Fraud
In the broadest sense, a fraud is an intentional deception made for personal gain or to damage another individual; the related adjective is fraudulent. The specific legal definition varies by legal jurisdiction. Fraud is a crime, and also a civil law violation. Defrauding people or entities of money or valuables is a common purpose of fraud, but there have also been fraudulent "discoveries", e.g. in science, to gain prestige rather than immediate monetary gain.
A hoax also involves deception, but without the intention of gain, or of damaging or depriving the victim; the intention is often humorous.
Types of fraudulent acts
Fraud can be committed through many media, including mail, wire, phone, and the Internet ( computer crime and Internet fraud). The difficulty of checking identity and legitimacy online, and the ease with which hackers can divert browsers to dishonest sites and steal credit card details, the international dimensions of the web and ease with which users can hide their location, all contribute to the very rapid growth of Internet fraud. Types of criminal fraud include:- bait and switch
- bankruptcy fraud
- benefit fraud, committing fraud to get government benefits
- charlatanism (psychic and occult),
- confidence tricks such as the 419 fraud and Spanish Prisoner
- selling counterfeit goods which are not what they claim to be, e.g., designer clothing, fake works of art, archaeological objects, etc.
- creation of false companies or " long firms"
- embezzlement, taking money which one has been entrusted with on behalf of another party
- false advertising
- false billing
- false insurance claims
- forgery of documents or signatures,
- health fraud, for example selling of products known not to be effective, such as quack medicines,
- identity theft
- investment frauds, such as Ponzi schemes and Pyramid schemes
- marriage fraud to obtain immigration rights without entitlement
- rigged gambling games such as the shell game
- securities frauds such as pump and dump
- taking payment for goods ordered with no intention of delivering them
- tax fraud, not reporting revenue or illegally avoiding taxes ( tax evasion). Iin some countries tax fraud is also prosecuted under false billing or tax forgery
Elements of fraud
Common law fraud has nine elements:Morlan v. Kelly, No. 2009-UP-002, SC Supreme Court, 2009. linkSchnellmann v. Roettger, 373 S.C. 379, 382, 645 S.E.2d 239, 241 (2007). link- a representation of an existing fact;
- its materiality;
- its falsity;
- the speaker's knowledge of its falsity;
- the speaker's intent that it shall be acted upon by the plaintiff;
- plaintiff's ignorance of its falsity;
- plaintiff's reliance on the truth of the representation;
- plaintiff's right to rely upon it; and
- consequent damages suffered by plaintiff.
Notable fraudsters
- Buddy Adkins & Johnny Bonanno, US: Spector Freight Systems owner(s) falsely represented as a legitimate trucking firm to swindle tens of thousands from transportation firms by false pretenses. Also used check fraud as well as wire and mail fraud.
- Frank Abagnale Jr., US impostor who wrote bad checks and falsely represented himself as a qualified member of professions such as airline pilot, doctor, and attorney. The film Catch Me If You Can is based on his life.
- Eddie Antar, founder of Crazy Eddie, who has about $1 billion worth of judgments against him stemming from fraudulent accounting practices at that company.
- Cassie Chadwick, who pretended to be Andrew Carnegie's daughter to get loans.
- Charles Dawson, an amateur British archeologist who claimed to have found the Piltdown man.
- Marc Dreier, Managing founder of Attorney firm Dreir LLP. Prosecutors allege that from 2004 through December 2008, He sold approximately $700 million worth of fictitious promissory notes.http://money.cnn.com/2009/03/19/news/hedge_fund_fraud/index.htm?postversion=2009031914 retrieved on March 19, 2009
- Richard Eaton, an English businessman who was business partners with mobster Paul Vario and Jimmy Burke and was involved in the Lufthansa heist. An associate of the Lucchese crime family
- Bernard Ebbers, founder of WorldCom, which inflated its asset statements by about $11 billion.
- Ramón Báez Figueroa, banker from the Dominican Republic and former president of Banco Intercontinental. Sentenced on October 21, 2007 to ten years in prison for a US$2.2 billion fraud case that drove the Caribbean nation into an economic crisis in 2003.
- Martin Frankel is a former U.S. financier, convicted in 2002 of insurance fraud worth $208 million, racketeering and money laundering.
- Samuel Israel III (1959)- Former hedge fund manager that ran the former fraudulent Bayou Hedge Fund Group. He had pretended to faked suicide.
- Konrad Kujau, German fraudster and forger responsible for the " Hitler Diaries".
- Kenneth Lay, the American businessman who built energy company Enron. He was one of the highest paid CEOs in America until he was ousted as Chairman and was convicted of fraud and conspiracy, although as a result of his death, his conviction was vacated.
- Nick Leeson, English trader whose unsupervised speculative trading caused the collapse of Barings Bank.
- James Paul Lewis, Jr., ran one of the biggest ($311 million) and longest running Ponzi Schemes (20 years) in US history.
- Gregor MacGregor, Scottish conman who tried to attract investment and settlers for the non-existent country of Poyais.
- Bernard Madoff, creator of a $65 billion Ponzi scheme - the largest investor fraud ever attributed to a single individual.
