Financial Institutions: Collaborate and Converge or Suffer the Consequences

Financial Institutions: Collaborate and Converge or Suffer the Consequences

Looking to strengthen your financial institution’s (FI) financial crimes initiatives and get ahead of potential schemes and scams? Follow the steps below, and you will be well on your way.

  1. Assess your risk as a group with leaders from different areas of Fraud, Cyber and AML.

  2. Decide on your recipe for countering those risks.

  3. Layer that with a top-level governance structure with all of the people on different teams dependent on each other.

Sounds easy enough, right? Not so fast. This checklist requires patience, fortitude, teamwork, leadership and the expertise of people from every department in your organization. Oh, and executive buy-in and support.

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The Cat-and-Mouse Game Between Financial Institutions and Their Unseen Adversaries

The Cat-and-Mouse Game Between Financial Institutions and Their Unseen Adversaries

“If you build a better mousetrap, it’s highly likely that an adversary will build a better mouse.” Jean-Francois Legault, Managing Director, Global Head of Cybersecurity at JPMorgan Chase, shared this metaphor at the beginning of his virtual breakout session at the 31st Annual ACFE Global Fraud Conference. It captures a sentiment that fraud examiners are all too familiar with — it can sometimes seem impossible to stay ahead of the fraudsters. But in his session “Building a Cyberfraud Intelligence Program for the Financial Industry,” Legault shared practical advice and tips on how financial institutions can build a cyberfraud intelligence program from the ground up.

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The Money Pit: Rogue Projects Can Lead to Construction Fraud

The Money Pit: Rogue Projects Can Lead to Construction Fraud

“Everyone at some point in their life has picked up a hammer or has walked by a construction site,” said Wayne H. Kalayjian, CFE, PE, SE, managing director at Secretariat International, during his virtual session at the 31st Annual ACFE Global Fraud Conference. “They’ve seen cranes and pile drivers … everyone has some sort of intuitive understanding of what construction is.”

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Jules Kroll Stresses That Practitioners Can’t Grow Without Innovating

Jules Kroll Stresses That Practitioners Can’t Grow Without Innovating

Jules Kroll recently had a shocking conversation with the head of compliance at a major European bank. “I asked them what they had seen in terms of fraud in the first quarter of the year,” said Kroll, during the Monday Opening General Session of the 31st Annual ACFE Global Fraud Conference. “They were seeing [fraud] up over 600%. So, we have our work cut out for us. … I don't think we're ever going to see a sudden outbreak of honesty.” Kroll, the 2020 recipient of the ACFE’s Cressey Award, says the profession needs to continue to innovate to find new ways to combat fraud as he did when he was a pioneer of the modern intelligence and corporate security industry.

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Seen on the Screen: Gathering for Our First All-Virtual Fraud Conference

Seen on the Screen: Gathering for Our First All-Virtual Fraud Conference

“We can only win the war against financial crimes with intelligent collaborations, mentorships, partnerships and by developing tools and policies that is globally scalable. Criminals are getting smarter; it is our jobs to ensure they end up on the losing side at all times.” — Wale Ayantoye, Global Sanctions Consultant, Square Inc.

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