Forensic Accounting is the branch of accounting that applies investigative, analytical, and auditing skills to examine financial records for use in legal contexts. It focuses on detecting fraud, uncovering misrepresentation, and providing expert testimony in disputes. Its purpose is accountability and justice: ensuring that financial information is not only accurate but also free of manipulation.


Core Functions

  1. Fraud Examination
    • Identifying embezzlement, financial statement fraud, money laundering, or asset misappropriation.
    • Tracing hidden assets and reconstructing destroyed or falsified records.
  2. Litigation Support
    • Providing expert analysis in court cases.
    • Valuation of damages, lost profits, or disputed assets.
    • Explaining complex financial data to judges and juries.
  3. Investigative Accounting
    • Reviewing accounting systems and internal controls.
    • Conducting interviews and forensic audits.
    • Supporting regulatory inquiries or criminal investigations.
  4. Dispute Resolution
    • Business valuation in shareholder or divorce cases.
    • Contract disputes and insurance claims.
    • Bankruptcy and insolvency analysis.

Methods


Theoretical Foundations


Role in Knowledge

As part of accounting, forensic accounting provides:


Distinction


In the Logos Framework

Forensic Accounting spans Choice, Structure, and Value:

It is the science of financial truth-seeking: dividing fact from fraud, ensuring accountability where financial misrepresentation threatens justice or stability.