- Colleen McCabe, British headmistress who stole £½ million from her school.
- Gaston Means, a professional conman during U.S. President Warren G. Harding's administration.
- Matt the Knife, American born con artist, card cheat and pickpocket who, from the ages of approximately 14 through 21, bilked dozens of casinos, corporations and at least one Mafia crime family out of untold sums.
- Barry Minkow and the ZZZZ Best scam.
- Michael Monus, founder of Phar-Mor, which ultimately cost its investors more than $1 billion.
- F. Bam Morrison, who conned the town of Wetumka, Oklahoma by promoting a circus that never came.
- Lou Pearlman, former boy-band manager indicted by a federal grand jury in Orlando on charges that he schemed to bilk banks out of more than $100 million.
- Frederick Emerson Peters, US impersonator who wrote bad checks.
- Charles Ponzi and the Ponzi scheme.
- Alves Reis, who forged documents to print 100,000,000 PTE in official escudo banknotes (adjusted for inflation, it would be worth about US$150 million today).
- Christopher Rocancourt, a Rockefeller impersonator who defrauded Hollywood celebrities.
- John Spano, a struggling businessman who faked massive success in an attempt to buy out the New York Islanders of the NHL.
- John Stonehouse, the last Postmaster-General of the UK and MP who faked his death.
- Kevin Trudeau (1963) – US writer and billiards promoter, convicted of fraud and larceny in 1991, known for a series of late-night infomercials and his series of books about "Natural Cures "They" Don't Want You to Know About".
- Richard Whitney, who stole from the New York Stock Exchange Gratuity Fund in the 1930s.
- In the UK a report concluded that the total costs of fraud and dealing with fraud in the year 2005-2006 was at least 13.9 Billion GBP.
- Michael Sabo (1945) who was best known as a check, stocks and bonds forger. He became notorious in the 1960s throughout the 1990s as a "Great Impostor" over 100 aliases, and earned millions from such.
- Elliot Castro, a Scottish former credit card fraudster who detailed his crimes in a biography and now advises banks and financial institutions.
- Ashok Jadeja (2009) who has been accused of cheating people from across India of crores of rupees on the pretext of having divine blessings.
Different legal traditions
Jewish law: Geneivat da'at
In Jewish law, the concept of geneivat da'at (גניבת דעת, literally "mind theft") covers various forms of deception and fraud. One Midrash states that geneivat da'at is the worst type of theft, because it directly harms the person, not merely their money.See also
- Accounting scandals
- Advance fee fraud
- Affinity fraud
- Association of Certified Fraud Examiners
- Bank fraud
- Bankruptcy fraud
- Benford's law
- Bribery
- Caper stories (such as The Sting)
- Charity fraud
- Cheque fraud
- Click fraud
- Con man
- Corporate abuse
- Counterfeit
- Cramming (fraud)
- Crimestoppers
- Corruption
- Contract fraud
- Creative accounting
- Credit card fraud
- E-mail fraud
- Electoral fraud
- Embezzlement
- Employment fraud
- Extrinsic fraud
- False Claims Law
- Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
- Financial crimes
- Financial crisis of 2007-2009
- Force-initiation
- Forex scam
- Fraud deterrence
- Fraud in the factum
- Fraud in parapsychology
- Fraud Squad
- Friendly Fraud
- Front running
- Geneivat da'at
- Great Stock Exchange Fraud of 1814
- Guinness share-trading fraud, famous British business scandal of the 1980s
- Hoax
- Identity and Access Management
- Identity Theft
- Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)
- Impersonator
- Insider trading
- Inspector General
- Insurance fraud
- Internet fraud
- Interpol
- Intrinsic fraud
- Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
- Journalism fraud
- Match fixing - fraud in sports
- Mail fraud
- Missing trader fraud
- Money Laundering
- Mortgage fraud
- Nigerian Letter
- Organized Crime
- Paternity fraud
- Per minas
- Phishing, attempt to fraudulently acquire sensitive information
- pious frauds, a form of fraud in religion motivated by sincere zeal
- Phone fraud
- Political corruption
- Ponzi scheme
- Quatloos.com
- Questioned document examination
- Real estate trends
- Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO)
- SAS 99
- Scam
- Secret profits
- Securities fraud
- U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
- Shell company
- Spin
- Swampland in Florida
- Telemarketing fraud
- The National Council Against Health Fraud
- Tobashi scheme, concealing financial losses
- Tunneling (fraud)
- United States Postal Inspection Service
- United States Secret Service
- Vanity gallery
- Vanity press
- Verisimilitude
- Visa fraud
- Welfare fraud
- Wine fraud
- Wire fraud
- White Collar Crime
References
- Fred Cohen Frauds, Spies, and Lies - and How to Defeat Them. ISBN 1-878109-36-7 (2006). ASP Press.
- Review Fraud - Alex Copola Podgor, Ellen S. Criminal Fraud, (1999) Vol, 48, No. 4 American Law Review 1.
- The Nature, Extent and Economic Impact of Fraud in the UK. Feb,2007.
- ''The Fraudsters - How Con Artists Steal Your Money(ISBN 978-1-903582-82-4) by Eamon Dillon, published September 2008 by Merlin Publishing