A student came forward and said that to me. She was bullied on LinkedIn for coming forward. That's the experience of a noble whistleblower, very similar to a vigilante whistleblower. So no, she was not. Did she expose herself as the whistleblower? No, this is the thing. He was able to figure it out. And so somehow the perpetrator, the student cheater, was able to Figure It Out.
Even if there are not many obvious warning signs, a gut feeling can tell you when something seems amiss.
Kelly Richmond Pope is the Dr. Barry Jay Epstein Endowed Professor of Forensic Accounting at DePaul University and the author of the book “Fool Me Once: Scams, Stories, and Secrets from the Trillion-Dollar Fraud Industry.” Pope joined Ricky Mulvey to discuss: - How to talk to aging relatives about fraud - What your “gut feeling” can tell you about potential scams - What generative AI means for the future of fraud
Company discussed: WFC
Host: Ricky Mulvey Guest: Kelly Richmond Pope Engineers: Dan Boyd, Rick Engdahl
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices