{"id":27968,"date":"2017-03-16T09:10:28","date_gmt":"2017-03-16T13:10:28","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/biznews.fiu.edu\/?p=27968"},"modified":"2017-08-30T07:58:18","modified_gmt":"2017-08-30T11:58:18","slug":"new-fiu-forensic-accounting-track-teaches-students-to-follow-the-money-one-class-at-a-time","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/biznews.fiu.edu\/2017\/03\/new-fiu-forensic-accounting-track-teaches-students-to-follow-the-money-one-class-at-a-time\/","title":{"rendered":"New FIU Forensic Accounting track teaches students to follow the money, one class at a time."},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/p>\n
Nevin Shapiro, who once owned a legitimate wholesale grocery distribution business, chose to make money an easier way: by defrauding investors and cooking the books. It meant a 20-year prison sentence for the former Miami Beach resident. Yet for students in Associate Professor Antoinette Smith<\/a>\u2019s introductory class in forensic accounting, Shapiro\u2019s crime served as an instructive example of how schemes are perpetrated and how perpetrators are caught.<\/p>\n