Accounting & Bookkeeping

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The application of accounting skills and investigative techniques to examine financial records for evidence of fraud, embezzlement, or disputes.

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Forensic Accounting combines accounting expertise with investigative skills to detect financial fraud, quantify damages in litigation, and provide expert testimony in court. Forensic accountants examine transactions for irregularities, trace hidden assets, analyze financial statements for manipulation, and reconstruct financial records. Common applications: corporate fraud investigation (Satyam scam, Enron), insurance claims analysis, divorce asset tracing, tax evasion detection, and anti-money laundering. In India, demand has surged post-Companies Act 2013 and increasing corporate governance focus.

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A forensic accountant investigating a ₹50 crore procurement fraud at a company discovers: fake vendor invoices created by a finance manager, payments routed to shell companies owned by the manager's relatives, journal entries backdated to hide timing, and ₹12 crore siphoned over 3 years. Evidence is compiled for criminal prosecution and civil recovery.

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How is forensic accounting different from auditing?

Regular auditing checks if financial statements are fairly presented (reasonable assurance, sampling-based). Forensic accounting actively investigates suspected fraud (detailed examination of every transaction, follows the money trail). Auditors look for material misstatement; forensic accountants look for intentional manipulation and criminal evidence.

When should a business hire a forensic accountant?

Red flags: Unexplained inventory shortages, vendors you can't verify physically, employees living beyond their means, irregular journal entries near period-end, whistleblower complaints, missing documentation, sudden changes in financial patterns, and failed internal controls. Also for M&A due diligence and insurance claim disputes.

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