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Elementary,Middle School,High School,College,University,PHD
| Teaching Since: | Apr 2017 |
| Last Sign in: | 331 Weeks Ago, 6 Days Ago |
| Questions Answered: | 12843 |
| Tutorials Posted: | 12834 |
MBA, Ph.D in Management
Harvard university
Feb-1997 - Aug-2003
Professor
Strayer University
Jan-2007 - Present
1) If an auditor had to find money laundering in the car wash business for example. The
auditor would have to look at the full capacity of the car wash and the cost of one car
wash. So if under full capacity the car was could wash 100 cars per day and if everyone
purchased the most expensive wash of $20. Then the most cash the car wash could
generate in one day is $20 * 100 = 2000. So if the car wash deposited more than 2,000
per day in cash then there would be reasonable cause for an investigation. Is this how it
works from an audit standpoint? How else could you find laundering in a car wash? 2) One way to conduct money laundering would be to acquire money orders in "low" dollar
amounts. Would this specific practice circumvent your bank controls? 3) In dealing with money laundering, what are items that will tip off the accountant?
4) Why would a copyright (65 years) be so much longer than a patent (20 years)?
5) What is the difference between real and personal property? What are the business
reasons to be able to distinguish between real and personal property? 6) Could personal property be converted to real property? If yes, how?
7) How do most local communities (especially counties) generate there tax revenue.
8) What are the two categories of personal property?
9) would like to consider the transfer of personal property versus real property. The concept
of buying a house versus buying a car (real versus personal property). Immediately we
know there are significant differences in the legal transfer of these types of property?
What are the conceptual reasons for these differences?
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