Long Island Chapter of the Association of Licensed Certified Fraud Examiners

LICFE
Newsletter

June 2000

Association of Certified Fraud Examiners

LONG ISLAND CHAPTER

NEWSLETTER

Vol. 2, Issue 3

June, 2000

Board of Directors:

David E. Zeldin, MPS, CFE, CFC, DABFE, FACFE
  President
Det. Lt. Peter M. Calabrese, CFE
  Vice President, Investigations
Gregory J. Naclerio, Esq., JD, CFE
  Vice President, Membership
Robert L. Goldfarb, CFE, CPA, DABFE, DABFA
  Vice President, Educational Programs
Donna N. Karp, CFE
  Recording Secretary
Margaret C. McArdle, CFE, CPA
  Treasurer
Jane R. Buck, Esq., JD, CFE
  Corresponding Secretary
Stephen E. Cleary, CFE
  Sergeant-at-Arms
Barry L. Pulchin, CPA, CFE, CVA, DABFA
  Member At-Large
Dennis Langel, CFE
  Member At-Large
Joan S. Wellstead, CFE
  Member At-Large
Gregory L. Somma, CFC
  Member At-Large
 Director of Administration

Committee Chairpersons
(Alphabetically)
*Board Member’s Committee Assignments Not Listed
Marisol Amarat
  Chairperson, Public Relations Committee 
  Vice-Chairperson, Meetings & Seminar Committee
Det. James Byrne, CFE
  Vice-Chairperson, Investigations
Committee
Camilia ElDidi
  Vice-Chairperson, Membership Committee
Frank Kollmann, CFE, FCLS
  Co-Chariperson,Investigations Committee
Stephen A. Linker, CPA, DABF
  Vice-Chairperson, By-Laws Committee
Stephen J. Mannhaupt, CPA
  Vice-Chairperson, Finance & Audit Committee
John F. Matula, CFE
  Chairperson, Internet Committee
Susan Nash, CFC
   Vice-Chairperson, Internet Committee
Mark S. Warshavsky, CPA, CVA, CFE
  Chairperson, Newsletter Committee 

Newsletter Editor:
Mark S. Warshavsky, CPA, CVA, CFE, 

Editorial Staff:
Jane R. Buck, Esq., JD, CFE
Donna N. Karp, CFE
Joseph Croce, CFE
Camilia ElDidi

 Chapter Office:
87 Bethpage Road
Hicksville, NY 11801
Telephone: (516) 931-0010
Fax:               (516) 931-0008
E-mail:         info@licfe.org
Internet:       www.licfe.org

 

PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE

DAVID E. ZELDIN, M.P.S., CFE, CFC, CSC, DABFE, FACFE

For those of you who didn't make it to the May 11th ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION, you missed an event that received an overwhelming "Thumbs Up" from everyone present. The evening proved to be so enlightening that we have received many requests to have at least two such meetings a year. We will be planning another one for sometime in the fall.

LICFE has a very busy schedule during the next few months. It is very gratifying to see the level of participation and enthusiasm that our chapter has generated. We are still trying to build our organization. So, please, if you haven't sent in your dues yet or haven't sent any new members to the chapter, please do so immediately.

In other parts of this newsletter you will note that the busy schedule, alluded to above, includes a full day seminar for 8 CPE Credits: "FRAUD DETECTION IN A MATRIMONIAL ACTION: A MOCK TRIAL" which will be on Tuesday, June 13th from 8:30 AM-5:00 PM, at the Westbury Manor. For those of you who participated in our previous seminar, you will remember the professionalism of our "educational partner", the Long Island Chapter of NCCPAP. This seminar will also be in conjunction with NCCPAP. The CPE credits will be awarded from NCCPAP, so that they are fully acceptable for both CPAs and CFEs.

The next event will be a joint Barbecue, with the Long Island Chapter of ASIS (American Society for Industrial Security), on Tuesday, June 27th at 6:00 PM, at the Westbury Manor. Members are encouraged to attend for the networking and the Westbury Manor's version of a Bar-B-Q.

