Recognizing The Red Flags Of Fake Or Inflated Employee Expenses

A Ventura County, California, jury convicted James Matthew Godsey, 46, of Camarillo, of embezzling more than $500,000 from his employer, Channel Islands Aviation. Godsey worked as a bookkeeper, managing payroll and accounts payable from 2015 to 2023.

Between 2017 and 2023, he repeatedly inflated his own compensation by inserting unauthorized wages and bonuses into payroll records and by creating false reimbursements for purported business expenses. These practices ultimately diverted more than $527,000 away from the company.

Jurors found him guilty of six felony counts of grand theft and also found special allegations to be true that he caused a loss exceeding $100,000 and abused a position of trust in committing the offenses.

The scheme went undetected for years because he was trusted as the sole bookkeeper and his work was not closely supervised. The theft was discovered only after the company was sold and new management initiated an audit that revealed irregularities in payroll and reimbursement records.

Godsey faces a potential prison term and restitution obligations.

Source: https://ktla.com/news/local-news/california-man-convicted-of-embezzling-over-500000-from-aviation-company/

Commentary

In the above matter, the perpetrator submitted false requests for reimbursement.

False expense reimbursement requests usually do not begin with large dollar amounts. They often begin with small exceptions that employees hope no one will question.

Warning signs often appear in the documentation itself. Receipts that look altered, lack detail, or are handwritten when vendors typically issue electronic receipts deserve closer review. Carefully check receipts that are blurry, cropped, or identical across multiple submissions.

Repeated requests that consistently fall just under approval thresholds, such as amounts just below the level requiring a second signature, are another red flag.

Patterns also matter. An employee whose expenses are regularly higher than peers in similar roles, who repeatedly uses the same vendors without a clear business reason, or who frequently submits late or corrected reports may be testing the limits of the process.

Duplicate or near-duplicate claims, such as the same date, vendor, and amount appearing more than once is a common indicator of fraud. Another indicator is a charge on a company card followed by a reimbursement request for the same item.

Employers should also pay attention to expenses that do not match business activity, such as travel, meals, or mileage that conflict with work calendars or known locations.

When any of these warning signs appear, supervisors and finance staff should pause reimbursement. Request and obtain clarification and supporting documentation. Make sure an investigation follows because early intervention can prevent a pattern of minor falsifications from growing into significant losses.

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