Connect with us

Accounting

Meet every accounting firm’s nightmare: Jackie Marie Peters

Published

on

And just who, you may be asking, is Jackie Marie Peters? Put simply, Jackie Marie is your firm’s biggest nightmare.

No, she’s not a client who never delivers her documents on time, or never pays her bill. Nor is she a staff member refusing to work 80 hours a week in tax season, or an overworked IRS employee who keeps you on hold and then can’t answer your question. She’s not even a member of Congress.

No, Jackie Marie is a real, actual nightmare. She’s a fraudster who was recently sentenced to 18 months in prison for her role in a scheme that involved hacking into the network of an accounting firm in Arizona and modifying the in-progress tax documents of more than 40 clients to inflate their refunds, and then arranging for those refunds (and some COVID relief payments) to be paid into bank accounts that she established and controlled — all without the knowledge of the taxpayers or the firm. She got away with more than $2.5 million.

jail2-fotolia.jpg

You may tell yourself that your firm is too small for this, but this was a local CPA practice, not some Big Four firm.

You may tell yourself that you’d notice this kind of activity right away, but Jackie Marie and her confederates were inside the target firm’s network for two years — from 2020 to 2022.

You may tell yourself that this kind of thing doesn’t happen that often, but it does — and it’s going to happen more, as the capabilities of fraudsters expand through artificial intelligence, massive increases in computer power, and our ever-growing reliance on technology.

The obvious answer is never to use technology at all, but since that horse is out of the barn, start by keeping these three facts in mind:

  • Everyone is vulnerable. Jackie Marie doesn’t care how big you are; in fact, she and her ilk may target smaller firms more often, on the theory that they’re less focused on security. Remember — she only needed 40 clients. You have 40 tax prep clients, right?
  • Security is primarily a people problem. By far the most common vector for an attack is less-than-vigilant staffers — those who click on phishing emails, or share passwords or private information, or otherwise give cybercriminals the one chance they need to get inside.
  • Strong security starts at the top. It may be a people problem, but people won’t pay attention to it unless the leaders of the firm do. When staff see partners calling out unsafe behavior, complying with safety measures, and otherwise prioritizing good IT hygiene, they’ll start to focus on it, too.

It’s time to bolster your cybersecurity. After all, while you may be safe from Jackie Marie for the next 18 months, there are literally thousands of people just like her out there right now.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Accounting

AI for CAS powerful, but fragmentation blunts potential

Published

on


When it comes to AI in accounting, the future is already here but not everyone seems to have noticed.

Continue Reading

Accounting

Managing expectations key to AI implementation for CAS

Published

on

AI implementation at a CAS practice is hard enough, but it becomes even more so when people don’t fully understand what AI can and cannot do. 

Speaking during the Information Technology Alliance’s spring collaborative in Memphis, Tennessee, Jessica Barnas, the partner leading the finance and accounting solutions advisory group for top 25 firm Wipfli, lamented that public discourse around AI has given people the impression it’s some sort of magic wand that can fix anything, which then leads to unrealistic expectations around its capabilities. 

“I talked to a lot of clients, I think they think that AI is like an elf that jumps out of the box and does things magically. They just say, ‘Can’t AI do that?’ I even had one of our partners [tell me this recently], we’re working on a five year revenue prediction—he said, ‘Well, can’t you just upload that to Copilot and have it spin up the business plan and everything?’ and I’m like, ‘Do you have any idea how generative AI works? It doesn’t do that.’ But I think that there’s just this misconception [that], oh, technology it is just this magic wand that’s going to make all of my accounting problems disappear,” Barnas said. 

Chris Gallo, director of outsourced business accounting services with Kansas-based firm Creative Planning and another one of the panelists, made a similar point, saying that it’s important to be realistic about what technology can do. While it can do a lot, he echoed Barnas in saying that some people seem to think it is magic. 

“If we believed everything that everybody told us you would be flying around in flying cars right now. I think we need to kind of take it with a grain of salt at some point. Because why wouldn’t we just say ‘ChatGPT build me a flying car,’ and then the bot people that you know Tesla’s building will just go do that. Right? It becomes a little bit ridiculous at some point too… There’s a lot of expectation, or unaligned expectations,” said Gallo. 

