rie, the cashier, who deposits the receipts daily in the bank. Margaret, the recordkeeper, receives a copy of the list and posts payments to the patients' accounts. About once a month, the office clerks have an expensive lunch they pay for as follows. First Carrie endorses a patient's check in the doctor's name and cashes it at the bank.
Lena, Carrie, and Margaret work for a family physician. The doctor is knowledgeable about office management practices and has segregated the cash receipt duties as follows: Lena opens the mail and prepares a triplicate list of money received. Lena sends one copy of the list to Carrie, the cashier, who deposits the receipts daily in the bank. Margaret, the recordkeeper, receives a copy of the list and posts payments to the patients' accounts. About once a month, the office clerks have an expensive lunch they pay for as follows. First Carrie endorses a patient's check in the doctor's name and cashes it at the bank. Lena then destroys the remittance advice accompanying the check. Finally, Margaret posts payment to the customer's account as a miscellaneous credit. The three justify their actions by their relatively low pay and knowledge that the doctor will likely never miss the money.
- Would a bank reconciliation uncover this office fraud?
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