Globally, we regularly read news headlines reporting about occupational fraud in sport clubs. Occupational fraud is using one’s position for personal benefit by deliberately misusing an organisation’s resources or assets.
Cases of fraud in sport clubs have been reported in the media of sports clubs of netball and football (soccer) in Australia, ice hockey in Canada, tennis in Germany, and football (gridiron) in the United States. In these cases, volunteer board members (i.e., treasurer and club president) are stealing money ranging anywhere from $1,500-800,000 USD or equivalent currency.
This is not surprising given that The Association of Certified Fraud Examiners (2018) reported that globally, skimming (stealing cash before being entered in an accounting system) schemes were more common in the arts, entertainment, and recreation industries than other industries (e.g., banking, manufacturing, health care or social services).
Our research team examined media stories from Australia, Canada, Germany, and the United States from 2008-2018. Occupational fraud mostly occurred through embezzlement including forged and writing blank cheques, siphoning funds, creating false accounts, and acquiring credit cards.
For example, in one case, a netball administrator from Banyule and District Netball Association (Australia) was found guilty in 2016 of siphoning $AUD209,000 over five years earmarked for junior and social players. A more recent case in the United States in 2018 showed that a treasurer admitted to embezzling over $USD150,000 from an Anchorage, Alaska youth hockey league over a span of several years.
Through these cases and many others, we see that fraud can have a negative impact on a sport club's finances, its reputation, the experiences of sport participants and volunteers, and can lead to community mistrust.
Our research has identified four main indicators of fraud that help us understand how and why fraud can happen in sport clubs: Pressure, Opportunity, Rationalisation, and Capability (see figure1).