Peter M. Guilfoyle Assistant State Auditor July 30, 1997

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The Honorable Deborah T. Poritz Chief Justice of the Supreme Court The Honorable Christine Todd Whitman Governor of New Jersey The Honorable Donald T. DiFrancesco President of the Senate The Honorable Jack Collins Speaker of the General Assembly Mr. Albert Porroni Executive Director Office of Legislative Services Enclosed is our report on the audit of the Judiciary, Superior Court of New Jersey, Camden Vicinage, for the period July 1, 1995 to June 30, 1997. If you would like a personal briefing, please call me at (609) 292-3700. Peter M. Guilfoyle Assistant State Auditor July 30, 1997 Page 2

Table of Contents Page Scope... 1 Objectives... 1 Methodology... 2 Conclusions... 2 Findings and Recommendations House Arrest Program... 3 Reconciliation of Open Bail and Bank Records... 4 Payroll... 5 Purchasing... 6

The Judiciary Superior Court of New Jersey Camden Vicinage Scope We have completed an audit of The Judiciary, Superior Court of New Jersey, Camden Vicinage for the period July 1, 1995 to June 30, 1997. Our audit included financial activities accounted for in the state s General Fund and the Judiciary Bail Fund. Total general fund expenditures of the vicinage during the audit period were approximately $42 million. The prime responsibility of the vicinage is the overall operation of the Civil, Criminal and Family Courts, the Probation Services Unit and a Field Operations section. The main components of vicinage revenues were fines and forfeitures which approximated $5.6 million during our audit period. For the audit period, receipts and disbursements of the Judiciary Bail Fund were approximately $9.2 million and $9.5 million, respectively. Objectives The objectives of our audit were to determine whether financial transactions were related to the agency's programs, were reasonable and were recorded properly in the accounting systems. We also tested for resolution of significant conditions noted in prior audit reports which were within our current audit scope. This audit was conducted pursuant to the State Auditor's responsibilities as set forth in Article VII, Section 1, Paragraph 6 of the State Constitution and Title 52 of the New Jersey Statutes. Our audit was conducted in accordance with Government Auditing Standards, issued by the Comptroller General of the United States. Page 1

Methodology In preparation for our testing, we studied legislation, administrative code, circular letters promulgated by the State Comptroller, and policies of the agency. Provisions that we considered significant were documented and compliance with those requirements was verified by interview and observation and through our samples of financial transactions. We also read the budget message, reviewed financial trends, and interviewed agency personnel to obtain an understanding of the programs and the internal control structure. A nonstatistical sampling approach was used. Our samples of financial transactions were designed to provide conclusions about the validity of transactions as well as internal control and compliance attributes. Sample transactions were judgmentally selected. To ascertain the status of findings included in our prior report, we identified corrective action, if any, taken by the vicinages and walked through the system to determine if the corrective action was effective. Conclusions We found that the financial transactions included in our testing were related to the agency's programs, were reasonable and were recorded properly in the accounting systems. In making this determination, we noted certain internal control weaknesses and matters of compliance with laws and regulations meriting management s attention. Details of our findings and recommendations follow. Auditee s Response We concur with the findings. We have taken steps to implement all of the recommendations. Page 2

House Arrest Program rocedures to prop- Perly safeguard and account for funds received from individuals placed in the house arrest program should be developed. Individuals who are placed in the house arrest program are assessed a daily fee of $7 to defray the costs of the program. Fees totaling $181,000 during the audit period were processed as refunds of disbursements on the New Jersey Comprehensive Financial System. Payments are accepted in the form of cash or money orders. Internal controls were not adequate to provide management with reasonable assurance that all fees due are collected and deposited intact. There are no written policies and procedures governing the collection, deposit and accounting of house arrest program fees. Written procedures are necessary to establish a basis for the system of internal controls over cash collections. The following weaknesses should be addressed by management. Probation Officers only issued receipts to individuals who make payments in cash. These receipts were not prenumbered, properly accounted for or reconciled with collections. No centralized subsidiary records existed which could provide management with information to track amounts receivable and funds collected. Records were not maintained by someone independent of the cash collection process. Probation Officers were responsible for cash collections and maintaining individual subsidiary records of balances due. Additionally, one individual received the funds from all officers without issuing receipts, maintained the funds in a locker and forwarded collections to another unit for deposit preparation. A manual log maintained by this employee only listed totals forwarded. Page 3

There were no independent reconciliations of collections with amounts due or bank deposits. Recommendation We recommend the vicinage develop and implement written procedures over the collection, deposit and maintenance of house arrest program fees. These procedures should provide for the utilization of prenumbered receipts for all collections, adequate subsidiary record keeping and periodic reconciliations. ¼½ Reconciliation of Open Bail and Bank Records econciliation of Rvicinage records and those of the bank are necessary to ensure that the proper amount of funds are available to refund sureties. Recommendation Funds are provided by sureties to gain the release of individuals awaiting a court appearance. The state serves as a fiduciary for these funds which are refundable to the surety, provided all required court appearances are kept until final adjudication. The vicinage does not reconcile the amount of potential bail claims on file with the bail funds available per bank records. Although no material differences were found, reconciliations serve as a detective control to identify potential errors or irregularities and would provide assurance that funds are available to refund bail deposits to sureties requesting refunds. This weakness was cited by an internal audit unit report dated March 21, 1996. To date vicinage personnel have not complied with that recommendation. We recommend the vicinage comply with the internal audit recommendation and perform these reconciliations on a regular basis. ¼½ Payroll Page 4

he vicinage should Tstrengthen controls over payroll processing. Payroll expenditures for the vicinage totaled $37.2 million during the audit period. The timekeeping function was decentralized at each of five organizations maintaining employee time and leave records. To safeguard salary appropriations against theft or unauthorized use, management must establish proper internal controls. Paycheck distribution and timekeeping functions were not properly segregated. The same individuals who maintained employee time records received and distributed paychecks. Probation Services has a computerized employee time tracking system in lieu of time sheets. This system did not provide for supervisory approvals of employee time worked. Additionally, regular bi-weekly pay time for nine sampled Probation Services employees could not be traced to the computerized time tracking system for a selected pay period. The prescribed Judiciary time sheet which accounts for employee time worked during the state pay period and requires a supervisory approval signature was not being utilized by all employees within Civil and Family Courts. Various employees within those two organizations used alternative time reporting methods that included daily time sheets and county issued weekly time sheets that account for hours worked on a Friday to Thursday basis. Additionally, the daily time sheets utilized by Civil Court clerks and aides were not certified by an approval officer. Recommendation We recommend the vicinage strengthen the internal controls over payroll through the segregation of employee timekeeping and paycheck distribution functions. In addition, all employees of the vicinage should utilize the prescribed Judiciary time reporting form to account for hours worked. Purchasing Purchasing guidelines mandated by the Department of Page 5

icinage purchases Vshould be executed in accordance with established state guidelines. the Treasury, Division of Purchase and Property were not always adhered to by the vicinage. Proper price competition was not obtained as required by Circular Letter 96-23-GSA for five ($11,163) of fourteen ($21,777) payment vouchers sampled. In addition, the vicinage s failure to process four sample payment vouchers within the eligible discount period, as mandated by Circular Letter 96-18-OMB, resulted in the loss of cash discounts totaling $833. Compliance with the established purchasing guidelines is necessary to ensure the efficient and economical use of state resources. Recommendation We recommend vicinage purchases be made in accordance with purchasing guidelines established by the Department of the Treasury, Division of Purchase and Property. ¼½ Page 6