KPMG: Fraud cases rise in Scottish courts sparking concern over economic crime
The number of alleged fraud cases being heard in Scottish courts rose dramatically last year, according to KPMG UK’s latest Fraud Barometer.
A total of 16 cases totalling £5.9 million reached Scottish courts in 2021, skyrocketing from 2020 when only one case worth £240,000 came to light.
The dramatic increase is believed to be a result of the combination of rising instances of fraud brought on due to the pandemic and courts working through a backlog of cases that built up because of initial restrictive Covid measures throughout 2020.
Most cases had a value of between £100,000 – £250,000, however one was worth over £1.1m. Eight of the 16 cases in Scotland concerned commercial businesses, all of which were targeted by their own employees or management.
Annette Barker, head of KPMG forensic in the UK, said: “Rising fraud cases in Scotland reflect the changing environment criminals have adapted to in the past 12 months. Covid-19 changed many aspects of our working lives and how businesses operate, creating more means, opportunity, and motive for people to commit fraud.
“While cases have risen in Scotland for all forms of fraud, it is promising to see more cases being detected and brought to court. It’s increasingly important for organisations and the public to be aware of increased threats, particularly online fraud, and implement preventative measures where possible to reduce their risk of falling victim.”
Case studies to reach Scottish courts during 2021 include:
- A shop owner was charged with fraudulently evading £1.1m in tax by supressing the total value of sales submitted in quarterly VAT returns. Prosecutors stated the individual did this with the “intent to deceive.”
- An operations admin assistant pleaded guilty to embezzling £500k from a college. She purchased IT equipment using the college’s bank accounts and then sold the items on for personal profit.
- A man pleaded guilty to embezzling £245k from his employer to fund his gambling addiction. The finance officer, who was responsible for payroll, deliberately overpaid companies and then requested the firms to refund the surplus back into his personal bank account. The fraud was uncovered during an audit which identified discrepancies.
The number of alleged fraud cases heard in UK courts in 2021 went up by 66 per cent compared to the same time in 2020. Despite another lengthy COVID-19 lockdown at the start of 2021, UK courts appear to have got back on their feet and made headway with the backlog of cases that built up because of initial Covid-19 measures.
Figures from KPMG UK’s Fraud Barometer found 298 alleged fraud cases were heard during 2021 (up from 180 in 2020). Yet the opposite trend was seen in terms of fraud value: the Fraud Barometer figures, which records alleged fraud cases with a value of £100k and above, saw the total value of fraud reaching UK courts in 2021 fall significantly from £724m in 2020 to £444.7m in 2021.
Whilst cases in UK courts provide an indicator of fraud activity, these cases are small in the context of fraud crime reported to Action Fraud. Between 2020 and 2021 there were 875,622 reports made to Action Fraud with a reported loss value of £2.35bn, pointing out the stark reality that relatively few cases are brought to court.
When analysing the data in more detail, it appears that there weren’t any high-value fraud cases over £50m last year, rather it was the lower value crimes that increased in both value and prevalence. Fraud cases worth between £100k and £5m rose from 164 in 2020 with a value of £100.3m, to a total of 285 in 2021 to the value of £178m.
Perpetrators of fraud continued to take advantage of the general public – in 2021, 93 cases of fraud were committed against a member of the public, to the total value of just under £116m, compared with 39 in 2020 totalling £33.3m.
Roy Waligora, partner and head of UK investigations at KPMG, said: “With the introduction of the BEIS White Paper and heightened focus on fraud, I would hope that it has helped tackle the prevalence of high-value fraud. With increased controls, it is only logical that less of these crimes slip through the net. In 2020, there was a £200m film piracy case which accounted for 28 per cent of the fraud value reported, hence why there has been such a significant fall in fraud values. With new regulation and heightened awareness of fraud, I hope cases as catastrophic as that one will no longer be seen in the future.
“Another reason for the fall in value could be that more complex cases are still being delayed as a result of the pandemic or are still currently being heard in court, and we will closely monitor for this in next year’s data.”