How whistle-blowers shape history
1,699,961 views |
Kelly Richmond Pope |
TEDxDePaulUniversity
• April 2017
Fraud researcher and documentary filmmaker Kelly Richmond Pope shares lessons from some of the most high-profile whistle-blowers of the past, explaining how they've shared information that has shaped society -- and why they need our trust and protection.
Fraud researcher and documentary filmmaker Kelly Richmond Pope shares lessons from some of the most high-profile whistle-blowers of the past, explaining how they've shared information that has shaped society -- and why they need our trust and protection.
This talk was presented to a local audience at TEDxDePaulUniversity, an independent event. TED's editors chose to feature it for you.
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Kelly Richmond Pope researches organizational misconduct, ethics and fraud.
Janet A. Samuels and Kelly Richmond Pope | Journal of Accountancy, 2014 | Article
"Are organizations hindering employee whistleblowing?"
In an effort to curb fraud, companies have instituted techniques such as third-party administration of ethics hotlines to assist in fraud detection. Recent research reveals several counterintuitive aspects of whistleblowing, showing that a company's fraud reporting programs can be implemented in a way that actually decreases employees' willingness to report fraud. This article explores actions organizations can take to avoid inadvertently discouraging fraud reporting and instead promote whistleblowing.
Kelly Richmond Pope | Washington Post, 2014 | Article
"Samoas, Thin Mints and Business Ethics"
In this Washington Post op-ed, Kelly Richmond Pope reflects on her experience as a Girl Scout and how her experience of selling cookies at an early age taught her valuable lessons about business ethics and fraud.
Kelly Richmond Pope and Franz Palomares | TED-Ed, 2015 | Watch
"How People Rationalize Fraud"
If you ask people whether they think stealing is wrong, most of them would answer yes. And yet, in 2013, organizations all over the world lost an estimated total of $3.7 trillion to fraud. Kelly Richmond Pope explains how the fraud triangle, developed by criminologist Donald Cressey, can help us understand how seemingly good people can make unethical decisions in their daily lives.
Kelly Richmond Pope and Tim Edson | 2018 | Listen
"Nothing But the Truth"
In September 2016, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), the Los Angeles City Attorney and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency fined Wells Fargo $185 million alleging that more than 2 million bank accounts or credit cards were opened or applied for without customer’s knowledge or permission between May 2011 and July 2015. Roughly 5,300 employees were terminated in relation to the allegations including many of the whistle-blowers who attempted to alert the bank. On this episode, co-host Kelly Pope interviews a Wells Fargo branch manager that was pressured to engage in the fraud but decided to whistle-blow.
Kelly Richmond Pope | Kartemquin Films, 2017 | Book
All the Queen's Horses
All the Queen's Horses is an award-winning documentary that chronicles that largest municipal fraud in United States history. Kelly Richmond Pope cleverly shows how a trusted city comptroller embezzled over $53 million from a small community. Additionally, the film explores the bravery of the whistle-blower who discovered the fraud.
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This talk was presented to a local audience at TEDxDePaulUniversity, an independent event. TED's editors chose to feature it for you.
Read more about TEDx.