Your buddy mentioned that she is thinking about suing under the qui tam law. You

Your buddy mentioned that she is thinking about suing under the qui tam law. You are not sure what that is.
a. Whatisaquitamprovision? b. Can employees who do not work for the govern- ment sue under this provision? c. Should the IRS offer a qui tam provision to reward citizens who help the government recover unpaid taxes? How many people would you “rat out” if you knew that you could collect, say, 20% of the unpaid taxes, fines, and penalties collected by the government? 4. Should whistleblower laws be transformed into mandatory rules that impose punishment on any person who has knowledge of a major financial reporting violation but knowingly fails to act? 5. Should the amount of the reward given to a whistle- blower depend on whether the whistleblower acted out of the purest of motives, rather than greed or a desire to impose revenge on an employer or a coworker?
6. Should coconspirators in any criminal matter be allowed to testify in court? If a whistleblower partic- ipated in perpetrating accounting fraud, should she be eligible to collect a whistleblower reward? 10. You currently work in the SEC reporting division of a midsize, publicly traded company. The com- pany has a Board of Directors and an Audit Com- mittee. You have worked there for three years, and you have a cordial but professional relationship with your direct supervisor. The company has a hotline for reporting “improper accounting, fraud, embezzlement, and other misconduct.” The hotline accepts anony- mous calls and is staffed by a division of a law firm that specializes in ethics and corporate com- pliance. The company also has a Code of Con- duct that strictly prohibits retaliation against any employee who reasonably believes that misconduct has occurred. In each of the following cases, state whether the likelihood of you reporting miscon- duct to your direct supervisor is Low, Medium, or High: A/ Late at night, you saw a colleague place anexpen- sive art object from the company’s front lobby in the trunk of his car and drive away. B/ Late at night, you saw the company CEO place an expensive art object from the company’s front lobby in the trunk of his car and drive away. C/ You were asked to improperly classify factory rent in General Overhead. It correctly should be capitalized as an element of Work in Process Inventory. Your colleague told you that, by doing this, the company’s Gross Profit Margin on sales would be higher, at least in the short run. This will lead stock market analysts to upgrade the com- pany’s stock. D/ You saw a colleague deliberately book a single sale twice. This results in reported Sales being too high. E/ You saw a colleague deliberately move a sale from January, Year 2, into December, Year 1, by alter- ing the shipping and invoice dates. F/ Your company sustained a loss when a burglary occurred. The actual loss was $30,000, but your colleague exaggerated this loss, filing a claim with the company’s insurer to recover for a $70,000 loss. G/ A client offered you a bribe during the course of an audit to “look the other way” and accel- erate the recording of an installment sale to a high-risk customer entirely into the year that goods were delivered. Under GAAP

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