Horngren's Accounting Plus Mylab Accounting With Pearson Etext -- Access Card Package (12th Edition)
Horngren's Accounting Plus Mylab Accounting With Pearson Etext -- Access Card Package (12th Edition)
12th Edition
ISBN: 9780134674681
Author: Tracie L. Miller-Nobles, Brenda L. Mattison, Ella Mae Matsumura
Publisher: PEARSON
bartleby

Videos

Textbook Question
Book Icon
Chapter 24, Problem 24.1FC

Fraud Case 24-1

Everybody knew Ed McAlister was a brilliant businessman. He had taken a small garbage collection company in Kentucky and built it up to be one of the largest and most profitable waste management companies in the Midwest. But when he was convicted of a massive financial fraud, what surprised everyone was how crude and simple the scheme was. To keep the earnings up and the stock prices soaring, he and his coworkers came up with an almost foolishly simple scheme: First, they doubled the useful lives of the dumpsters. That allowed them to cut depreciation expense in half. The following year, they simply increased the estimated salvage value of the dumpsters, allowing them to further reduce depreciation expense. With thousands of dumpsters spread over 14 states, these simple adjustments gave the company an enormous boost to the bottom line. When it all came tumbling down, McAlister had to sell everything he owned to pay for his legal costs and was left with nothing.

Requirements

  1. If an asset has either too long a useful life or too high an estimated salvage value, what happens, from an accounting perspective, when that asset is worn out and has to be disposed of?
  2. Do the rules of GAAP (Generally Accepted Accounting Principles) mandate specific lives for different types of assets?
  3. How might either too long a useful life or too high an estimated salvage value affect key performance indicators such as return on investment and residual income?

Blurred answer
Students have asked these similar questions
May 13th, 1998, a Friday that will be remembered by a major Chicago bank. Embezzlers nearly escaped with $69 million! Arnand Moore, who was released after serving for years of his 11 years sentence for a $180,000 fraud, decided it was time to put his fingers and is something a little bigger and better. He instigated a $68.7 million fraud plan. Naming himself as “Chairman,” he assembled Herschel Bailey, Otis Wilson, Neal Jackson, Leonard Strickland, and Ronald Carson to complete the formation of his “board.” Most importantly, the “board” was able to convince an employee of the Chicago bank to provide their “in.” the caper required one month of planning in a small hotel in Chicago and took all of 64 minutes to complete.  The bank employee had worked for the Chicago bank for eight years, and he was employed in the bank's wire transfer section, which dispatches multimillion dollar sums around the world via computers and phone lines. Some of the bank's largest customers send funds from…
Consider each of the following situations.  Is there a potential problem?  Which part of the fraud triangle is involved, if any? A.  Susan is an accounts payable clerk.  She sets up creditors in a financial database and pays invoices as they come in.  Last year, she won employee of the year and is a valued employee.  Through the grapevine, Susan's boss just learned that Susan's brother has a gambling problem.   B.  Now suppose that Susan from situation A is now secretary for the head of the marketing department.  She keeps track of the vice president of marketing's schedule and handles the correspondence.   C.  Keith has been employed for 6 months as a teller at a community bank.  All is going well, and his cash drawer has had shortages only twice (of less than P500).  The shortages were traced and the problems corrected.   D.  At the company Memorial Day picnic and golf outing last week, Nancy noticed that June moved her ball to a better lie when she thought no one was looking.  There…
The Perfect Crime? Consider the following story of an actual embezzlement.This was the ingenious embezzler’s scheme: (a) He hired a print shop to print a private stock of Ajax Company checks in the company’s numerical sequence. (b) In his job as an accounts payable clerk at Ajax, he intercepted legitimate checks written by the accounts payable department and signed by the Ajax treasurer and destroyed them. (c) He substituted thesame numbered check from the private stock, payable to himself in the same amount as the legitimate check, and he “signed” it with a rubber stamp that looked enough like the Ajax Company treasurer’s signature to fool the paying bank. (d) He deposited the money in his own bank account. The bank statement reconciler (a different person) was able to agree the check numbers and amounts listed in the cleared items in the bank statement to the recorded cash disbursement (check number and amount) and thus did not notice the embezzler’s scheme.The embezzler was able to…

Chapter 24 Solutions

Horngren's Accounting Plus Mylab Accounting With Pearson Etext -- Access Card Package (12th Edition)

