Improper Revenue Recognition and the SEC Whistleblower Program

On September 7, 2017, the SEC announced that financial services firm State Street agreed to pay more than $35 million to settle charges that it fraudulently charged secret mark-ups for transition management services. According to the SEC’s order, the scheme generated approximately $20 million in improper revenue for the firm. After a client discovered the overbilling scheme, State Street attempted to cover it up by blaming it on a “fat finger error.” The SEC later determined that this statement was a misrepresentation as the mark-ups were done intentionally.

We have successfully represented whistleblowers at the SEC disclosing revenue recognition fraud.  For more information about revenue recognition schemes, see our article: How to Report Improper Revenue Recognition and Earn an SEC Whistleblower Award.

If you have information that may qualify for an SEC whistleblower award, contact the Director of our SEC whistleblower practice at mstock@zuckermanlaw.com or call our leading SEC whistleblower lawyers at (202) 930-5901 or (202) 262-8959. All inquiries are confidential.

In conjunction with our courageous clients, we have helped the SEC halt multi-million dollar investment schemes, expose violations at large publicly traded companies and return funds to defrauded investors. Read our tips for SEC whistleblowers and Forbes column about the success of the SEC whistleblower program.

Contact us today to find out the strategies that we have successfully employed to secure SEC whistleblower awards for our whistleblower clients.

SEC Whistleblower Program and Revenue Recognition Fraud

Under the SEC Whistleblower Program, whistleblowers are eligible to receive an award for providing the SEC with original information about a violation of the federal securities laws, including improper revenue recognition. If the SEC uses a whistleblower’s information to bring a successful enforcement action, the whistleblower is eligible to receive 10% to 30% of the monetary sanctions collected as an award. Thus, if a whistleblower had provided original information to the SEC about State Street’s overbilling scheme, he or she could be eligible to receive an award of up to $10.5 million.

The SEC Whistleblower Program also protects the confidentiality of whistleblowers and does not disclose information that might directly or indirectly reveal a whistleblower’s identity. Moreover, whistleblowers can submit an anonymous tip to the SEC if represented by an attorney. Importantly, even compliance personnel, auditors (external and internal), accountants, officers, and directors may be eligible to receive rewards under the program.

Revenue Recognition Fraud SEC Whistleblower Awards

Since 2012, the SEC Whistleblower Office has awarded nearly $1 billion in awards to whistleblowers.  The largest SEC whistleblower award to date is $114 million. Tips from whistleblowers have enabled the SEC to take enforcement actions resulting in more than $2.7 billion in financial remedies. In fact, one tip about accounting violations that improperly inflated revenue by $80 million has already resulted in a $22 million SEC award.

For more information about the SEC Whistleblower Program, see our eBook Tips from SEC Whistleblower Attorneys to Maximize an SEC Whistleblower Award. Click below to hear SEC whistleblower lawyer Matt Stock’s tips for SEC whistleblowers:

SEC Takes Aim at Improper Revenue Recognition

According to a Report Pursuant to Section 704 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, during the five years preceding the enactment of SOX, the “SEC brought the greatest number of actions [involving issuer financial-report violations] in the area of improper revenue recognition: 126 of the 227 enforcement matters involved such conduct, including the fraudulent reporting of fictitious sales, improper timing of revenue recognition, and improper valuation of revenue.” Years later, the SEC continues to focus on issuer reporting and disclosure violations, including improper revenue recognition.

According to the SEC’s 2020 Annual Report to Congress on the SEC Whistleblower Program, a majority of whistleblowers tips submitted to the SEC Whistleblower Program relate to violations with corporate disclosures and financials:

A 2016 Harvard article also found that the most common SEC enforcement actions concerning accounting violations are related to “inaccurate representations of revenue.”

As discussed in an article in CFODIVE titled Improper revenue recognition tops SEC fraud cases, the SEC continues to focus on revenue recognition fraud, and whistleblower disclosures about improper revenue recognition schemes may qualify whistleblowers for an SEC whistleblower award.

SEC Enforcement Actions for Improper Revenue Recognition

The following SEC enforcement actions are examples of the types of improper revenue recognition schemes that could qualify for an SEC award:

Fraudulent Overbilling Schemes

Improper Timing of Revenue Recognition

Fictitious Sales

Tips for Qualifying for an Revenue Recognition SEC Whistleblower Bounty

SEC Whistleblower Lawyers Representing Revenue Recognition Whistleblowers

If you have information that you would like to report to the SEC, contact an SEC whistleblower attorney at leading whistleblower firm Zuckerman Law for a free, confidential consultation about your case by calling 202-262-8959.

For more information about SEC whistleblower rewards and protections:

SEC Whistleblower Law Firm Representing Revenue Recognition Whistleblowers

Dodd-Frank Whistleblower Protections for Revenue Recognition SEC Whistleblowers

whistleblower_lawyers_012017_infographic