Thursday, March 14, 2013

Private-investigator licensing emerges as potential threat to CPAs


BY JEFF DREW
MARCH 5, 2013
The AICPA has made available to members an online guide detailing which states and cities require CPAs practicing forensic accounting to be licensed as a private investigator.

More than 40 states have enacted laws requiring private investigators to buy a license to operate in their state. Most of those regulations have gone into effect during the past five years, according to research done by the AICPA’s Forensic & Valuation Section.

Based on feedback from AICPA members, the FVS Section believes many CPAs are unaware that they might be breaking state laws regarding P.I. licensing. Penalties for operating as a private investigator without a license vary, but in some states it is a felony.

To spread the word to the CPA community, the FVS Section is making available to AICPA members an online matrix designed to help CPAs determine if the tasks they perform in their practice require them to obtain a private investigator’s license in the states and/or cities in which they do business. The matrix of P.I. licensing requirements for CPAs previously had been available only to FVS members.

While the scope and complexity of P.I.-licensing laws and statutes vary nationwide, they all impose licensing requirements on individuals participating in activities associated with private investigations. Because forensic accountants conduct research- and document-based investigations, they often fall under the purview of these laws. In addition, some CPAs specializing in information technology perform work, such as digging for information in computer files, that could require them to register as private investigators.

The requirements for obtaining a P.I. license, like the penalties for failing to do so, vary greatly by state. In some states, the statutes specifically exempt forensic CPAs from the licensing mandate. In other states, including Virginia, the P.I.-license exemption is extended only to CPAs based in that state. In Virginia, state law mandates that forensic accountants licensed as a CPA in another state must obtain a P.I. license to do work in Virginia regardless of whether their home state has exempted them from such a requirement.

Some CPAs in states that have exempted CPAs from having to procure a P.I. license might believe that mobility laws would carry that protection over to other states. But, as shown in the Virginia example, that is not necessarily the case.

—Jeff Drew (jdrew@aicpa.org) is a JofA senior editor.

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