WorldCom By Dennis Moberg (Santa Clara University) and Edward Romar (University of Massachusetts-Boston) 2002 saw an unprecedented number of corporate scandals: Enron, Tyco, Global Crossing. In many ways, WorldCom is just another case of failed corporate governance, accounting abuses, and outright greed. But none of these other companies had senior executives as colorful and likable as Bernie Ebbers. A Canadian by birth, the 6 foot, 3 inch former basketball coach and Sunday School teacher emerged
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The Smartest Guys in the Room: The Enron Movie Magnolia Home Entertainment Reflection Questions Choose one or more of the following questions to discuss. There are no right or wrong answers. I am asking for your impression, thoughts, and critical reflections on these questions, not a yes or no. Support your answers with examples from the movie and from your own experiences or other sources. 1. Is this a story about financial numbers or is it about people and Enron’s culture? Explain
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Assignment 3: Using Teams in Production and Operations Management BUS 508 – Contemporary Business Forensic Accountants Forensic accounting is accounting that result from actual or anticipated legal disputes. Forensic accountants are the auditors of the forensic accounting practice. They investigate, coordinate data and offer their evidence in trial; and because it is forensic business, the evidence they find is suitable to present and will hold its proof in a court trail. Forensic accountants
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Enron the Fallen Tiffany Califf Professor: Karina Arzumanova LEG100014VA016-1116-001Business Law I July 24, 2011 Describe how Enron could have been structured differently to avoid such activities. Enron’s leaders had the work ethic of only fighting for themselves and if others got hurt it was no big deal hurting. Enron had that it’s a dog-eat-dog thinking. This type of thinking would, in the end, be the demise of Enron. Enron focused on short-term gains. The accounting tactics of Enron
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ethical breach and how each measure should be implemented in future. Assignment 1: Review of Accounting Ethics 3 Before the Enron and Andersen scandals, relatively little public attention was paid to the truthfulness of financial reporting. Of course, no one believed every company was beyond any suspicion of misrepresenting its activities. But, by and large, it was taken for granted that the reports
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The Enron Scandal and Moral Hazard Prof. Leigh Tesfatsion Department of Economics Iowa State University Ames, IA 50011-1070 http://www.econ.iastate.edu/tesfatsi/ Last Revised: 3 April 2011 The Enron Scandal and Moral Hazard • Enron, the 7th largest U.S. company in 2001, filed for bankruptcy in December 2001. • Enron investors and retirees were left with worthless stock. • Enron was charged with securities fraud (fraudulent manipulation of publicly reported financial results, lying to SEC,…)
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Behavior Article Analysis In this paper I will identify situations that might lead to unethical practices and behavior in accounting. I will also examine the effects of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 on financial statements. Since the Enron scandal at the end of 2001 there have been several reports of unethical practices as well as poor behavior. So what exactly leads someone to report false information? In most cases that I have seen it usually begins with minor accounting infractions. When
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Case7.2:Stephen Gray, CPA Answer for Q1 Ethical codes create a boundary that members of a profession could act in to the professions highest beliefs. Where code of ethics is not enforced, a profession’s name could be tarnished by the wrong acts of some individuals that would affect all members of the profession and as the consequence the general public will also be affected. The main reason for the change of these codes overtime is the change in the culture or values systems and attitudes
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ABSTRACT Between the years 1998 and 2002, the United States suffered a time in which several large companies engaged in fraudulent behavior which eroded investor confidence in the stock market and to some extent destabilized the economy. Audits, which were conducted to assess the validity and reliability of a company’s financial statements, were not detecting the material misstatements in the statements. As a result, both the US Government and the accounting profession needed to come up with
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The accounting fraud at WorldCom was the result of corporate supremacy, individual liability, and an ultimate collapse of their system of in-house controls that can all be attributed to greed, manipulation and a lack of accountability for top executives. Bernie Ebbers, at the helm of it all, lacked focus, strategic direction, and led WorldCom with a consistently declining moral compass. It is thought that the ethical turn down of WorldCom’s top executives began with the U.S. Justice Department’s
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