Payroll fraud
This is one of the most common instances of employee deception. In 2013, Dennis Harold from Dagenham, Essex, swindled recruitment firm Devonshire Appointments out of £2.9m by inventing temporary staff and paying wages into more than 20 bank accounts with false company names. The then 60-year-old pleaded guilty to fraud by abuse of position and was jailed for four years.
Expenses fraud
A fifth of workers believe it’s OK to fiddle their expenses, according to research by the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners – with much of the justification being that “everybody does it”. Whether it’s a relatively minor exaggeration of mileage claims, or submitting fake invoices that appear to cover an employee’s company spending, expenses fraud is thought to cost businesses worldwide an average of £30,000 a year.
Personnel fraud
This can cover anything from falsifying CVs or references to calling in sick while working elsewhere. Britain’s Energy Coast took on trust new finance director James Cox’s CV and references – only for him to defraud the utility firm of £40,000. Investigations discovered that not only were his documents all fake but that he’d been jailed for fraud before – twice.
Procurement fraud
One of the most common employee crimes is falsifying documents to dishonestly purchase items or services from favoured, or even fictitious, contacts. NHS manager Mark Evill was one of three men jailed in November for defrauding a Welsh health board of £700,000 by awarding contracts to a fictional construction firm. They were caught out after naming “staff” after members of U2 and writing emails and invoices from Paul Hewson and David Evans – the real names of the band’s singer, Bono, and guitarist, The Edge.
Data fraud
Unsurprisingly, this is the fastest-growing modus operandi of the fraudulent employee. The number of court cases relating to theft of confidential company data rose by 25% last year, according to data law specialist EMW, and its prevalence is increasing. Risks to businesses include theft of customer and staff information, client databases or, in technology and finance, algorithms. One of many recent high-profile cases involved a BUPA employee stealing more than 500,000 customer records and attempting to sell them on the dark web.
“Companies are especially vulnerable to this type of employee fraud,” says Morgan. “Not only is technology advancing at such a fast rate that it’s a challenge to keep your business secure, but the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) means any company suffering a data breach could face a fine of millions of pounds.” Indeed, BUPA was fortunate to be fined just £175,000 in September 2018 because the breach occurred between January and March 2017. Had it happened when GDPR came into force in May 2018, the fine could have been as much as £17m.
“Managers need to be realistic about employee dishonesty,” says Kearns. “You want to believe everyone is honest, especially if they’ve worked for you for a long time. But employee fraud costs you money, damages your reputation and, if you don’t address it, disheartens and discourages those of your staff who are honest. Companies need to understand the risks of employee fraud and how to monitor and tackle it.”