LibraryLeadership Ethics Case Library - University of Arizona Center for Leadership EthicsReluctant to Report: One Charitable Organization’s Experience with Fraud
To View Full Case Details.
Register NowReluctant to Report: One Charitable Organization’s Experience with Fraud
Last Updated: 04/02/2026
Case Organization
https://eller.arizona.edu/departments-research/centers-labs/leadership-ethics
Eller College of Management 520-621-2165 1130 E. Helen St. | P.O. Box 210108. Tucson, AZ 85721-0108
Case Contributors
Case Disciplines
Skills & Expertise
|
Background & Objective
The challenge or opportunity you are trying to address for the organization. |
The chair of the board of directors for a local non-profit (dedicated to providing social services to families of children who have degenerative diseases) sat in her office contemplating the fate of the organization. Just an hour earlier she had been notified by the auditor that the CEO confessed to skimming funds, misclassifying restricted donations, and creating a fictitious vendor through which he paid himself without supplying the goods that the invoices claimed. The frauds perpetrated totaled approximately $25,000.The CEO had been at his post for many years and had earned the respect and trust of the community. The organization’s mission had been achieved and in fact had expanded under the CEO’s tenure. Still, with the recession, the organization’s reserves were near depletion. The CEO could not have picked a worse time to breach his fiduciary duties given that the organization had just “kicked off” their capital campaign. The chair worried how all this would be received by the community if it became public.When the CEO admitted to the fraud, he explained the dire personal circumstances that led to his dishonest conduct. His wife was suffering from terminal cancer, had consequently quit her job, and he was left as the sole support for his family. He agreed to legitimately borrow against his home to pay back the stolen money, but conditioned his agreement on being allowed to leave “quietly” so that he would be able to seek other employment to pay his debts and support his family.Empathy for the CEO and other practical reasons made the chair reluctant to report the incident to the authorities and handle the matter internally. |
|
Learning Objectives
This is what students will learn as they complete the case. |
This case examines ethical decision-making, governance, and accountability within a nonprofit organization facing internal fraud. It challenges students to balance empathy, legal responsibility, and stakeholder trust while evaluating real-world consequences of transparency versus concealment.
|
|
Key Action Items
These are activities and action items you might want to complete in order to achieve the expected outcomes. |
|
| Milestones |
Milestone #1
Guiding Questions
Deliverable
Suggested Outcome(s)
Milestone #2
Guiding Questions
Deliverable
Suggested Outcome(s)
Milestone #3
Guiding Questions
Deliverable
Suggested Outcome(s)
Milestone #4
Guiding Questions
Deliverable
Suggested Outcome(s)
|
Explore the CapSource Case Library
The CapSource Case Library helps students explore real-world challenges faced by leading organizations across industries. Each case introduces a practical business or social impact problem and invites students to think critically about potential solutions.
Students can use cases to:
Educators can register and browse the library for free. Upgrade for classroom use to bring experiential learning into your courses through case discussions, assignments, and competitions. The library is constantly growing and used by schools everywhere.
What you get when you upgrade:
Unlock the Full Case
Create a free account to browse case materials, submit custom cases/case responses, and explore ways you can leverage this material to improve classroom engagement and enhance learning outcomes.
Register to View Full Case Details
Register NowAlready have an account? Log In
Educator or organization? Book A Demo

