Forensics Journal - Stevenson University 2013 | Page 16

FORENSICS JOURNAL What is meant by “financial forensic investigations”? Merriam-Webster’s on-line Dictionary defines the word “forensic” as, “belonging to, used in, or suitable to courts of judicature or to public discussion and debate” (“Definition: Forensic”). Financial investigations deal with investigations concerning the monetary aspects of criminal activity. The U.S. Federal Law Enforcement Training Center’s (FLETC) Financial Fraud Institute teaches a series of thirteen courses for federal law enforcement agencies. These courses cover the full spectrum of financial investigations: money-laundering, asset forfeiture, blackmarket money exchanges, and various fraud investigative techniques (“Financial Fraud Institute”). The focus of these investigations is to understand the financial components involved in these crimes and identify what violations might be prosecutable. As an example, a law enforcement agent conducting a money-laundering investigation has to understand both the mechanics of the transactions in question and how each transaction satisfies the elements of statutory criminal violations. Once discovered, such violations could be used to take action against the perpetrators. Using the money-laundering example, once evidence is discovered that federal laws were violated, the agent proceeds towards prosecution. The charges filed could include asset forfeiture counts to seize ill-gotten gains from bank accounts or property purchased by manipulating counterfeit monies. If the scheme involved a regulated industry, such as investments or insurance, regulatory code could be used to file cease and desist actions against the entity, block the principles from engaging in that industry again, and/or take the business into government receivership. The use of financial forensic investigations to identify criminal or regulatory violations in furtherance of prosecutions is a powerful weapon against crime. According to the “Financial [