Professional Ethics: Heists and Internal Control Failures

Professional Ethics: Heists and Internal Control Failures

Description:
This webinar examines high-profile heists and thefts that occurred because of weak or failed internal controls, and the ethical lapses that enabled them. Through engaging, real-world case studies, participants will explore how breakdowns in control environment, monitoring, segregation of duties, and ethical culture can lead to catastrophic loss and reputational harm. The session highlights the connection between technical control weaknesses and ethical responsibility — showing not just what controls failed, but why professionals allowed them to fail.
 
Attendees will review illustrative examples where heists were not only a control problem, but an ethical failure: professionals ignored red flags, rationalized shortcuts, or failed to escalate risks, creating fertile ground for fraud and theft. This webinar bridges internal control frameworks with professional ethics, emphasizing accountability, vigilance, and ethical leadership.
 
Participants will investigate themes such as:

  • Inadequate segregation of duties enabling fraud schemes
  • Weak monitoring and oversight that masked theft
  • Ethical lapses in reporting risks and escalating concerns
  • Rationalizations and cultural norms that eroded controls
  • The ethical duty to design, implement, and test controls effectively

By studying these cases, professionals will deepen their understanding of how strong internal controls and ethical judgment together protect assets, stakeholders, and trust.
 
Learning objectives:

By the end of this webinar, participants will be able to:

  1. Explain how specific internal control failures contributed to heists and theft incidents.
  2. Recognize the ethical failures that accompany control breakdowns.
  3. Apply professional ethics principles to internal control design, evaluation, and reporting.
  4. Identify red flags and risk indicators linked to both unethical behavior and control weaknesses.
  5. Develop strategies to strengthen ethical culture and internal controls within their own organizations.

This session is ideal for CPAs, auditors, risk professionals, internal control designers, compliance officers, and other professionals seeking to connect ethical judgment with control effectiveness and fraud risk mitigation.
 
Course length:2.0hrs

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