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PCAOB
Pub lic
Company
Accounting
Oversight
Board
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1 666
K Street,
N.W
Was hington,
DC 20006
Te lephone:
(202)
207-9100
F acsimile:
(202)
862-8430
www. pcaobus.org
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Inspection of
Wieseneck, Andres & Company, P.A. |
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Issued by the
Public Company Accounting Oversight Board
October 27, 2005
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THIS
IS A PUBLIC VERSION OF A PCAOB INSPECTION REPORT
PORTIONS OF THE COMPLETE REPORT ARE OMITTED
FROM
THIS DOCUMENT IN ORDER TO COMPLY WITH
SECTIONS 104(g)(2) AND 105(b)(5)(A)
OF THE
SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002
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PCAOB RELEASE
NO. 104-2005-117A
(Includes
portions of Parts II and IV of the full report that
were not
included in PCAOB Release No. 104-2005-117) |
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PCAOB Release No. 104-2005-117A |
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PCAOB
Pub lic
Company
Accounting
Oversight
Board
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Notes
Concerning this Report
1. Portions of this report may describe
deficiencies or potential deficiencies in the systems, policies,
procedures, practices, or conduct of the firm that is the
subject of this report. The express inclusion of certain
deficiencies and potential deficiencies, however, should not be
construed to support any negative inference that any other
aspect of the firm's systems, policies, procedures, practices,
or conduct is approved or condoned by the Board or judged by the
Board to comply with laws, rules, and professional standards.
2. Any references in this report to
violations or potential violations of law, rules, or
professional standards should be understood in the supervisory
context in which this report was prepared. Any such references
are not a result of an adversarial adjudicative process and do
not constitute conclusive findings of fact or of violations for
purposes of imposing legal liability. Similarly, any description
herein of a firm's cooperation in addressing issues
constructively should not be construed, and is not construed by
the Board, as an admission, for purposes of potential legal
liability, of any violation.
3. Board inspections encompass, among
other things, whether the firm has failed to identify departures
from Generally Accepted Accounting Principles ("GAAP") in its
audits of financial statements. This report's descriptions of
any such auditing failures necessarily involve descriptions of
the related GAAP departures. The Board, however, has no
authority to prescribe the form or content of an issuer's
financial statements. That authority, and the authority to make
binding determinations concerning an issuer's compliance with
GAAP, rests with the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC"
or "Commission"). Any description, in this report, of perceived
departures from GAAP should not be understood as an indication
that the Commission has considered or made any determination
regarding these GAAP issues unless otherwise expressly stated.
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PCAOB Release No. 104-2005-117A |
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PCAOB
Pub lic
Company
Accounting
Oversight
Board
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INSPECTION OF
WIESENECK, ANDRES & COMPANY, P.A.
The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board ("PCAOB" or "the Board")
has conducted an inspection of the registered public accounting firm
Wieseneck, Andres & Company, P.A. ("the Firm"). The Board is issuing
this report of that inspection in accordance with the requirements of
the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 ("the Act").
The Board is making portions of the report publicly available.
Specifically, the Board is releasing to the public Part I of the report
and portions of Part IV of the report. Part IV of the report consists of
the Firm's comments, if any, on a draft of the report. 1/
The Board has elsewhere described in detail its approach to making
inspection related information publicly available consistent with legal
restrictions. 2/
A substantial portion of the Board's criticisms of
a firm (specifically criticisms of the firm's quality control system),
and the Board's dialogue with the firm about those criticisms, occurs
out of public view, unless the firm fails to make progress to the
Board's satisfaction in addressing those criticisms. In addition, the
Board generally does not disclose otherwise nonpublic information,
learned through inspections, about the firm or its clients. Accordingly,
information in those categories generally does not appear in the
publicly available portion of an inspection report.
_______________________________
1/ The Board does not make public any of a
firm's comments that address a nonpublic portion of the report. In
addition, pursuant to section 104(f) of the Act, 15 U.S.C. section 7214(f),
and PCAOB Rule 4007(b), if a firm requests, and the Board grants,
confidential treatment for any of the firm's comments on a draft report,
the Board does not include those comments in the final report at all.
The Board notes that it routinely grants confidential treatment, if
requested, for any of a firm's comments that identify factually
inaccurate statements in the draft that the Board corrects in the final
report.
2/ See Statement Concerning the Issuance of
Inspection Reports, PCAOB Release No. 104-2004-001 (August 26, 2004).
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PCAOB
Pub lic
Company
Accounting
Oversight
Board
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PCAOB Release No. 104-2005-117A
Inspection of Wieseneck, Andres
& Company, P.A.
