Case Study 4
Complete the following case study:Fraud in Collegiate Athletics
https://mediaweb.saintleo.edu/courses/ACC505/ACC505_CaseStudy_Mod5.pdf
Compose a two page, double-spaced, APA format (source citations and reference insertions) essay. Expand your recommendations as they are supposed to be the main, and most part of the second page of these. Please do not use Wikipedia as a source.
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Module5_Case Study_KU Fraud in Collegiate Athletics When Major League Money Meets Little League Controls HERBERT W. SNYDER, PH.D., CFE; DAVID O'BRYAN, PH.D., CFE, CPA, CMA January/February 2012 A major, multimillion sports ticket fraud at the University of Kansas highlights how CFEs can help convince administrators and boards to reassert control over their athletics departments. The answer could be independent oversight. On June 30, 2009, David Freeman pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit bank fraud as part of a federal bribery case. Anxious to please the judge prior to his sentencing, he provided investigators with information about theft and resale of football and basketball tickets at the University of Kansas (KU). Freeman fingered two individuals, one of whom was exonerated while the other proved to be central to the case. Freeman had his sentence reduced from 24 to 18 months, which his attorney said was an inadequate reward for the information he had provided, according to "Developer source in KU ticket scandal," by Steve Fry, in The Topeka Capital-Journal, April 22, 2010. Federal authorities contacted KU officials in late 2009. Under increasing pressure, KU announced in March 2010 that it had retained the services of the Wichita office of Foulston Siefkin LLP to conduct an internal investigation. Assisted by a forensic accounting firm, Foulston Siefkin found that six employees had conspired to improperly sell or use approximately 20,000 KU athletic tickets — mostly to basketball games, including the Final Four tournament — from 2005 through 2010. The sales amounted to more than $1 million at face value and could range as high as $3 million at market value. Even worse, the investigators were unable to determine how many of the tickets were sold directly to brokers because the employees disguised these distributions into categories with limited accountability, such as complimentary tickets, according to "University of Kansas athletic tickets scam losses may reach $3M," in the Kansas City Business Journal, May 26, 2010. The investigation did not examine years prior to 2005 because the athletics department did not retain those records. The investigation of KU's ticket sales and fundraising operations by federal authorities continued throughout 2010 and 2011. KU's internal investigation, which was released May 26, 2010, implicated the associate athletic director for development, the associate athletic director for the ticket office, the assistant athletic director for development, the assistant athletic director for sales and marketing, the assistant athletic director for ticket operations and the husband of the associate athletic director for the ticket office who had been working for KU as a paid consultant. WHAT ACTUALLY HAPPENED? The accused allegedly abused the complimentary ticket policies of the university in three ways: First, official policy allowed for certain athletic office employees to receive two complimentary tickets for each athletic event provided they would not resell them. Instead, the athletic department routinely gave each of these employees more than two tickets for each event and tacitly permitted, if not overtly encouraged, reselling. Second, the development/fundraising arm of the athletic office was permitted to use complimentary tickets to cultivate relationships with prospective donors. However, these officials helped themselves to many more complimentary tickets than they could have reasonably needed. Third, athletic department members improperly used or resold complimentary tickets reserved only for charitable organizations. The culprits concealed these thefts by simply charging tickets to such fictitious accounts as RJDD - "Rodney Jones Donor Discretionary" - and not recording the ultimate recipients. (Jones was the assistant athletic director for development and one of the two persons the informant identified.) By 2009, a cover-up compounded the original schemes. When the 2008-2009 basketball ticket sale records could not be reconciled, Charlotte Blubaugh told Brandon Simmons and Jason Jeffries to move documents from the athletic office to the football stadium where she, Ben Kirtland and Tom Blubaugh would destroy them on a weekend and then attribute their absence to construction at the stadium, according to Foulston Siefkin's final report to the KU's general counsel. In a separate scheme, the husband of the associate athletic director for the ticket office, who was supposedly employed as a consultant to the athletic department, received payments totaling $116,500, all approved by the associate athletic director for development. Apparently, the husband did not provide any services in exchange for these payments. Importantly, no allegations or evidence suggested that any players, coaches or university administrators outside athletics were involved in these crimes. The athletic director was not involved in the scheme but accepted responsibility for the lax oversight that contributed to its extent and duration. Athletics office employees solely perpetrated these frauds. So how did the frauds go undetected for at least five years? And what can anti-fraud professionals do to