Date & Time: November 2, 2026 @ 2:00 pm - 3:00 pm EST + 15 min Q&A
Many significant frauds are not uncovered because of sophisticated forensic techniques or unexpected whistleblower disclosures. Instead, post-investigation reviews often reveal that warning signs were visible long before the misconduct was exposed. Colleagues noticed unusual behaviour, managers received complaints, auditors identified concerns, and control weaknesses were documented. Yet despite these indicators, action was delayed or never taken.
The challenge is rarely a complete absence of information. More often, organisations struggle with how information is interpreted, communicated, escalated, and acted upon. Cognitive biases, organisational culture, misplaced trust, competing priorities, and fear of consequences can all contribute to environments where fraud risks are recognised but not effectively addressed. As a result, fraud can continue for years despite multiple opportunities for intervention.
This session explores why organisations fail to act on known fraud risks and examines the behavioural, cultural, and governance factors that allow misconduct to thrive in plain sight. Drawing on fraud research, major case studies, and lessons from organisational failures, participants will gain practical insight into recognising organisational blind spots and strengthening fraud prevention, escalation, and accountability mechanisms.
Key Topics Discussed:

Dr Kassem is a senior academic with more than 20 years of experience in higher education and an internationally recognised research expert in fraud and financial crime. She is the Founder and Director...
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