Financial Management, Banking, and Insurance Bangladesh

Fraud Examination and Forensic Accounting Training Course

Fraud losses rarely come from a single missing control; they usually emerge from weak transaction oversight, poor evidence handling, and delayed escalation across accounting, audit, and compliance teams. Fraud examination and forensic accounting is the disciplined practice of identifying suspicious activity, tracing financial records, testing red flags, and documenting findings so they can support action. It enables professionals to detect anomalies, reconstruct transaction histories, and present defensible reports.

In this 5-day fraud examination and forensic accounting training, you work with methods informed by ACFE-style fraud risk thinking, transaction tracing, interview practice, and evidence-based reporting while also addressing the pressure of digital workflows, automated payments, and larger data volumes that make concealment easier to miss. The course is designed for forensic accountants, internal auditors, compliance officers, fraud investigators, and finance professionals who need practical outputs such as fraud risk registers, transaction trace schedules, interview notes, evidence logs, and draft case reports. You leave with a clearer investigative process and the tools to turn suspicious activity into credible findings that organizations can act on with confidence.

Duration
5 Days
Duration
Certificate
Certificate
Included
Delivery
Instructor-Led
Delivery
Level
Foundation To Intermediate
Level
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Weekend (4 Wks)
USD 1,050
Starts
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Mon - Fri (5 Days)
USD 1,050
Starts
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Weekend (4 Wks)
USD 1,050
Starts
Ends
Mon - Fri (5 Days)
USD 1,050
Starts
Ends
Weekend (4 Wks)
USD 1,050
Starts
Ends
Mon - Fri (5 Days)
USD 1,050
Starts
Ends
Mon - Fri (5 Days)
USD 1,050

Classroom Training

In-person sessions at premier locations

Nairobi Kenya
Mon - Fri
5 Days
USD 1,800
Kigali Rwanda
Mon - Fri
5 Days
USD 2,100
Dubai United Arab Emirates (UAE)
Mon - Fri
5 Days
USD 4,600
Zanzibar Tanzania
Mon - Fri
5 Days
USD 2,900
Customized Content
Team Training
Flexible Dates

In-person training at our premier venues — pick a city and date that works for you.

Location Duration Fee Language
Nairobi, Kenya Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 1,800 English See dates & reserve →
Kigali, Rwanda Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 2,100 English See dates & reserve →
Dubai, United Arab Emirates (UAE) Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 4,600 English See dates & reserve →
Zanzibar, Tanzania Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 2,900 English See dates & reserve →
Abuja, Nigeria Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 3,100 English See dates & reserve →
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 2,400 English See dates & reserve →
Mombasa, Kenya Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 1,900 English See dates & reserve →
Cape Town, South Africa Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 4,200 English See dates & reserve →
Johannesburg, South Africa Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 3,800 English See dates & reserve →
Kampala, Uganda Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 2,100 English See dates & reserve →
Pretoria, South Africa Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 3,600 English See dates & reserve →
Lagos, Nigeria Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 2,500 English See dates & reserve →
Arusha, Tanzania Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 2,000 English See dates & reserve →
Dar es Salaam, Tanzania Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 2,094 English See dates & reserve →
Naivasha, Kenya Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 1,900 English See dates & reserve →
Kisumu, Kenya Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 3,200 English See dates & reserve →
Accra, Ghana Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 3,800 English See dates & reserve →
Nakuru, Kenya Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 3,200 English See dates & reserve →

Live, instructor-led sessions you can join from anywhere — pick the next start date below.

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Content tailored to your industry, tools, and specific business challenges

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About the Course

Organizations want fraud examination and forensic accounting results they can defend, not just suspicions they can repeat. That means you need to show pattern recognition, transaction tracing, evidence preservation, interview discipline, and clear reporting, all within a process that stands up to internal review and external scrutiny. This course uses the logic of the ACFE-style fraud examination lifecycle and the practical discipline of forensic accounting to help you move from red flags to supported conclusions.

You will turn scattered knowledge into a structured investigative system. Across the course, you will practice the use of transaction traces, evidence logs, fraud risk matrices, interview plans, reconciliation schedules, case chronologies, and defensible reports. You will also be introduced to the way digital accounting environments, automated approvals, and analytics-supported review change modern fraud work, while practicing only the core techniques that can realistically be applied in a 5-day foundation-to-intermediate programme. In practical terms, this fraud examination and forensic accounting training teaches you how to spot anomalies, test records, document evidence, and build a clear case narrative that leadership can understand and use.

