Check out today's FraudTalk interview with Cheryl Obermiller, a small businesswomen and major embezzlement survivor. Cheryl is in the process of completing her book, My Accountant’s Drawers ~ the Small Business Owner’s Guide to Outwitting Embezzlers, Thieves and Scallywags, due to be published in late 2014. Her story is a compelling one that every small business owner should hear. In fact, when her book comes out - it should be required reading at any credible business school. Her lessons are not taught there these days and, with the proliferation of embezzlement schemes in today's business world, they should be.
Join me Monday's at 10 a.m. EST for Fraud Talk on the Voice America online platform. My host page is here.
Monday, September 29, 2014
Thursday, September 25, 2014
Report: Lawsuit claims ex-worker stole $2 million from PBS
From the Boston Globe 9/25/14:
September 25, 2014
Lawsuit claims ex-worker stole $2 million from PBS
By Deirdre Fernandes
Boston Globe September 25, 2014
The former finance director of PBS’s video distribution arm
in Boston is alleged to have stolen more than $2 million from the public
broadcasting network over the course of about four years, according to court
records.
The alleged embezzlement came to light in a lawsuit filed
Monday by PBS’s insurance company against Citizens Bank in US District Court in
Boston. The suit alleges that Christopher C. Morris, who worked for a PBS
subsidiary that sells DVDs and video-on-demand of popular shows, deposited more
than 200 checks meant for PBS in his own private account, and it contends that
Citizens should have been aware of the fraud.
Federal law enforcement officials are investigating,
according to the PBS subsidiary, Public Media Distribution. No charges have
been brought in the case, according to court records.
The office of US Attorney Carmen M. Ortiz declined to
comment, as did Citizens Bank. Morris, whose last known address was in Chelsea,
could not be reached.
In a statement, Public Media Distribution, said, “There is
current law enforcement activity regarding this issue and we cannot comment at
this time.”
PBS, which stands for
Public Broadcasting Service, and its state affiliates are nonprofits that rely
on taxpayer funding and the goodwill and trust of individual and corporate
donors. But the network also has some money-making entities, such as Public
Media Distribution, a joint venture between PBS and Boston public television’s
WGBH Educational Foundation.
Public Media Distribution generated $48.7 million in profits
in 2012, according to the latest federal tax filings.
Morris worked for the distribution company until 2012.
Company officials declined to provide more specific information about when
Morris was hired and the circumstances of his departure. Morris sold his
Chelsea condominium in early 2013 for $312,000, according to real estate
records.
Morris deposited 202 checks made out to PBS totaling $2.1
million into his own account starting in 2008 continuing until at least 2012,
according to the lawsuit filed by Federal Insurance Company, a New Jersey firm
that covers PBS and its subsidiaries. The checks were not from the network’s
fund drives but from consumers and companies buying PBS and WGBH programming
such as “Downton Abbey,” the Civil War series by documentary filmmaker Ken
Burns, and the children’s program, “Arthur.”
The checks should have been deposited into PBS’s Bank of
America account. But the lawsuit alleges Morris forged a PBS endorsement on the
checks and presented the checks to Citizens for deposit into his own account
“Citizens Bank did not conduct any reasonable inquiry or
question the appropriateness of the deposits when the checks were presented to
Citizens Bank and accepted,” Federal Insurance said in the lawsuit.
Federal Insurance, which covered PBS for employee theft,
paid the nonprofit $2 million, the limit of the policy’s liability. The insurer
is seeking to recover that money from Citizens, plus legal and other costs.
Federal Insurance on Wednesday filed a motion asking the
court to seal the original complaint and allow Federal Insurance to submit a
redacted version concealing the name of the former employee and PBS, according
to court records.
WGBH was the victim of employee theft a few years ago. In
2010, a former accounting manager at WGBH-TV pleaded guilty to stealing nearly
$500,000 from the station over nine years.
Such thefts deliver a blow to the reputations of charities,
because they are built on trust and the expectation that the money they receive
is used appropriately, said Chris Marquet, the owner of Marquet International,
a Boston investigative firm that publishes an annual report on white-collarfraud.
“It’s never a good thing,” Marquet said. “They are probably
no doubt going to have show the world that they have safeguards in place.”
Thefts from charitable organizations are fairly common,
usually because they do not have the resources and structure for strict
oversight, Marquet said. One in six major embezzlement cases in 2012 involved
charities or religious organizations, according to Marquet’s study.
Public Media Distribution is set up as separate company from
PBS and WGBH, with its own leadership and employees. But executives from WGBH,
which owns a 40 percent stake in the distribution company, sit on its board of
directors.
Labels:
commentary,
embezzlement,
non-profit fraud
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)