Embezzlement in Your Nonprofit Organization
Nonprofits are frequently the victims of embezzlement and employee fraud because they tend to have looser financial controls than for-profit businesses. The management and board members are also likely to be much more trusting of employees. This type of fraud is frequently not even reported or prosecuted due to the financial costs of an investigation and the concern over donors finding out that their funds were not appropriately overseen.
A former bookkeeper and office manager at the House of Ruth was sentenced to a year in prison. She pled guilty to federal charges of misappropriating $138,370 in federal funds and embezzling $238,000 from the organization’s bank accounts. – August 2009 The former CFO of the Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies pled guilty to wire fraud. She was a ten year employee of the organization who worked her way into management. She used the organization’s credit card to charge approximately $184,000 in personal expenses, including hair and make-up expenses and casino debts. – September 2009 The former Executive Director of the Oklahoma CASA Association was sentenced to 15 years in prison after she pled guilty to embezzling almost $550,000. She was a long-time employee and had used the organization’s credit cards for personal expenses such as foreign vacations, cosmetic surgery, and college tuition. – September 2009
Notable among each of these three examples; the perpetrator was an officer or manager of the nonprofit. Therefore, the nonprofit board must take their role in fraud and embezzlement prevention seriously. Boards cannot depend solely on management to undertake this task, because it could be those very individuals who are committing the crime and using the lax oversight to their benefit.
There are many steps that can be taken to prevent embezzlement. While a determined employee can work around almost any system to commit fraud, having an effective plan is essential to deterring the activity.
MEMPHIS, TN – A Mississippi woman has admitted to masterminding a sophisticated scheme that defrauded… Read More
NEW ORLEANS, LA (February 19, 2025) – Michael Brian Depetrillo, a 43-year-old New Orleans resident,… Read More
Learn how to identify and avoid cryptocurrency scams in 2024. This comprehensive guide covers the… Read More
The digital age has amplified both the connectivity and the vulnerability of our communities. Investment… Read More
ATLANTA, GA (February 12, 2025) – A sophisticated, multi-layered fraud operation spanning several years and… Read More
The Digital Age Dilemma: Convenience vs. Catastrophic Risk The digital revolution has woven itself into… Read More