The course is built for professionals who work under time pressure, limited data access, competing priorities, and tight reporting expectations. Whether you sit in finance, internal audit, compliance, investigations, or control assurance, you need methods that work in real operating conditions rather than idealized case studies. This programme is designed for that reality and keeps the focus on practical fraud examination and forensic accounting outputs you can apply after class.


Target Audience

This course is designed for professionals who need to investigate suspicious transactions, document evidence, and support defensible fraud findings in accounting and control environments.

  • Forensic accountants preparing transaction analyses and case files
  • Internal auditors testing fraud controls and red-flag indicators
  • Fraud investigators tracing payments and compiling evidence logs
  • Compliance officers escalating suspicious activity and control failures
  • Finance managers reviewing anomalies in journals and reconciliations
  • Accounts payable supervisors spotting vendor and invoice irregularities
  • External auditors assessing fraud risk and documentation quality
  • Risk analysts mapping fraud exposure across business processes
  • Anti-money laundering analysts reviewing unusual payment patterns
  • Loss prevention specialists supporting investigations and reporting

Course Objectives

This course equips you to assess, apply, and document fraud examination and forensic accounting initiatives that improve detection quality, support compliance expectations, and strengthen investigative reporting.

  • Assess fraud risk using a fraud risk matrix and transaction cycle review.
  • Apply transaction tracing methods to reconstruct suspicious payment flows and ledger entries.
  • Design an evidence log and case chronology for forensic accounting files.
  • Build an interview plan using a structured fraud inquiry approach.
  • Evaluate controls against COSO Internal Control Integrated Framework principles.
  • Navigate documentation and escalation requirements for fraud examination reporting chains.
  • Implement red-flag testing with spreadsheet-based anomaly review and reconciliation checks.
  • Synthesize findings into a defensible fraud report with supporting schedules and conclusions.

Requirements & Prerequisites

Participants should have basic accounting knowledge, familiarity with financial statements, and a working understanding of internal controls and transaction cycles. Prior exposure to audit or compliance work is helpful, but no programming is required; any digital analysis is presented at an operational level using common spreadsheet-based review methods and evidence templates.


Local Application and Business Return in Bangladesh

How participants can apply the training in local operating conditions, and the return their organisation can plan for.

How participants apply this

Participants in Bangladesh typically apply this training by strengthening how they review loan files, trade transactions, and vendor payments, using structured red-flag checklists and transaction-tracing schedules. In banks and non-bank financial institutions, they use the methods to scrutinize core banking and LC transactions, reconcile them with supporting documents, and escalate anomalies with better documentation. Public-sector participants apply forensic accounting techniques to iBAS++ and project accounts, tightening evidence trails around procurement, advances, and grant spending. Across sectors, learners improve the quality of interview notes, evidence logs, and draft investigation reports so that internal audit, HR, and the Anti-Corruption Commission or law-enforcement partners can act more confidently.

Expected ROI

Within 6–12 months, organizations can expect more focused and faster fraud reviews, because staff use clear investigative plans instead of ad hoc checking. Losses from common schemes such as duplicate payments, non-existent vendors, or unauthorized loan rescheduling can be reduced as high-risk transactions are systematically tested and control gaps are documented. Management and boards benefit from clearer fraud risk registers and case reports, which support stronger remediation decisions and regulatory engagement. Over time, better-quality evidence handling and documentation lowers the risk that internal disciplinary cases or external prosecutions fail due to weak files.

Training Methodology

This is a practical, outcome-driven course designed to turn fraud examination and forensic accounting aspiration into measurable action and credible reporting.

Methodology includes:

  • Hands-on calculation using Benford-style review, ratio analysis, and reconciliation exceptions from sample ledgers.
  • Scenario simulation of a vendor fraud investigation under deadline and limited document access.
  • Assessment exercise using a fraud risk assessment checklist and COSO control mapping.
  • Stakeholder mapping of escalation paths from finance operations to audit committee reporting.
  • Case study analysis from banking, procurement, retail, and healthcare fraud patterns.
  • Group workshop to produce a transaction trace schedule and draft fraud case memo.
  • Reflection exercise using ACFE-style fraud red flags and internal benchmark comparisons.

