The Role of a Forensic Accountant in a High Net-Worth Divorce

When considerable assets are involved in a Florida divorce, unraveling them can become a significant challenge.

If one or both spouses have a high net worth, there may be structures that protect these assets. In these cases, it may be wise to hire someone who can investigate finances, whether for tax purposes, the ease of succession, or to determine if each spouse is honestly declaring their financial value.

A forensic accountant is a professional with invaluable skills who can investigate each individual’s net worth as you prepare to divide your assets.


What is a Forensic Accountant?

Sometimes, a nonprofit corporation, a for-profit corporation, a government entity, or a high-net-worth individual may employ a forensic accountant. The American Bar Association reports that forensic accountants use scientific techniques to investigate the money trail, often done when money goes missing or fraud is suspected.

In the case of a pending divorce, a forensic accountant might be used to:

  • Assign a value to any business – This includes the value if and when the business is sold and its potential for future earnings. Exploring whether one party is undervaluing their business to keep from paying more to the other spouse. Has one or have both spouses breached their fiduciary duty to the company to hide fraudulent activity?

  • Determining if one party has squirreled money away overseas where another accountant might not find it. This practice may also mask illegal activities.

  • Investigating the accurate numbers of each individual’s holdings. This includes exploring debts the other spouse may want to share upon splitting.

  • Determining the value of a family trust, living trusts, and inheritances, both now and in the future.

  • Coming up with an actual value in case one spouse argues that child support or alimony is based on the other’s earnings. It’s common for one party to understate their earnings to minimize paying child support or alimony.

  • A forensic accountant will help provide information about each spouse’s tax implications, including taxes and the cost of transferring assets due to a divorce.

How Does a Forensic Accountant Work?

At the family law office of Crystal Collins Spencer, we are very familiar with divorces in which one party tries to conceal their assets. This can be accomplished by creating a secret account, transferring offshore, transferring to a family member or friend, or creating a shell company.

When we suspect this has been done, hiring a forensic accountant will provide us with the answers we seek.

For example, a forensic accountant analyzes the deposits made into the account and the money transferred out. The numbers should result in no unanswered questions. 

A forensic accountant will also investigate whether one spouse delays receiving a bonus or salary increase until the divorce is finalized. 

The forensic accountant will look at each spouse’s bank account to determine if they made any large purchases without declaring where the money came from. These might be jewelry, boats, art, vacation property, or an expensive car. A deep dive will uncover suspicious activity that needs to be explored further. 

Particularly revealing is whether the assets, deposits, and payments have changed considerably before and after the divorce announcement. Even with the first hints of divorce, we may find that one’s assets were significantly reduced or altered in some significant way. We need to determine where that money went.

Your High Net-Worth Florida Divorce Attorney

Attorney Crystal Collins Spencer is your best ally when you are involved in a high net-worth divorce. She will walk you through the process of preparing to file for divorce, discovery, financial disclosure, settlement, and, if necessary, a trial to the final dissolution of the marriage.

Her experience, combined with her compassion, will aid you in making the right decisions both now and in the future, whether child sharing and custody, alimony, division of assets, property allocation, or modification of an agreement. You only get one chance to make this right. 

Call Ms. Spencer at her Pensacola office at 850-795-4910. Whether you live in the Panhandle, including Santa Rosa Beach, Sandestin, Destin, and Ft Walton, Ms. Spencer’s services are available to those in Pensacola and the surrounding areas. 

Sources:

ABA
https://www.americanbar.org/groups/litigation/resources/newsletters/family-law/what-forensic-accountant/ABA