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    JACK GREENBERG, INC.

    A. Synopsis

    Jack Greenberg Inc. (JGI) is a wholesale meat company established by Mr. Jack Greenberg. The

    company situated in the eastern seaboard of United States offers a variety of meat, cheese, and other food

    products. Being a familyowned business, they did not value the importance of internal control. Soon

    after Mr. Jack Greenbergs death, the companys president, Emanuel, realized that they need to develop a

    more formal accounting and control system so they hired Steve Cohn as the companys controller. He

    implemented new policies and procedures that will help in the companys operations and accounting

    system. Fred, the vice president of the company, who used to be the one handling the prepaid inventory

    account, refused to cooperate with Cohn.

    Several processes were conducted before the merchandise would be considered passed from the

    inspections. The main focus of this case would be on the prepaid inventory account kept by the company.

    One risk that JGI faces is the double counting of inventories. It happens whenever theres a delay in

    processing the delivery receipt forms.

    In the mid 1980s, Fred began to intentionally overstate JGIs prepaid inventory and he forced to

    reduce the products gross margins to compete with larger companies. He did these all just to make his ill

    father feel better. In addition, he mentioned that after his fathers death he kept doing the fraudulent act

    because of the significant changes occurring in the market which adversely affected us. SteveCohn was

    given the title Chief Financial Officer (CFO) and he designed a computerized accounting system for the

    prepaid inventory in early 1992.

    Grant Thornton (GT) became JGIs independent audit firm starting 1986 to 1994 and provided the

    company an Engagement Compliance Checklist several weeks before year end. GT requested

    numerous documents from JGI such as those involved in the prepaid inventory account, Freds prepaid

    inventory log, and Cohns reconciliation report. Cohn passes documents thoroughly to GT except for the

    documents maintained by Fred. Because of that, GT received that information after the audit had already

    begun each year. In addition, GT auditors failed in discovering that much of the prepaid inventory was

    double counted.

    During the audit of GT since 1992 to 1994, they gave several recommendations and comments about

    the companys accounting and control system in their Internal Control Structure Reportable Conditions

    and Advisory Comments report. But still, Fred did not complyin those recommendations; until he was

    forced to submit falsified documents, which the GT auditors immediately detected. Fred was forced to

    admit that he did the fiddling of documents.

    JGI still retained GT to determine the impact of the fraudulent act and to develop a reliable set of

    financial statements. The Greenbergs provided this information to their companys three banks. Within

    six months, JGI filed bankruptcy and ceased operations.

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    B. Case Facts High sales prompted need for internal control so JGI hired Steve Cohn as

    controller. Segregation of duties is implemented. There were internal controls

    developed for many accounting functions but was unable to modernize control

    procedures over Prepaid Inventory account.

    Suppliers required prepayment for meat items: 60% Prepaid Inventory and 40%Merchandise Inventory. Tracking inventory is not automated. Cohn developed

    controls and process to reduce risk of double-counting inventory. Fred, VP,

    refused to comply. Cohn eventually gave up his effort.

    Fred intentionally misstated the inventory account. Key documents weredestroyed and recreated.

    Auditors investigated the Prepaid Inventory accounts and found unusual amountsof time between customs inspections and delivery to Greenberg warehouse. They

    followed up with questioning Fred regarding corroboration with the custom

    agents. Auditors also wanted to match delivery receipts with 9540-1 forms. The forms

    were not organized and would have been too cumbersome to go through. Grant

    Thornton decided the forms were not necessary for the audit but wanted them for

    future audits.

    The fraud was discovered by Grant Thornton in 1994.

    C. Answers1. Family owned business is a business where most of the shareholders are from the same family.

    Conflict of interest is possible in this kind of business. The auditor should observe the type of

    relationship among the family members. There should be a written agreement to specify rights,

    duties, and obligations for each member, the auditor should read those documents for further

    information. In this case, because of the conflict of interest and maybe, trust among each other,

    Emmanuel Greenberg did not force Jack Greenberg to follow Steve Cohns (their controller who

    later became the CFO) suggestion about changing the accounting system for the inventories

    which in the end, made Jack continue changing the numbers in the statements and manipulating

    the documents. The auditor should exercise more professional due care and be more competent

    by exerting more effort and diligence in this kind of business in order to discover fraud and

    misstatements.

    2. For the prepaid inventories, the auditor should determine if they exist (all inventories in therecord are existing and valid), if all prepaid inventories have been properly recorded in the

    records (completeness), if the value presented in the records is correct (valuation), and if the

    company really owns the prepaid inventories (rights and obligations). Misstatement of prepaid

    inventories by overstating it could lead to understatement of COGS which would lead to

    overstatement of Net Income. For the merchandise inventory, the auditor should also determine

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    the existence by physical counting the merchandise, completeness by tracing them to the records,

    and valuation by checking the schedule.

    3. Externally prepared documents and evidence like confirmations, external statements andconfirmations are more reliable than internally prepared documents like inquiry and internalstatements. Internal documents may be already tampered with the management who seeks to

    defraud the users of their financial statements or they may hide facts which may make the auditor

    discover the irregularities, if any. The auditor should have relied less on the internal evidence and

    should have gathered more external evidence like confirmation from suppliers.

    4. Performing walkthrough tests will frequently be the most effective way of achieving theobjectives in discovering misstatements. An audit walk-through traces how a company

    authorizes, records, processes and reports a sample transaction to confirm that it's handled

    correctly. In performing a walkthrough, the auditor follows a transaction from origination through

    the company's processes, including information systems, until it is reflected in the company's

    financial records, using the same documents and information technology that company personnel

    use. Walkthrough procedures usually include a combination of inquiry, observation, inspection of

    relevant documentation, and re-performance of controls. In performing a walkthrough, at the

    points at which important processing procedures occur, the auditor questions the company's

    personnel about their understanding of what is required by the company's prescribed procedures

    and controls. These probing questions, combined with the other walkthrough procedures, allow

    the auditor to gain a sufficient understanding of the process and to be able to identify important

    points at which a necessary control is missing or not designed effectively. Additionally, probing

    questions that go beyond a narrow focus on the single transaction used as the basis for the

    walkthrough allow the auditor to gain an understanding of the different types of significant

    transactions handled by the process. It is required by GAAS. (Source:http://pcaobus.org/standards/auditing/pages/auditing_standard_5.aspx)

    5. Aside from walkthrough tests, the auditor should have gathered more externally generateddocuments like confirmation from suppliers about the receiving date of the inventories so that

    they could vouch the documents to the records and determine the existence and completeness.

    The auditors should also have observed the physical count during the end of the fiscal year, so

    they can assure that the merchandise recorded is correct. They also should have matched the

    Form 9540-1 documents to the delivery reports when they discovered it rather than deciding that

    its not necessary for the audit. They should also have investigated more on the time lag between

    the date the meat arrived in the port and the time the meat arrived in the warehouse. Analytical

    procedures could also be done by comparing the prepaid inventory with sales, and comparing

    prepaid inventory during each year.

    6. The audit firm has a responsibility of informing the client about their internal control weaknessesand suggesting solutions for these weaknesses. Cohn would not be able to insist these to the

    owners so the auditors should have insisted to change and improve the internal controls. After

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    which, they could have observed whether the company would follow their proposals and continue

    to do so.