Upcoming Sessions

Next available dates worldwide

Virtual

(Zoom) Training
USD 1,050
27th Jun-19th Jul 2026

Nairobi

Kenya
USD 1,800
20th Jul-24th Jul 2026

Kigali

Rwanda
USD 2,100
29th Jun-3rd Jul 2026

Dubai

United Arab Emirates (UAE)
USD 4,600
29th Jun-3rd Jul 2026

Abuja

Nigeria
USD 3,100
29th Jun-3rd Jul 2026

Addis Ababa

Ethiopia
USD 2,400
29th Jun-3rd Jul 2026

Zanzibar

Tanzania
USD 2,900
13th Jul-17th Jul 2026

Mombasa

Kenya
USD 1,900
20th Jul-24th Jul 2026

Cape Town

South Africa
USD 4,200
6th Jul-10th Jul 2026

Johannesburg

South Africa
USD 3,800
6th Jul-10th Jul 2026

Pretoria

South Africa
USD 3,600
29th Jun-3rd Jul 2026

Kampala

Uganda
USD 3,700
27th Jul-7th Aug 2026

Lagos

Nigeria
USD 2,500
29th Jun-3rd Jul 2026

Certification

Recognized credentials that advance your career

Participants who complete the Fraud Examination and Forensic Accounting Training Program earn a Trainingcred Certificate of Achievement, demonstrating professional competence and alignment with global standards in learning and development.

NITA Accredited

Accredited by the National Industrial Training Authority, ensuring programs meet nationally recognized standards of quality and relevance.

CPD Certified

Recognized by the CPD Certification Service, ensuring every program meets internationally benchmarked standards of professional excellence.

Why this course earns its place on your CV

Accredited training, practitioner trainers, and peers on the same career track — the three things real expertise is built on.

Career Advancement

  • Elevate your career with certified skills in high-demand fraud examination.
  • Unlock new job opportunities with expert forensic accounting techniques.
  • Become indispensable in financial security with top-tier fraud prevention skills.

Expert Instruction

  • Learn from leading forensic accountants with real-world investigative experience.
  • Gain insights from experts who've cracked major financial fraud cases.
  • Master practical skills through case-based learning from seasoned professionals.

Practical Skills Application

  • Apply forensic tools in simulations designed after actual fraud scenarios.
  • Transform theory into practice with hands-on forensic accounting labs.
  • Navigate complex financial records with confidence by the end of the course.

Tools and platforms relevant to this field

Examples Bangladesh teams may encounter, and that may be featured in training where they support the confirmed course scope.

4

These are field-relevant examples, not a promise that every tool will be covered. Exact coverage depends on the confirmed course scope, participant needs, and delivery format.

  • ACL Analytics (now Galvanize HighBond modules) Galvanize (formerly ACL Services Ltd., now part of Diligent Corporation)
    Used by internal audit and risk teams in Bangladeshi banks and corporates to import general ledger and subledger data, run tests for duplicate payments, round-sum invoices, and unusual journal entries, and document exception reports that feed into fraud examinations.
  • iBAS++ Finance Division, Ministry of Finance, Government of Bangladesh with technical support from development partners
    The government’s integrated budget and accounting system centralizes transaction records for ministries and agencies, enabling forensic accountants and auditors in the public sector to trace payment trails, review commitment and payment mismatches, and extract evidence for fraud investigations.
  • Core Banking Systems (Flexcube, Temenos T24, Finacle) Oracle Financial Services Software, Temenos AG, Infosys Limited
    Commercial banks in Bangladesh run on these core banking platforms; fraud examiners and forensic accountants frequently analyze exported transaction logs, user activity records, and loan and deposit histories from these systems to reconstruct suspect transactions and identify override or limit-breach patterns.
  • Microsoft Power BI Microsoft Corporation
    Used by finance and audit teams to visualize large transaction datasets, build anomaly dashboards (for example, unusual vendor activity or rapid account turnover), and support evidence-based reporting in internal fraud reviews.

Real-World Case Studies from Bangladesh

Real organisations putting these methods into practice — what they did, what changed, and the measurable outcome. No hypothetical scenarios.

1
  • Hallmark Group Ltd. loan scam at BASIC Bank 2012
    Bangladesh Small Industries and Commerce Bank Limited (BASIC Bank)

    Between 2010 and 2013, Hallmark Group and related entities allegedly obtained several thousand crore taka in loans from BASIC Bank’s branches using fake documents, shell companies, and collusion with bank officials, causing massive losses and prompting regulatory and criminal investigations.

    Bangladesh Bank investigations identified large-scale loan irregularities and recommended action; the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) filed multiple cases against Hallmark Group officials and BASIC Bank insiders, assets were frozen, and loan classification and recovery processes were tightened.