October 27, 2005
Page 2
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PART I
INSPECTION PROCEDURES AND CERTAIN OBSERVATIONS
Members of the Board's inspection staff ("the inspection team")
conducted fieldwork for the inspection from May 2, 2005 to May 4, 2005.
The fieldwork included procedures tailored to the nature of the Firm,
certain aspects of which the inspection team understood at the outset of
the inspection to be as follows:
Number of offices 1 (North Palm Beach, Florida)
Ownership structure Corporation
Number of partners 2
Number of professional staff 3/
1
Number of issuer audit clients 4/
10
Board
inspections are designed to identify and address weaknesses and
deficiencies related to how a firm conducts audits. To achieve that
goal, Board inspections include reviews of certain aspects of selected
audits performed by the firm and reviews of other matters related to the
firm's quality control system.In the course of reviewing aspects of
selected audits, an inspection may identify ways in which a particular
audit is deficient, including failures by the firm to identify, or to
address appropriately, respects in which an issuer's financial
statements do not presentfairly the financial position, results of
operations, or cash flows of the issuer in
_____________________
3/
"Professional staff" includes all personnel of the
Firm, except partners or shareholders and administrative support
personnel. The number of partners and professional staff is provided
here as an indication of the size of the Firm, and does not necessarily
represent the number of the Firm's professionals who participate in
audits of issuers or are "associated persons" (as defined in the Act) of
the Firm.
4/
The number of issuer audit clients shown here is
based on the Firm's self reporting and the inspection team's review of
certain information for inspection planning purposes. It does not
reflect any Board determination concerning which, or how many, of the
Firm's audit clients are "issuers" as defined in the Act.
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PCAOB
Pub lic
Company
Accounting
Oversight
Board
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PCAOB Release No. 104-2005-117A
Inspection of Wieseneck, Andres
& Company, P.A.
October 27, 2005
Page 3 |
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conformity
with GAAP. 5/
It is not the purpose of an inspection, however, to
review all of a firm's audits or to identify every respect in which a
reviewed audit is deficient. Accordingly, a Board inspection
report should not be understood to provide any assurance that the firm's
audits, or its issuer clients' financial statements, are free of any
deficiencies not specifically described in an inspection report.
A. Review of Audit Engagements
The scope
of the inspection procedures performed included reviews of aspects of
the performance of two of the Firm's audits of the financial statements
of issuers. Those audits and aspects were selected according to the
Board's criteria, and the Firm was not allowed an opportunity to limit
or influence the selection process.
The inspection team identified matters that it considered to be audit
deficiencies.6/
The deficiencies identified in both of the audits
reviewed included deficiencies of such significance that it appeared to
the inspection team that the Firm did not obtain sufficient competent
evidential matter to support its opinion on the issuer's financial
statements. Those deficiencies included
(1) the failure to perform adequate audit procedures
to test the existence and valuation of investments and goodwill; and
____________________
5/ When it comes to the Board's attention
that an issuer's financial statements appear not to present fairly, in a
material respect, the financial position, results of operations or cash
flows of the issuer in conformity with GAAP, the Board reports that
information to the SEC, which has jurisdiction to determine proper
accounting in issuers' financial statements.
6/ PCAOB standards require a firm to take
appropriate actions to assess the importance of audit deficiencies
identified after the date of the audit report to the firm's present
ability to support its previously expressed opinions. See AU 390,
Consideration of Omitted Procedures After
the Report Date, and AU 561,
Subsequent Discovery of Facts Existing at
the Date of the Auditor's Report (both
included among the PCAOB's interim auditing standards, pursuant to PCAOB
Rule 3200T). Failure to comply with these PCAOB standards could be a
basis for Board disciplinary sanctions. |
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PCAOB
Pub lic
Company
Accounting
Oversight
Board
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PCAOB Release No. 104-2005-117A
Inspection of Wieseneck, Andres
& Company, P.A.
October 27, 2005
Page 4
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(2) the failure to perform and document adequate audit
procedures to test the existence of a significant portion of the
inventory balance and to test the valuation of the issuer's recorded
inventory.
B. Review of Quality Control System
In addition to evaluating the quality of the audit work performed on
specific audits, the inspection included review of certain of the Firm's
practices, policies and procedures related to audit quality. This review
addressed practices, policies and procedures concerning audit
performance, training, compliance with independence standards, client
acceptance and retention, and the establishment of policies and
procedures. As described above, any defects in, or criticisms of, the
Firm's quality control system are discussed in the nonpublic portion of
this report and will remain nonpublic unless the Firm fails to address
them to the Board's satisfaction within 12 months of the date of this
report.
