Smart algorithms are being used to unearth fraudulent employee claims. AP
Smart algorithms are being used to unearth fraudulent employee claims. AP

Now AI can tell who's cheating on their expenses claims



One employee travelling for work checked his dog into a kennel and billed it to his boss as a hotel expense.

Another charged yoga classes to the corporate credit card as client entertainment. A third, after racking up a small fortune at a strip club, submitted the expense as a steakhouse business dinner.

These bogus expenses, which occurred recently at major US companies, have one thing in common: all were exposed by artificial intelligence algorithms that can in a matter of seconds sniff out fraudulent claims and forged receipts that are often undetectable to human auditors - certainly not without hours of tedious labor.

AppZen, an 18-month-old AI accounting start-up, has already signed up several big companies, including Amazon.com, IBM, Salesforce.com and Comcast and claims to have saved its clients $40 million in fraudulent expenses. AppZen and traditional firms like Oversight Systems say their technology isn’t erasing jobs - so far - but rather freeing up auditors to dig deeper into dubious claims and educate employees about travel and expense policies.

“People don’t have time to look at every expense item,” says AppZen chief executive Anant Kale. “We wanted to get AI to do it for them and to find things the human eye might miss.”

US companies, fearing damage to their reputations, are loath to acknowledge publicly how much money they lose each year on fraudulent expenses. But in a report released in April, the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners said it had analysed  2,700 fraud cases from January 2016 to October 2017 that resulted in losses of $7 billion.

The world’s largest anti-fraud organisation found travel and expense embezzlement typically accounts for about 14 per cent of employee fraud. It has become easier to fool finance departments thanks to websites such as fakereceipts.us that make it easy to create a bogus paper trail.

For years, forensic accountants like Tiffany Couch, the founder of Acuity Forensics, have had to do the sleuthing one receipt at a time. In one case, she exposed $1.4m worth of fabricated receipts; in another, Ms Couch outed three car parts executives who claimed thousands of dollars in expenses on a decadent weekend trip to Canada with their wives. But, despite such successes, she says the advent of artificial intelligence is long overdue. “It’s an auditor’s worst nightmare to go through expense claim reimbursement,” she says.

Mr Kale, who has a background in finance and technology, created his firm after discovering how antiquated back office expense systems had become. Only about 20 per cent of claims were being scrutinised and in most cases auditors were just trying to match the amount on a receipt to the expense submitted, he says.

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AppZen, which is based in San Jose, California, can audit 100 per cent of claims in real-time by running receipts through an algorithm that hunts for duplication, discrepancies or inflated expenses. It reimburses legitimate employee expenses on the same day and kicks back any dubious claims to human auditors for further investigation. The algorithm can compare the average cost of a flight from New York to Chicago against the amount claimed and will flag it if the price seems exorbitant for that day (or if the employee upgraded their flight to first class). It will also sound the alarm if a company listed on a receipt doesn’t exist or if a strip club is masquerading as a steakhouse.

The algorithms have already exposed some creative - and costly - frauds: employees tacking on bottles of vodka to their “work lunch” bill; buying $3,000 worth of Starbucks gift cards; and claiming it as “coffee with a contact”. One employee claimed her $900 office farewell party and submitted one that contained an animated photograph of her face instead of any receipts - demonstrating how seriously she took the auditors.

A number of Indian tech companies, including Wipro, have started offering AI-based fraud detection services similar to the one offered by AppZen. Oversight Systems, which is based in Atlanta, began using an early version of AI several years ago and its machine learning technologies now make it possible to scrutinise millions of transactions in real time.

According to Oversight, 30 per cent of employee expense claims are risky, wasteful and potentially fraudulent. “You’ll be amazed at what people will try and do,” says chief executive Terrence McCrossan.

Will artificial intelligence ever completely replace human auditors?

Guido van Drunen, a principal in KPMG’s Forensic Advisory Services, believes some lower-level jobs will disappear as more and more companies adopt the technology in the coming years. But he says there’s no way AI can spot all the sneaky ways employees try to defraud their employers.

He recalls being called in after an employee claimed for a live python. “Everyone was jumping up and down saying it was a fraud,” he says. Upon further investigation, Mr van Drunen discovered the individual worked in sales and had bought the constrictor snake as a marketing ploy for the launch of a new product called Python.

While the snake could be justified, the employee’s purchase of $1,200 worth of steak as snake food could not. Pythons only consume live prey.

“The python was a legitimate business purchase,” Mr van Drunen says.

“But the steak was for his family barbecues.”

Electoral College Victory

Trump has so far secured 295 Electoral College votes, according to the Associated Press, exceeding the 270 needed to win. Only Nevada and Arizona remain to be called, and both swing states are leaning Republican. Trump swept all five remaining swing states, North Carolina, Georgia, Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin, sealing his path to victory and giving him a strong mandate. 

 

Popular Vote Tally

The count is ongoing, but Trump currently leads with nearly 51 per cent of the popular vote to Harris’s 47.6 per cent. Trump has over 72.2 million votes, while Harris trails with approximately 67.4 million.

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December 11: 'My husband died, so what happens to the Dh240,000 he owes in the UAE?'

JL, a housewife from India, wrote to us about her husband, who died earlier this month. He left behind an outstanding loan of Dh240,000 and she was hoping to pay it off with an insurance policy he had taken out. She also wanted to recover some of her husband’s end-of-service liabilities to help support her and her son.

“I have no words to thank you for helping me out,” she wrote to The Debt Panel after receiving the panellists' comments. “The advice has given me an idea of the present status of the loan and how to take it up further. I will draft a letter and send it to the email ID on the bank’s website along with the death certificate. I hope and pray to find a way out of this.”

November 26:  ‘I owe Dh100,000 because my employer has not paid me for a year’

SL, a financial services employee from India, left the UAE in June after quitting his job because his employer had not paid him since November 2018. He owes Dh103,800 on four debts and was told by the panellists he may be able to use the insolvency law to solve his issue. 

SL thanked the panellists for their efforts. "Indeed, I have some clarity on the consequence of the case and the next steps to take regarding my situation," he says. "Hopefully, I will be able to provide a positive testimony soon."

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MS, an energy sector employee from South Africa, left the UAE in August after losing his Dh12,000 job. He was struggling to meet the repayments while securing a new position in the UAE and feared he would be detained if he returned. He has now secured a new job and will return to the Emirates this month.

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