After a very busy June, LICFE's regular July 11th meeting, for 2 CPE credits, will be at 6:00 PM, at the Westbury Manor. There are two wonderful presentations planned. The Guest Speaker will be Cynthia Hetherington, MLS, Competitive Intelligence Professional, researcher, and nationally renowned lecturer. Joseph J. Croce, CFE (Det. NYPD, Ret.), Vice-President of Fraud Investigations of Sothebys.com, will do a 30 minute presentation entitled "E-Commerce Fraud." This second presentation will be in lieu of our normal "Case of the Month."

Finally, LICFE is a co-sponsor and will be an exhibitor at the 11th Annual Fraud Conference and Trade Show between July 30th and August 4th, at the New York Marriott Marquis. For more information, check http://www.cfenet.com/conference.

You should try to get into the habit of checking our website (www.licfe.org) at least twice each month, to keep up with any new information and announcements. Also, if you have not checked your own directory listing, please do so. If you are either not listed, or have any changes, please e-mail them to me at info@licfe.org. Finally, from our membership standpoint, we are in the final stages of the preparation of new Membership Certificates, which will be mailed to all paid members shortly. I hope to see everyone at the Seminar, Meetings and Conference.

                                           Very truly yours,

                                        David E. Zeldin

                                                      President

 

FRAUD DETECTION IN A MATRIMONIAL ACTION:
A MOCK TRIAL

Morning Sessions:

Topic

Presenter

Supervising a Fraud Engagement

Diane Wolmack, CPA, CFE

Proper Investigation Techniques

David E. Zeldin, CFE, CFC, DABFE, FACFE, CSC

Interview of a Propertied Spouse: Forensic Accounting Issues

Stephen A. Linker, CPA, DABFA

Forensic Procedures

Steven A. Goldstein, CPA, CFE

Afternoon:

THE MOCK TRIAL

Honorable Peter Skelos, J.S.C., presiding

For the Plaintiff

Gabriel S. Kohn, Esq., Counselor at Law
Joel A. Rakower, CPA
John F. Matula, CFE, Private Investigator

For the Defendant

Charles J. McEvily, Esq., Counselor at Law
Martin P. Randisi, CPA, ASA

 

REGISTER NOW FOR THE LICFE/NCCPAP FULL DAY SEMINAR

TUESDAY, JUNE 13, 2000  8:30AM – 5:00 PM AT THE WESTBURY MANOR

(Jericho Turnpike, 1/3 mile east of Glen Cove Road)

Registration and Continental Breakfast 7:30 AM

To register, submit a separate application for each participant. Duplicate this form as necessary. Mail to: LICFE – 87 Bethpage Road, Hicksville, NY 11801 (Credit card payments may be faxed to 516-931-0008. Credit cards are processed through Spectrum Associates).

Name:                                                                                     

Title/Designation:                                                                              

Company Name                                                                                                                   

Address:                                                                                                                               

Phone:                                                                                    

License Number:                                                                                

 

All attendees will receive CPE certificates. Handouts, literature, continental breakfast and lunch included.

Fee:        $150 Members                     $175 Non-Members            Make checks payable to LICFE

 

Charge to credit card #                                                                      

Expiration                                                                             

Circle one:            AMEX    VISA      M/C        Signature of Cardholder                                                                                    

 

Please circle appropriate membership:      Member of LICFE           Member of NCCPAP

                                                                    Member of both              Not a member of either

 

UPCOMING    CHAPTER    EVENTS   -- LOOK    WHAT’S    IN    STORE    THIS    SUMMER!

 

FUN FUN FUN!
& GOOD FOOD, TOO
at the joint LICFE/ASIS Barbecue

Tuesday, June 27th 6PM at the Westbury Manor

CHAPTER DINNER MEETING
Tuesday July 11th  6PM at the Westbury Manor
 SPECIAL GUEST SPEAKER
CYNTHIA HETHERINGTON, MLS
Competitive Intelligence Professional
plus
 “E-COMMERCE FRAUD”
Presented by
Joseph J. Croce, CFE (Det. NYPD, ret.)

Vice-President – Fraud Investigations
Sothebys.com

What a great way to enjoy yourself while networking and building your contacts! No CPE credits for this event, but worthwhile nevertheless! Everyone needs some rest and relaxation, and with this crowd, how can you lose!! 

RAIN OR SHINE!

