

David P. Weber
Education
- University of Florida, DBA, Accounting; Organizational Behavior, 2023
- Syracuse University College of Law, JD, 1998
- Syracuse University, BS, Criminal Justice, 1995
Areas of Expertise
- Forensic Accounting
- Fraud Examination
- Anti-Money Laundering
Bio
Dr. Weber teaches forensic accounting, fraud examination and business law each semester at the Perdue School of Business. He focuses on accounting organizational behavior, mainly, on why people engage in financial misconduct in the workplace. He is a licensed attorney, forensic accountant, certified fraud examiner, and registered private investigator.
Dr. Weber concluded his federal career as the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's Chief Investigator. Prior to this, he served as Chief of Enforcement Unit I of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. Prior to the FDIC, Weber was the Special Counsel for Enforcement for the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the Treasury Department bureau responsible for supervision of the nation's banking system, and all foreign banks federally licensed to conduct business in the United States.
In September 2022, the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Virginia appointed Dr. Weber as the sole Eastern Shore of the Chesapeake Bay member of the Board of Governors for the Virginia State Bar. They enforce the rules and regulations that govern lawyer ethical behavior and the unauthorized practice of law; discipline lawyers who violate the rules; regulate attorneys鈥 completion of mandatory continuing legal education; promote access to legal services; and advance diversity and inclusion in the legal profession. In June 2024, Dr. Weber was named Certified Fraud Examiner of the Year for 2024-2025, the highest honor within the fraud examination profession.
Dr. Weber believes that public service is crucial to public trust.
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Research Interests
Dr. Weber's research interests include how to develop and test accounting organizational behavior theories to predict white-collar crime in the workplace, as well as how to best teach ethics and professionalism in the accounting industry to avoid the inevitable accounting scandals of our future.
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Teaching Philosophy
Dr. Weber supports experiential learning, particularly in teaching forensic accounting and professional ethics, both of which are highly technical subjects. Only by teaching students how to do can they learn. The U.S. government has dedicated approximately $3 million to Dr. Weber's vision of experiential learning to combat elder financial and high-tech crime on the Eastern Shore of the Chesapeake Bay.
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Current Courses
Spring 2025
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Fall 2025- Loading ACCT 248...
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- Awards/Honors
The Timothy Pearson Best Dissertation Paper AwardPresented by the American Accounting Association
Certified Fraud Examiner of the YearPresented by the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners
- Professional Memberships
Association of Certified Fraud Examiners
Maryland Association of Certified Public Accountants
American Accounting Association
- Licensures and Certifications
Law Licenses - Maryland, Virginia, District of Columbia, New York,
Certified Fraud Examiner, Association of Certified Fraud Examiners
Private Investigator, Virginia Department of Criminal Justice Services
- Grants and Sponsored Research
Eastern Shore Elder Financial Justice Program: to combat elder financial exploitation and high-tech crime on the Eastern Shore of the Chesapeake Bay FY 2022, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Community Living<i>The <b>Perdue School of Business</b> at 糖心Vlog, through its undergraduate<b> Certificate Program in Fraud and Forensic Accounting</b>, in <b>partnership </b>with the <b>State鈥檚 Attorneys Office for Worcester County, Maryland</b>, and key stakeholders including Worcester County, Maryland, <b>Adult Protective Services</b>, and Worcester County, Maryland, <b>allied law enforcement</b>, will, in the course of this two-year project, expand and coordinate a county-wide program to prevent, respond, investigate, and protect elders from financial exploitation and fraud, perpetrated both through traditional financial fraud, as well as through emerging technologies, such as peer-to-peer payment systems, cell phone/text messaging /internet and crypto currencies including bitcoin (hereinafter referred to as 鈥渉igh-tech fraud鈥). The risks and incidents of both traditional and high-tech fraud have only increased during COVID-19 as vulnerable adults have experienced dramatically increased social and physical isolation, particularly in rural areas of the United States, such as the Eastern Shore of the Chesapeake Bay. </i><br><i> </i><br><i>The <b>goals </b>of this project are to expand the prevention, response, investigation, and protection of Worcester County, Maryland鈥檚 vulnerable elder population from fraud, financial and high-tech exploitation, while increasing the pipeline of qualified financial and high-tech crime investigators for the future by leveraging use of the 糖心Vlog Fraud and Forensic Accounting Certificate Program students and faculty. </i><br><i> </i><br><i>The <b>objectives </b>are to (1) <b>expand</b> <b>criminal</b> <b>investigative resources</b> to respond to elder financial and high-tech exploitation referrals; (2) expand <b>social case worker resources</b> with the expertise to respond to elder financial and high-tech exploitation referrals; (3) increase the <b>availability</b> of future fraud examiners, investigators and case workers specialized in elder financial and high-tech exploitation investigations <b>through training and education</b>; and (4) <b>train existing law enforcement, social workers and APS/Health Department case workers</b> to improve response to financial and high-tech elder exploitation. </i><br><i> </i><br><i>Anticipated <b>outcomes</b> include: (1) prompt investigation of all financial and high-tech elder exploitation referrals; (2) numerical increase in the identification, investigation and/or prosecution of financial and high-tech elder exploitation suspects; (3) numerical increase in social outreach to elder financial or high-tech exploitation victims; and (4) numerical reduction in repeat victimization of elder financial or high-tech exploitation victims, each as measured from referral reports required under Maryland law. </i><br><i> </i><br><i>The expected <b>products</b> of this project are financial and high-tech elder crime <b>outreach materials</b> for use within the elder community; student, law enforcement and case worker <b>training</b> in elder financial and high-tech crime; <b>increased availability of trained graduates</b> in fraud and forensic accounting with specialization in elder financial and high-tech crime; the <b>creation and funding of</b> twenty intern investigator <b>positions</b>, and six new full-time law enforcement and case worker positions to <b>prevent, respond, investigate and protect elders from financial and high-tech crime</b>; and <b>evidence-based research</b> to <b>increase knowledge and approaches</b>, specifically to determine if the increases in financial and high-tech crime education, prevention, intervention and protection result in a decline of elder financial and high-tech crime exploitation referrals, as well as the recurrence of victimization of such elder community members, all on the Eastern Shore of Maryland, which is one of the most rural and geographically remote locations in the United States. </i><br><i> </i><br><i>The <b>duration</b> of this project is 24 months from notification of award. </i>
Eastern Shore Elder Financial Justice Program: to combat elder financial exploitation and high-tech crime on the Eastern Shore of the Chesapeake Bay FY 2023, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Community Living
- Service Activities and Community Relations
Member at Large for the Eastern Shore - Board of Governors of the Virginia State Bar
Member - Maryland Attorney Grievance Commission Peer Review Committee- External Collaboration Highlights
In March and April 2025, I assisted Bloomberg with their investigation and reporting of a major hack of the U.S. Department of the Treasury and national banking regulator the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. The hack, likely by a foreign intelligence agency, included access to the full email accounts of hundreds of Treasury Department officials responsible for anti-money laundering and foreign bank supervision, including sanctions enforcement. You can read some of the stories here:
and here:
In December 2024, I assisted reporters in understanding the audit and PCAOB requirements concerning the financial scandal of Super Micro (ticker: SMCI), which faced the resignation of its public auditor, EY. You can read one of the stories quoting me here:
In June 2024, I assisted ABC Denver with a reporting project concerning loan fraud schemes, where fraudsters take out loans in victims' names, then trick them into transferring the loan proceeds through peer-to-peer payment methods. I helped reporters with the story, including a review of documents, and was interviewed on air for the story. You can watch the segment here:
In January 2024, I authored one of the first articles on the Foreign Extortion Prevention Act, a brand new law that criminalizes the "demand side" of foreign bribery by public corporations and US domestic concerns. This new law closes the loophole that has existed since 1977 when the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act was first enacted. You can read the article here:
In September 2023, I assisted PolitiFact, a national not-for-profit political reporting project of the Poynter Institute for Media Studies. PoltiFact was investigating the allegations against the Biden family of supposed money laundering from foreign corporations, and I assisted the reporters and readers with understanding the definition of money laundering, shell companies, and whether they are used for legitimate purposes. Read the full story here:
In August 2023, the American Banker covered my research into women and embezzlement, focusing on bank fraud. I assisted the AB with the story, including discussion of well-known financial frauds involving female executives in national banks, including at the now-failed Colonial Bank, and the Wells Fargo fake accounts scandal. Read the full story here:
