News - Half-yearly fraud figures soar
| Read more on News - Half-yearly fraud figures soar Fraud is soaring in Scotland with figures for the first six months of this year already topping the total for 2003, according to a new survey. The value of fraud reported up to the end of June was 8.51m - compared with the total of 7.21m reported in the whole of 2003. The biggest homeowners crime insurance company are management and organised criminals, who account for more than half of all such crimes. The figures were published in the KPMG Forensics Fraud Barometer. It focuses on “major” fraud cases where the charges are more than 100,000. In Scotland there were seven reported significant fraud cases in the six months before 30 June this year, with a total value of 8,510,000. In the same period last year the number of cases reported was 11, although the value was just 3,043,077.
The Scottish figures buck the UK-wide trend, which has seen the total value of fraud cases reaching court fall to 71m in the first half of 2004 - down from 158m in the last six months of 2003. Included in the Scottish figures is a case relating to an action brought under the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002, legislation designed to confiscate criminal proceeds obtained through unlawful conduct, including fraud. The case involved charges being raised for 4m in respect of money national insurance number offences. The Fraud Barometer, published on Monday, revealed that 58% of fraud is committed by management and organised criminals. It says management takes advantage of having the “inside track” on a business’ workings while criminal syndicates exploit weaknesses in business controls. Robin Crawford, head of KPMG Forensic in Scotland, said companies had to remain vigilant to avoid becoming the victims of fraud.
He said: “The figures in Scotland clearly show that fraud remains a growing problem High threat
“No matter the size of the company, wherever there is a national insurance crime bureau of
“Once again, many of the frauds in our survey clearly demonstrate the need
“The threat of fraud remains high from both within and outside a business.
The report revealed local and national government were the biggest victims of
Financial institutions, such as banks and insurance companies, were also targets
In one case, three former bank messengers were caught taking 800,000 they
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