    View source

Real Results from Real Professionals

Thousands of professionals have transformed their careers through our training programs. Now, it's your turn.

Local market advisory

Course relevance for Bangladesh

A country-specific view of market pressure, regulatory context, and practical business return behind this training.

  • Market context
  • Regulatory fit
  • Business application

Regulatory context in Bangladesh

The local regulators, laws, and frameworks shaping this discipline, with the curriculum mapped to what teams need to know.

6

Regulators

  • BFIU BFIU receives and analyzes suspicious transaction reports and cash transaction reports from reporting organizations, so fraud examiners and forensic accountants in banks and financial institutions must understand its reporting expectations and how internal investigations feed into STR and SAR submissions.
  • BB As the central bank and banking regulator, Bangladesh Bank issues prudential, anti-fraud, internal control, and IT guidelines and conducts inspections, making its directives a key reference for fraud risk management and forensic reviews in banks and non-bank financial institutions.
  • ACC The ACC is the national agency mandated to investigate and prosecute corruption and major financial crimes, so internal fraud examinations must be structured so that case files, evidence logs, and reports can be shared with and withstand scrutiny by ACC investigators and prosecutors.
  • BSEC BSEC regulates the capital market and listed companies; forensic accounting and fraud examination work related to market manipulation, insider trading, and financial statement fraud in listed entities must consider BSEC reporting, disclosure, and enforcement requirements.
  • MRA MRA regulates microfinance institutions; fraud examiners working in MFIs or reviewing microcredit portfolios need to understand MRA rules on governance, internal control, loan documentation, and reporting when investigating misappropriation or irregular lending.
  • FRC The FRC oversees audit quality and financial reporting standards in Bangladesh, so forensic accountants dealing with financial statement fraud, auditor misconduct, or accounting irregularities must align their analyses with standards and oversight expectations set by the FRC.

Frameworks the course aligns with

  • 01 Money Laundering Prevention Act · 2012
  • 02 Anti-Corruption Commission Act · 2004
  • 03 Bank Company Act · 1991
  • 04 Securities and Exchange Ordinance · 1969

Frequently Asked Questions

Got questions? We've gathered the answers to common queries to help you feel confident and informed.

Who else has attended this training course?

Join global leaders and experts from top-tier organizations who have already benefited from this training. Here are just a few of our past participants:

Designation Organization
Internal Auditor Centre of Excellence in Reproductive Health Innovation, Nigeria
Internal Auditor Centre of Excellence in Reproductive Health Innovation, Nigeria
Consultant Centre of Excellence in Reproductive Health Innovation, NIGERIA
Practitioner Centre of Excellence in Reproductive Health Innovation, Nigeria
Audit Officer Central Bank of Somaliland, Somalia
Internal Auditor African Union Commission, ETHIOPIA

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Bangladeshi banks and NBFIs have experienced high-profile frauds involving forged documents, fake loans, and misuse of core banking systems, so they need staff who can trace transactions and test red flags systematically. The course focuses on practical skills such as analyzing loan and trade transactions, identifying override and limit-breach patterns, and preparing defensible case files that align with expectations from Bangladesh Bank inspectors and internal audit committees.

Yes. The course emphasizes chain-of-custody, evidence logging, and clear report writing, which are critical when your findings may be reviewed by Bangladesh Bank examiners, the ACC, or law-enforcement agencies. By learning to structure facts, working papers, and exhibits clearly, you make it easier for external authorities to rely on your internal investigation output.

You do not need prior forensic case experience, but you should be comfortable with basic accounting records such as ledgers, vouchers, and bank statements. The course builds from core fraud concepts into hands-on exercises in transaction tracing, interviewing, and evidence-based reporting, so internal auditors, finance managers, compliance officers, and investigators can all follow and apply the methods.

The training is not a formal exam-prep course, but it is informed by ACFE-style fraud risk thinking and covers many practical areas tested in certifications, such as fraud schemes, investigation steps, interviewing, and documentation. Participants planning to pursue professional fraud or forensic certifications will gain a strong practical foundation that complements their self-study or formal exam preparation.

The programme includes methods for working with larger transaction datasets from core banking, mobile financial services, and ERP systems, focusing on how to filter, sample, and document anomalies. You learn to design simple analytic tests and link digital evidence—such as system logs and electronic approvals—to traditional documents so that investigations remain robust as organizations digitize.

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