In May 2023, CBS national news visited the Perdue School of Business campus to shoot a segment on bank scams involving high-tech fraud, in which I served as the consulting expert. I was also featured in all three of the print, television and internet stories concerning this fraud. You can read and watch the segment here:
In March of 2023, I assisted the American Banker with its coverage of the guilty plea of Carrie Tolstedt, the former Retail Bank President of Wells Fargo Bank. Tolstedt ultimately plead guilty to 18 U.S.C. 1517, corruptly obstructing the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency's examination of Wells Fargo Bank. Tolstedt is likely the highest ranking person to have ever been convicted of a crime in U.S. financial history, as well as the highest ranking female, having likely directed the fraudulent account misconduct of tens of thousands of Wells Fargo employees. Read the full story here:
In 2022-2023, I assisted the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists in their investigation of accounting and audit firm 鈥淕reenwashing.鈥 The cross-border investigation, published in many news stories on March 1, 2023, exposed the flaws of the environmental auditing and certification industries designed to combat deforestation, illegal logging and other abuses by publicly traded companies. I served as one of the experts to assist the ICIJ with the business and audit practices of the US accounting industry, and the role these firms play in ESG. "The problem is that there are no legally binding rules on auditing companies鈥 sustainability claims," said Weber, who teaches forensic accounting at 糖心Vlog in Maryland. 鈥淭his is the new frontier of accounting and where the money is,鈥 said Weber, a former chief investigator for the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the Wild West.鈥 Read the full story on ESG failures here:
In Fall 2022, I assisted the American Banker with its investigation into corporate governance and insider abuse allegations at Maryland's second largest bank. As part of that investigation, Eagle Bank's CEO was banned from banking for life, after improperly obtaining nearly $100 million in loans from his own bank without authorization. "At the end of the day, there were people who turned a blind eye to this," said David Weber, a Maryland attorney and clinical assistant professor of accounting at 糖心Vlog Maryland's Perdue School of Business. "The fact this wasn't discovered raises a lot of questions about corporate governance and the leadership of the bank." "Regulators have been particularly sensitive to insider lending since the 1990s, after a study commissioned by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency found that banks with governance issues 鈥 including a history of insider lending violations 鈥 were significantly more likely to fail, Weber said. Specifically, insider abuse was a significant factor in 35% of the bank failures studied. According to Weber, the study defined insider abuse as self-dealing..."
You can read the story here:
In Spring 2022, I started assisting the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists who are investigating the role of professionals in creating shell companies and secrecy for corrupt Russian government officials and Russian kleptocrats, who are attempting to evade sanctions and law enforcement inquiries into their ill-gotten gains. I am serving as one of the ICIJ's consulting experts on the investigation. You can read one of the first stories published here:
In Spring 2022, I served as the forensic accounting expert for the American Banker's investigation into Bank of America's violations of law and regulation for failing to prevent fraud in millions of debit card accounts created to receive pandemic assistance from state governments. You can read one of the stories here:
In July 2022, Bank of America was fined $225,000,000 as a result.
In Spring 2021, I served as the forensic accounting expert for a CBS News investigation into Bank of America's failures to prevent fraud in millions of unemployment benefits debit card accounts. The assistance included reviewing thousands of pages of BofA records for CBS News, as well as being interviewed on the Perdue School's campus as part of the investigation. You can watch the first of the interviews here:
In January 2021, I served as the consulting expert to the Associated Press in their coverage of the amendments to the USA PATRIOT ACT and the Bank Secrecy Act, the largest changes to US anti-money laundering law since at least 9/11. I was also quoted extensively in the stories, which were published in over 300 national and international news articles, one of which you can read here:
In Fall of 2020, I served as the forensic accounting expert for the Associated Press investigation into how the Venezuelan government circumvents global and US sanctions by use of a vast money laundering and trade financing scheme. Read more here:- Press Releases
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SU's Weber Earns ACFE Fraud Examiner of the Year Award
Tuesday, June 25, 2024 -
SU's Weber Earns American Accounting Association Best Dissertation Paper Award
Tuesday, April 23, 2024 -
SU Hosts Fraud Lecture with Pulitzer Prize Winner Jake Bernstein November 13
Thursday, November 02, 2023 -
SU Students Provide Anti-Fraud Outreach at Senior Luncheon
Friday, November 18, 2022 -
$2.6 Million Federal Grant to Enhance One-of-a-Kind SU Partnership to Investigate and Curb Elder Financial and High-Tech Fraud
Thursday, October 20, 2022