END OF PART I |
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PCAOB
Pub lic
Company
Accounting
Oversight
Board
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PCAOB Release No. 104-2005-117A
Inspection of Wieseneck, Andres
& Company, P.A.
October 27, 2005
Page 5
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PORTIONS OF THE REST OF THIS REPORT ARE NONPUBLIC AND ARE OMITTED
FROM THIS PUBLIC DOCUMENT |
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PCAOB
Pub lic
Company
Accounting
Oversight
Board
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PCAOB Release No. 104-2005-117A
Inspection of Wieseneck, Andres
& Company, P.A.
October 27, 2005
Page 6
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PART II
* * * *
B. Issues Related to Quality Controls
The inspection of the Firm included consideration of aspects of the
Firm's system of quality control. Assessment of a firm's quality control
system rests both on review of a firm's stated quality control policies
and procedures and on inferences that can be drawn from respects in
which a firm's system has failed to assure quality in the actual
performance of engagements. 7/
On the basis of the information reported by
the inspection team, the Board has the following concerns about aspects
of the Firm's system of quality control.
Audit Performance
A firm's system of quality control should provide reasonable assurance
that the work performed on an audit engagement will meet applicable
professional standards and regulatory requirements. On the basis of the
information reported by the inspection team, including the audit
performance deficiencies described in Part II. A and any other
deficiencies identified below, the Board has concerns that the Firm's
system of quality control fails to provide such reasonable assurance in
at least the following respects
a. Technical Competence, Due Care, and Professional Skepticism
The Firm's system of quality control appears not to do enough to
ensure technical competence and the exercise of due care or professional
skepticism. In addition to the deficiencies noted in Part II. A, the
inspection team reported the Firm apparently failed to detect the
omission of potentially significant disclosures in the financial
statements of one issuer audit client's financial statements. [Issuer A]
______________________
7/ A firm's failure to comply with the
requirements of PCAOB standards when performing an audit may be an
indication of a potentially significant defect in a firm's quality
control system even if that failure did not result in an insufficiently
supported audit opinion. |
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PCAOB
Pub lic
Company
Accounting
Oversight
Board
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PCAOB Release No. 104-2005-117A
Inspection of Wieseneck, Andres
& Company, P.A.
October 27, 2005
Page 7
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b. Auditor Communications
The Firm's
system of quality control does not provide sufficient assurance that the
Firm would make or document all required auditor communications with
audit committees, including making independence confirmations required
by Independence Standards Board Standard No. 1,
Independence Discussions with Audit
Committees, and formally documenting
communications with audit committees. [Issuers A and B]
c. Concurring Partner Review
Questions
exist about the effectiveness of the Firm's existing arrangement for
concurring partner reviews. Having procedures for concurring partner
review by a competent reviewer is an important element of quality
control. Such reviews should involve the performance of appropriate
procedures using due care and professional skepticism, with the Firm
appropriately addressing the reviewer's findings and documenting the
process. The information reported by the inspection team suggests that
there is no evidence that the concurring partner review procedure used
by the Firm resulted in the identification of any of the deficiencies
noted by the inspection team. This may result from a lack of
competency, due care or professional skepticism on the part of the
concurring partner; deficiencies in the scope of the concurring
partner's procedures; and/or the Firm's failure to properly address the
concurring partner findings. Apparent deficiencies in
documentation of the scope and results of the concurring partner's
reviews preclude the Board from determining the relative contribution of
each of these potential causes to the failure of the concurring partner
process to prevent the deficiencies reported by the inspection team.
* * * * |
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PCAOB
Pub lic
Company
Accounting
Oversight
Board
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PCAOB Release No. 104-2005-117A
Inspection of Wieseneck, Andres
& Company, P.A.
October 27, 2005
Page 8
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PART IV
RESPONSE OF THE FIRM TO DRAFT INSPECTION REPORT
Pursuant to
section 104(f) of the Act, 15 U.S.C. Section 7214(f), and PCAOB Rule 4007(a),
the Board provided the Firm an opportunity to review and comment on a
draft of this report. The Firm provided a written response.
Pursuant to
section 104(f) of the Act and PCAOB Rule 4007(b), if a firm requests,and
the Board grants, confidential treatment for any of the firm's comments
on a draft report, the Board does not include those comments in the
final report. The Board routinely grants confidential treatment, if
requested, for any of a firm's comments that identify factually
inaccurate statements in the draft that the Board corrects in the final
report.
Pursuant to
section 104(f) of the Act and PCAOB Rule 4007(b), the Firm's response,
minus any portion granted confidential treatment, is attached hereto and
made part of this final inspection report. In any version of this
report that the Board makes publicly available, any portions of the
Firm's response that address nonpublic portions of the report are
omitted. |
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