prevent situations like this? WHY COLLEGE ATHLETIC PROGRAMS ARE VULNERABLE TO FRAUD The KU ticket scandal is not unique. It is merely the most recent and largest among financial scandals in college athletic departments that have included the University of Louisville, the University of Colorado and the University of Miami. What happened at KU is a combination of separate, but related, problems that have become increasingly common in college athletic programs: • Major athletic programs generate and spend huge sums of money. • These programs frequently lack transparency in their finances. • Athletic programs often operate independently of university oversight. As we have seen, the frauds at KU were not particularly sophisticated. (For example, the associate athletic director for the ticket office used multiple dummy accounts for ticket purchasers with business locations that matched her home address.) The difficulty anti-fraud professionals face is not designing or implementing financial controls; the challenge is convincing senior administrators and oversight boards to reassert control over their athletic departments so that existing controls will be effective. A higher-education institution often uses a top-down, command-and-control structure on the field or in the gym to build successful sports programs. However, that school might inappropriately use that same approach to administer the business side of athletic programs. Fraud examiners who deal with intercollegiate athletics should be aware of the following factors, which may predispose athletic programs to fraud: College sports are a lucrative target for frauds Part of the difficulty in dealing with ticket sale frauds in college athletics is that the sheer volume of money invites theft. According to most recent figures available from the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and compiled by ESPN ("The money that moves college sports," March 3, 2010, by Paula Lavigne), the 120 schools that comprise the Division I Football Bowl Subdivision generate more than $1.1 billion from ticket sales each year. Of these, the top five schools raise between $30.6 million and $44.7 million. (By comparison, KU is large but not exceptional. During the same period, the KU athletic programs spent more than $65 million and generated more than $17 million in ticket sales.) College sports increasingly value winning over good financial stewardship The inherent risk that surrounds such large sums of money is compounded by the intense pressure athletic programs face to win games and increase their television exposure. As the Knight Commission observed in its 2009 report on college athletics: "The growing emphasis on winning games and increasing television market share feeds the spending escalation because of the unfounded yet persistent belief that devoting more dollars to sports programs leads to greater athletic success and thus to greater revenues." ("Restoring the Balance: Dollars, Values and the Future of College Sports") This situation, albeit in different contexts, is common to many businesses that experience fraud. High revenues combined with a focus on growth at all costs often lead to situations in which organizations outstrip their own control structures and invites unscrupulous employees to siphon funds. Sports tickets are inherently valuable and easily convertible to cash Athletic departments maintain an inventory of valuable, readily exchangeable assets in the form of tickets. An active secondary market, including ticket brokers, scalpers and casual sales among ticket holders, facilitates the unauthorized, difficult-to-trace resale of these tickets. This is exacerbated when the market value of the tickets frequently exceeds their considerable face value by a wide margin. Also, custodians of complimentary tickets can wield great power and influence over those who want these coveted assets. Otherwise good people may turn a blind eye to wrongdoing if tempted, for example, by free tickets to the Final Four or a BCS bowl game. College athletic departments frequently lack transparency in their operations Lack of access to information is a classic condition for facilitating fraud. The financial reporting that university athletic departments require varies widely in the amount and quality of information that they make publicly available. The U.S. Equity in Athletics Disclosure Act, for example, requires colleges to file annual reports with the U.S. Department of Education. However, compliance requires only six areas of expense - an overly broad set of categories that allows wide variation among institutions. The situation is a bit ironic when we consider that many Division I schools - such as The University of Texas with yearly athletic revenues of $44 million, or Alabama, with an annual athletic budget of $126 million - rival or exceed for-profit firms but without the same reporting requirements imposed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission or IRS, according to Lavigne's 2010 ESPN article. Frequently, a single individual controls the daily financial management of an athletic department and is not subject to financial controls and oversight normally found in profit-making entities. This trend to place all the power in one person often begins at schools with highly successful coaches. According to the Knight Commission's 2009 review of college presidents, a majority believes that the influence of outside money has eroded their ability to control coaches and their programs. ("Quantitative and Qualitative Research with Football Bowl Subdivision University Presidents on the Costs and Financing of