SEC Bars CPAS Who Missed Fraud
Written by Bob Scott   
Tuesday, 07 June 2011 14:24

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William W. Wood Jr., Livingston & HaynesThe SEC has barred two Massachusetts CPAs from practice for failing to detect millions of dollars in fraudulent revenue reported by an online search service even though they were warned of issues. William W. Wood, Jr. and Kevin Howley drew the action and their firm Livingston & Haynes, was censured for issuing unqualified opinions regarding the 2005 and 2006 financial statements of Locate Plus whose former CEO and CFO generated revenue via a sham client company.

Howley, who served as engagement partner on most firm audits, and Wood, concurring partner on most work, can apply for reinstatement after three years and the firm must pay a $130,000 civil money penalty. The SEC says the two did not follow up the fact that the prior auditor had sent allegations from a former LocatePlus board member that the company had loaned $2 million to Andover Secured Resources, another phony unit. The prior auditor had also resigned in 2004, telling the client his concerns about the reliability of management's representations.

Many of the issues surround Omni Data, which was purportedly part of the channel for LocatePlus' services, databases that were searchable for individual's names, addresses and real estate holdings. In 2005 and 2006, Omni Data paid $300,000 a month for unlimited access to the data while LocatePlus was supposed to spend $500,000 to build a website for the client. LocatePlus reported $6 million in revenue from Omni Data, representing 25 percent of revenue for the two years.
However, Omni Data was a sham company and the accounting firm was unable to find any records of Omni Data in Connecticut, at times could not contact or even find a president of the company nor could the accountants locate a website, even thought Omni Data was supposedly selling data over the web. In August 2005, Howley received a call from a former LocatePlus board member who questioned the sales to Omni Data and said its president was Latorella's former girl friend, a ballet teacher.

To fund the Omni Data sales, Fields and Latorella funneled $2 million in cash to the company, which made its way back to LocatePlus. Among other issues was the fact that the contract to Omni Data was signed months before the firm was incorporated in Delaware.

When Howley and Wood met the former auditor in 2005, he added that reasons for his resignation included management's providing contradictory explanations and its providing unsigned contracts as audit evidence. Even after receiving the information from the informant, the two came to no conclusion about the allegations even though information was shared with the firm. In fact, in 2005 the firm identified "overstated and/or fictitious revenues/accounts receivable" relating to Omni Data.

Nevertheless, the firm accepted representations from management and the chairman of the client's audit committee that there was no truth to the allegations.


Bob Scott
About the author:
Bob Scott has provided information to the tax and accounting community since 1991, first as technology editor of Accounting Today, and from 1997 through 2009 as editor of its sister publication, Accounting Technology. He is known throughout the industry for his depth of knowledge and for his high journalistic standards.  
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Last Updated on Friday, 01 July 2011 02:53
 

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Comments (1)
Clean PCAOB inspection reports
1 Tuesday, 14 June 2011 11:44
jurisper
Reading the SEC admin release, I really question how the PCAOB could have given L&H clean inspection reports in 2006 and 2008. The audit failures must surely have been obvious from the work papers described in the release. The fraud at Locateplus was certainly obvious for years from even cursory review of the company's 10-K's.

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