 

Email your reservations now to info@licfe.org or fax them to LICFE at 516-516-931-0008

 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sex.com Saga Still Sizzling by Craig Bicknell

Few people would dispute that sex.com is a valuable piece of online property. Stephen Cohen wouldn't: He's the ex-convict who runs sex.com and claims it's the top-grossing porn site on the Web, snaring millions of dollars a month. Neither would sex.com's original owner, Net entrepreneur Gary Kremen, who sued two years ago to reclaim the domain he says Cohen stole by forging a phony transfer letter to domain registrar Network Solutions. With millions at stake, Kremen sued both Cohen and Network Solutions.

There are those, however, who would argue that online property, valuable or not, isn't property at all. Unfortunately for Kremen, one of those people is Judge James Ware, who's presiding over Kremen's case against Network Solutions in U.S. District Court in San Jose, California. ….Ware granted a summary judgment in favor of NSI, based in part on the ruling that domains are not property, and are therefore not subject To property law.

"The court leaves it to the Legislature to fashion an appropriate statutory scheme to protect dormant domain names unprotected by trademark law," Ware wrote in his ruling. 

Kremen is furious. "It's ridiculous. If you follow the logic here, it's open season for stealing domains. If I go hijack your domain and use it for a year, you have absolutely no recourse." Kremen plans to appeal. (His separate suit against Stephen Cohen is still pending.)

Kremen's wrath may be justified, but it should be directed at the law, not the judge, several legal experts say. "The court points out, rightly, that the law has yet to catch up with the Internet, and it would be overreaching if it ruled for the plaintiff," said Sally Abel, a trademark lawyer at Fenwick and West in Palo Alto, California. "The judge is right -- at this time."

At the heart of the property dispute is whether domains are more akin to a plot of land (obviously, property) or to a phone number, which is considered a designation for a service and not property in and of itself. Network Solutions argues that it's like a phone company, and that domain names are like phone numbers. "A domain name is not property, it's a service," said Phil Sbarbaro, Network Solution's litigation attorney. "To say people buy and sell domain names is the vernacular, but it's not accurate," he said. What they're doing is authorizing Network Solutions to transfer the service it provides to a new customer, he said. Others think that's oversimplifying.

"Domains have many of the attributes of property," said Rob Phillips, an intellectual property lawyer in the Silicon Valley office of Howrey Simon Arnold & White. "People pay a lot of money for them, they create a huge amount of value, and they exist, albeit in computer form. If they're not property, what are they?" If domains are property, they can be stolen -- "converted" in legalese --just like a car, and the victim of the theft is entitled to recover monetary damages. If they're not property, they can't be converted, and claims for recompense fall by the wayside. Kremen hopes to reclaim the millions Cohen has made running sex.com since the alleged theft. That will be much harder to do if Kremen can't legally claim that Cohen has stolen his property.

In his ruling on Network Solutions case, Judge Ware acknowledged the uncertainty of property law as it applies to domains, but emphasized that the job of clarifying the legal standing of domains rests with the Legislature, not the courts.

"The court recognizes that the present action invites abandoning the traditional strictures of conversion to encompass forms of intangible property," he wrote. "However, this court heeds the California Supreme Court's admonitions to exercise restraint in imposing (new tort duties) when to do so would involve complex policy decisions ... the court is reluctant to construct the proverbial slippery slope. "Whether or not the judge made the right call on property law, he was right to rule in favor of Network Solutions for other reasons, experts said. NSI can't be blamed if it was duped by a single piece of forged correspondence among the millions of letters and emails it receives.

"Who are they, the Internet traffic cops in the sky?" Abel said.

Kremen's legitimate legal beef is with Cohen, lawyers said, and he still has a good chance of winning that case, whether or not sex.com is considered property. "There was still allegedly a fraud perpetrated," Phillips said. "If Kremen can prove that it was a forgery, than he could get a court order declaring the transfer was fraudulent and ordering NSI to transfer it back. Then the jury could award compensatory damages."

The case is scheduled to go to trial in March 2001.

Reprinted by permission.


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Long Island Chapter of Association of Certified Fraud Examiners (CFE)
NEW Long Island Chapter Office:
400 Garden City Plaza, Fifth Floor
Garden City, NY 11530
Tel: (212) 973-1000 x4383    
Fax: (212) 973-1004
E-mail: JLemanski@mwellp.com
Internet: http://www.licfe.org