In: Accounting
Distinguish between a shell company fraud and pass through fraud.
A shell company fraud first requires that the perpetrator establish a false supplier on the books of the victim company. The fraudster then manufactures false purchase orders, receiving reports, and invoices in the name of the vendor and submits them to the accounting system, which creates the allusion of a legitimate transaction. A pass through fraud is similar to the shell company fraud with the exception that a transaction actually takes place. Again, the perpetrator creates a false vendor and issues purchase orders to it for inventory or supplies. The false vendor then purchases the needed inventory from a legitimate vendor. The false vendor charges the victim company a much higher than market price for the items, but pays only the market price to the legitimate vendor. The difference is the profit that the perpetrator pockets.
Establish fake supplier, create false documents; pass through fraud: Real transaction with inflated prices, profiting perpetrator.