Misconceptions about AI capabilities also serve to drive fear on the part of accountants. Barnas said that a big part of the change management process when it comes to implementing AI is allaying fears from staff that they’re not going to fire everyone and replace them with bots. While there have been major improvements in AI over the years, she does not believe it is in the position to wholesale replace human accountants just yet. Instead, it has become a great way to augment those humans and make them more competitive against the humans who are not using AI. 

“They think ‘AI will eliminate my job!’ So we talk about our philosophy. We’re looking to adopt these tools to help you get bigger and better and embrace the advisory role, but the only way AI will replace you is if a person using AI will replace you. You need to give that level of comfort to your teams so that everyone knows we’re just trying to get better, we’re just picking up new tools, this is not a replacement for you,” Barnas said. 

There is a similar fear when it comes to billable hours, also explored in another panel (see other story), of what happens when a process that normally takes 8 hours now only takes 1. Barnas first described the billable hour as “the enemy of all of us here in the room” but also conceded it is a real anxiety for practices that have built their foundation on it. She suggested, in response to this concern, to take a page from Google and encourage people to develop pet projects using AI and rewarding them if it turns into something useful for the entire team; and if it really does lead to a reduction in billable hours, don’t punish people with less money when they’ve done what you wanted them do in the first place. Overall, a firm’s business model should not be one that punishes efficiency: a practice should value results, not burning hours. She conceded that, for certain firms set in their ways, this might need retraining. 

“Okay, I took this process down from seven hours to half hour every week. Now what? Teach me how to do advisory. Because being a CFO, doing modeling and projections, it is not something [you learn] from reading a book or sitting in on one webinar. We would all be doing that if that were the case. So how can we train our teams on what to do next? All of that is involved in change management: being a guide and providing the safety for each step,” she said. 

Gregg Landers, the last panelist and managing director of client accounting and advisory services and internal control services with Top 10 firm CBIZ, talked about how a lot of the misunderstandings and misconceptions regarding AI can be allayed from people just experimenting with it themselves, which not only lets them get a better impression of its current capabilities but will train them in using those capabilities to their fullest potential. 

“I’ve been encouraging some of my teams to use their personal generative AI a little Black Mirror-like, [where you] keep talking to it, and it talks back. You get accustomed to how to give a context, how to get better answers. Sometimes, if you’re nice to it, [you get] a tighter answer than if you’re not. So experiment around with it. 

He gave an example from his own life, where he needed to learn more about digital services taxes. Through an extended conversation with an LLM  he was able to understand what the DST is and how it works and how accountants manage it. He was able to get good outputs from the model, though, because previous experience taught him that he needs to provide more context and information for a decent answer, because these models can get tripped up by ambiguities. He compared it to a fortune cookie that could be interrupted in many ways, people should be clear and concise when prompting AIs. 

“We’ve become a society of fortune cookies. I may ask ‘how is that project going’ and you tell me ‘it’s going good’ but what I mean is ‘is it on time?’ and what you might mean is ‘I had this hiccup that put me two weeks behind but now it is resolved so it is good.’ We can’t have fortune cookies when interacting with generative AI. You need clear, concise, contextual communication,” he said.

Continue Reading

Accounting

Deloitte to move North American headquarters to Hudson Yards

Published

on

Deloitte is moving its North American headquarters to Hudson Yards in New York City.

The Big Four Firm committed to 800,000 square feet of the 1.1 million-square-foot tower known as 70 Hudson Yards, the Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday. Deloitte has been headquartered at 30 Rockefeller Plaza since January 2011.

A logo sits above the head office of Deloitte LLP in Warsaw, Poland, on Monday, Jan. 9, 2017. Investors in Poland are betting that the nation’s central bank will raise its benchmark rate faster than stated. Photographer: Piotr Malecki/Bloomberg

Related Companies, the real estate developer behind the more-than 60-floor tower, reportedly reached an agreement with Deloitte before construction even began, which is slated for June.

Related Companies and Oxford Properties Group, the codeveloper of Hudson Yards, declined to comment. Deloitte did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

KPMG is also planning to move its headquarters to Manhattan’s West Side. In August 2022, it announced it would move by the end of 2025 and downsize its office space by over 40%. 

KPMG currently leases approximately 800,000 square feet at 345 Park Avenue, where its worldwide headquarters are located, as well as 560 Lexington avenue and 1350 Sixth Avenue. In its relocated headquarters, it will occupy approximately 450,000 square feet across 12 floors in the new 58-story Two Manhattan West building, which finished construction in January 2024.

Continue Reading

Trending