F. O., a senior notary at Pels Rijcken, siphoned off more than €9 million over 15 years. The fraud surfaced when banks flagged suspicious transactions to the Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU-Nederland).
At the firm, trust in status and familiarity delayed questioning unusual transfers. The accounts looked legitimate, and the person behind them was trusted.
Strip away the headlines, and you'll find something familiar: money leaving accounts over a long period without being properly questioned.
For a micro-business owner in the Netherlands, this isn't abstract. It's cash flow, client trust, and sleepless nights.
What Happened at Pels Rijcken
According to the Public Prosecution Service, O. used foundations with misleading names and falsified documents to transfer client funds from derdengeldenrekeningen (third-party accounts).
These accounts exist to keep client money separate from operational cash.
The principle is simple: separation protects trust.The fraud was flagged by banks monitoring transactions, while internally, seniority and legitimacy appearances created a long-lasting blind spot.
Research from Nyenrode Business University later showed the fraud was less sophisticated than initially claimed.
The firm lacked basic internal controls: no four-eyes principle on transfers, no regular checks on third-party accounts, and no questioning of repeated use of the same foundation across multiple transactions.
Why Small Businesses Are More Exposed
You might assume large firms are safer because they have systems. The data shows otherwise.
Small businesses lose a median of €184,000 to fraud, nearly double the median loss at larger companies.
The typical employee theft scheme lasts 14 months before it is detected. Of businesses affected, 54% recover nothing.
The reason is structural. In a small operation, one person often handles accounts payable and receivable, bank reconciliations, and payroll. There's no separation. Only trust.
According to the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners, 89% of small-business fraud cases involve first-time offenders. These aren't career criminals. They're people you know, who have worked with you for years, and who understand where the gaps are.
Where the Risk Sits in Your Business
Most fraud doesn't start with dramatic theft. Familiarity is where the problems begin.
One person who "handles the payments." One supplier invoice no one checks because the relationship feels solid. One internal transfer no one questions because the name on the account looks legitimate.
In Dutch law, derdengeldenrekeningen exist to hold client funds in separate accounts. The same principle applies on a smaller scale in your own company: separation protects trust.
The Pels Rijcken case shows what happens when separation doesn't exist. Banks flagged the fraud because patterns didn't fit. You do the same on a smaller scale by knowing what "normal" looks like in your business.
What to Review Now
You don't need intricate compliance manuals. You need regular attention.Separate functions where possible. If you can't separate, then review. The person who pays the bills should never be the sole person who reconciles the bank account.
This is how they cover their tracks.
Look at your bank statements yourself. Understand the flow of funds between operational accounts and client funds.
Question unfamiliar names, even if they look official.Set up a short monthly review of payments.
Organizations with monitoring systems experienced 52% fewer losses and 58% faster fraud detection. Y
ou don't need software. You need consistency.Document transparently. Your documentation should make sense to someone outside your company.
If this doesn't work, you've found a gap.
Why This Matters Beyond the Money
When fraud surfaces, the damage to reputation often exceeds the financial loss.
Pels Rijcken had to compensate clients and divest its notarial branch. For a small business, reputation is more concentrated.
One incident weighs against years of work.Internal clarity isn't bureaucracy. It's risk management at its most practical.
Large institutions learn from scandals: systems matter more than status. For small entrepreneurs, the same applies.
Not because disaster is around the corner, but because steady control keeps your business calm.In the end, steady control brings lasting calm.
