The arrest last week of a manager at the Bloomfield, New Mexico, Motor Vehicle Department on suspicion of embezzling $24,000 was only the latest in a rash of employee thefts in San Juan County.
Accountants and business leaders say small businesses can take steps to protect themselves from employee theft. Good accounting practices are a must.Most commonly the embezzlement cases we find, the employer or whoever is being embezzled from looks at their accounting practices and reconsiders what they're going to do in the future.
A lot of business owners are too trusting of their employees.
In the past year, the Farmington, New Mexixo area has seen a streak of suspected fraud and embezzlement, including the suspected $450,000 theft from the Convention and Visitors Bureau, $5 million from two cases relating to a failed hospital proposal, a fake charity scam, and staff theft from a concrete business.
Accountants and investigators say it's likely many more cases are not reported.
Particularly small businesses, they don't want their reputation ruined, they don't want to look stupid, so they don't report it. They certainly don't report it to the press. Business owners should assess their exposure to internal theft, and then develop procedures to mitigate those risks, he said.
Most important to avoiding embezzlement is internal controls such as having two people examining accounts. Experts also recommend different people fill out deposit slips and take the deposits to the bank. Owners should also make sure employees aren't writing business checks to themselves.
The individual owner needs to be looking at the bank reconciliations, making sure the checks that clear are the checks he's authorized.
Particularly when you're a nonprofit, I don't think you can have too many eyes looking at the finances and the money that comes into the organization.
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