On a beautiful spring morning in 2015, Stephen Lowber, chief financial officer of Cutter and Buck, Inc.,
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Cutter and Buck, Inc., had been encountering declining sales as it approached the end of its fiscal year. In the final days of the fiscal year, the company negotiated deals with three distributors under which Cutter and Buck would ship them a total of $5.7 million in products. The distributors were assured they had no obligation to pay for any of the goods until customers located by Cutter and Buck paid the distributors.
Sometime later, Lowber learned that these three distributors were operating as Cutter and Buck's warehouses. Rather than restate and correct the company's financial statements, Lowber concealed the transactions from Cutter and Buck's independent auditors and board of directors by arranging for distributors to return $3.8 million in unsold inventory. The returns were accounted for as a reduction in sales during the following year. Additionally, Lowber instructed personnel to override the recorded business lines instead of the business line under which those sales were originally recorded to hide the magnitude of the returns.
As a result of these fraudulent transactions, Cutter and Buck's management overstated true fourth quarter and annual revenue of fiscal year 2015 by 12 percent and 4 percent, respectively.
1. What were the main types of financial statement fraud committed at Cutter and Buck? Do these types of fraud occur often?
2. What should have been the appropriate accounting treatments?
3. The three parts of the fraud triangle are pressure, opportunity, and rationalization. List some of the pressures that may have led to this fraud.
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Related Book For
Fraud Examination
ISBN: 978-1305079144
5th edition
Authors: W. Steve Albrecht, Chad O. Albrecht, Conan C. Albrecht, Mark F. Zimbelman
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