Introduce your students to an exciting and growing branch of accounting - where the knowledge, skills and abilities of advanced accounting are combined with investigative expertise and applied to legal problems. This textbook provides clear, step-by-step guidance on how to investigate auditing, fraud detection, litigation and cybercrime.
Part crime novel, part textbook, Dangerous Hoops combines the principles of marketing and forensic accounting into a lively narrative to educate and entertain. Set in the world of professional sports, Dangerous Hoops introduces FBI agent Bill Douglass as he pursues a deadly extortionist in order to save lives -- and spare the NBA from a public relations nightmare. The adventurous storyline -- complete with demands for cash and diamonds, poisoned collectors' cards, and botched drop-offs -- also explores aspects of business and marketing with examples from the world of pro basketball. Both innovative and educational, Dangerous Hoops provides real instruction in a novel form and serves as a refreshing text for business majors and MBA students.
Jeff Burke, Special Agent of the IRS, goes beyond the law as he uncovers a major plot to rip off millions of dollars of income tax revenues. As a supplementary text for Public Finance, Taxation, or Accounting courses, it puts taxation concepts into words a novice can understand. Called a "cross between Mickey Spillane and Mr. Chips" by The Washington Post, Professor Larry Crumbley (aka Iris Weil Collett) is the author of twelve other widely adopted educational novels. Business Week in June 1989, called him a mover and shaker, and said he "aims to lend excitement to the study of debits and credits by couching the stuff in romantic prose." Using forensic accountants as his major characters, Crumbley has been called the Mark Twain of the accounting profession by New Accountant"--
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.