Ch. 24 - Prob. 11AQCCh. 24 - Prob. 1RQCh. 24 - Prob. 2RQCh. 24 - Prob. 3RQCh. 24 - Prob. 4RQCh. 24 - Prob. 5RQCh. 24 - Prob. 6RQCh. 24 - Prob. 7RQCh. 24 - Prob. 8RQCh. 24 - Prob. 9RQCh. 24 - 10. Explain the difference between a centralized...Ch. 24 - Prob. 11RQCh. 24 - Prob. 12RQCh. 24 - Prob. 13RQCh. 24 - Prob. 14RQCh. 24 - Prob. 15RQCh. 24 - Prob. 16RQCh. 24 - List the four types of responsibility centers, and...Ch. 24 - What is a performance evaluation system?Ch. 24 - What are the goals of a performance evaluation...Ch. 24 - Prob. 20RQCh. 24 - Prob. 21RQCh. 24 - Prob. 22RQCh. 24 - Prob. 23RQCh. 24 - Prob. 24RQCh. 24 - Prob. 25RQCh. 24 - Prob. 26RQCh. 24 - Prob. 27RQCh. 24 - Prob. 28RQCh. 24 - Prob. 29RQCh. 24 - Prob. 30RQCh. 24 - Prob. 31RQCh. 24 - Prob. 32RQCh. 24 - Prob. 33RQCh. 24 - What is a transfer price?Ch. 24 - Prob. 35ARQCh. 24 - Prob. 36ARQCh. 24 - Prob. S24.1SECh. 24 - Prob. S24.2SECh. 24 - Prob. S24.3SECh. 24 - Prob. S24.4SECh. 24 - Prob. S24.5SECh. 24 - Prob. S24.6SECh. 24 - Describing the balanced scorecard and identifying...Ch. 24 - Prob. S24.8SECh. 24 - Prob. S24.9SECh. 24 - Prob. S24.10SECh. 24 - Prob. S24.11SECh. 24 - Prob. S24.12SECh. 24 - Prob. S24A.13SECh. 24 - Prob. E24.14ECh. 24 - Prob. E24.15ECh. 24 - Prob. E24.16ECh. 24 - E24-17 Computing product costs in traditional and...Ch. 24 - Identifying responsibility centers after...Ch. 24 - Prob. E24.19ECh. 24 - Prob. E24.20ECh. 24 - Prob. E24.21ECh. 24 - Prob. E24.22ECh. 24 - Prob. E24.23ECh. 24 - Prob. E24.24ECh. 24 - Prob. E24.25ECh. 24 - Prob. E24.26ECh. 24 - Prob. P24.27APGACh. 24 - Prob. P24.28APGACh. 24 - Prob. P24.29APGACh. 24 - Prob. P24.30APGACh. 24 - Prob. P24.31APGACh. 24 - Prob. P24.32BPGBCh. 24 - Prob. P24.33BPGBCh. 24 - Prob. P24.34BPGBCh. 24 - Using ROI and Rl to evaluate investment centers...Ch. 24 - Prob. P24.36BPGBCh. 24 - Prob. P24.37CTCh. 24 - Continuing Problem P24-38 Using ROI and Rl to...Ch. 24 - Comprehensive Problem for Chapters 22-24 The...Ch. 24 - Comprehensive Problem for Chapters 22-24 The...Ch. 24 - Comprehensive Problem for Chapters 22-24 The...Ch. 24 - Comprehensive Problem for Chapters 22-24 The...Ch. 24 - Comprehensive Problem for Chapters 22-24 The...Ch. 24 - Comprehensive Problem for Chapters 22-24 The...Ch. 24 - Comprehensive Problem for Chapters 22-24 The...Ch. 24 - Comprehensive Problem for Chapters 22-24 The...Ch. 24 - Comprehensive Problem for Chapters 22-24 The...Ch. 24 - Comprehensive Problem for Chapters 22-24 The...Ch. 24 - Comprehensive Problem for Chapters 22-24 The...Ch. 24 - Comprehensive Problem for Chapters 22-24 The...Ch. 24 - Comprehensive Problem for Chapters 22-24 The...Ch. 24 - Comprehensive Problem for Chapters 22-24 The...Ch. 24 - Tying It All Together Case 24-1 Before you begin...Ch. 24 - Prob. 24.1DCCh. 24 - Prob. 24.1EICh. 24 - Fraud Case 24-1 Everybody knew Ed McAlister was a...
Knowledge Booster
Background pattern image
Accounting
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, accounting and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.
Similar questions
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
Recommended textbooks for you
Text book image
Auditing: A Risk Based-Approach (MindTap Course L...
Accounting
ISBN:9781337619455
Author:Karla M Johnstone, Audrey A. Gramling, Larry E. Rittenberg
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Text book image
Century 21 Accounting Multicolumn Journal
Accounting
ISBN:9781337679503
Author:Gilbertson
Publisher:Cengage
Text book image
Fundamentals of Financial Management (MindTap Cou...
Finance
ISBN:9781285867977
Author:Eugene F. Brigham, Joel F. Houston
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Text book image
Fundamentals of Financial Management (MindTap Cou...
Finance
ISBN:9781337395250
Author:Eugene F. Brigham, Joel F. Houston
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Computer Fraud; Author: Mitch Wenger (Accounting Systems & Tech);https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-s82SCuMaTI;License: Standard Youtube License