# Freeman & Mills

## About


- Verified: Yes

## Services

### M&A Accounting Services
- [Financial Due Diligence](https://bilarna.com/services/manda-accounting-services/financial-due-diligence)

## Frequently Asked Questions

**Q: What is forensic accounting and what does a forensic accountant do?**
A: Forensic accounting is a specialized field of accounting that investigates financial discrepancies and fraud by applying accounting, auditing, and investigative skills to legal matters. A forensic accountant's primary role is to analyze, interpret, and summarize complex financial data to uncover evidence for legal proceedings. Their duties include tracing illicit funds, calculating economic damages in disputes, valuing businesses, and providing expert witness testimony in court. They are often engaged in cases of embezzlement, money laundering, securities fraud, and breach of contract. This work requires not only deep accounting knowledge but also an understanding of legal systems and the ability to communicate findings clearly to judges and juries.

**Q: What are the most common types of financial fraud investigated by forensic accountants?**
A: Forensic accountants most commonly investigate asset misappropriation, financial statement fraud, and corruption. Asset misappropriation, such as employee theft or embezzlement, is the most frequent, involving schemes like fraudulent disbursements, payroll fraud, or inventory theft. Financial statement fraud involves the intentional manipulation of a company's financial reports to deceive stakeholders, often through revenue overstatement, understating liabilities, or improper asset valuation. Corruption cases include bribery, kickbacks, conflicts of interest, and illegal gratuities. Other prevalent areas include money laundering, where illicit funds are disguised as legitimate, and securities fraud like insider trading or Ponzi schemes. These investigations require meticulous examination of transactions, digital records, and communication trails to establish intent and quantify losses.

**Q: How does forensic accounting differ from traditional auditing?**
A: Forensic accounting differs from traditional auditing primarily in its objective, scope, and mindset. Traditional auditing is a systematic, periodic review designed to provide reasonable assurance that financial statements are free from material misstatement, focusing on compliance and accuracy. It is proactive and preventive. In contrast, forensic accounting is reactive and investigative, initiated in response to a specific suspicion or allegation of fraud, dispute, or litigation. Its objective is to uncover evidence, determine culpability, and quantify losses for legal proceedings. While auditors test samples for errors, forensic accountants examine specific transactions in depth, often reconstructing events and following a money trail. Forensic work requires a skeptical, investigative mindset and often involves testifying in court, whereas auditors provide an opinion on financial statements for stakeholders.

## Links

- Profile: https://bilarna.com/provider/freemanmills
- Structured data: https://bilarna.com/provider/freemanmills/agent.json
- API schema: https://bilarna.com/provider/freemanmills/openapi.yaml
