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This section explains
Auditors shall retain in the audit file substantive email communications sent to or received from an entity official or an outside party that are relevant to the audit and are related to the report. [Nov-2011]
Email communications among audit team members shall be retained in the audit file if they relate to a significant matter and contain information or data that is not preliminary. [Nov-2011]
Auditors shall transfer all relevant emails from their personal email boxes to the audit file before the file is finalized and delete any copies of the emails from their mailboxes when the file documentation is completed. [Nov-2011]
Auditors shall transfer audit documentation temporarily stored on USB keys or other storage media to the audit file before the file is finalized and delete the documents from the temporary location when the file documentation is completed. [Nov-2011]
All material, regardless of format or location, that does not form part of the audit record and is no longer required shall be disposed of prior to the completion of the assembly of the final audit file. [Nov-2011]
When there is a known issue or an area that involves a difficult question of judgment or principle, or audit testing produces an exception, it may be necessary to retain relevant audit evidence such as copies of entity documents in the audit file to facilitate the efficient review and clearance of the matter and to provide support that may be necessary in the future.
Only copies (or electronic versions or scanned images) of entity documents are included in an audit file, not original entity documents. (OAG Audit 1191 Retention policies and procedures). When team members obtain original versions of entity documents (for example, a contract, invoice or subject file), they will return them to the entity when they no longer require the documents; they will not discard them under any circumstances.
If entity original documents cannot be returned, team members consult Legal Services.
Following are factors to consider when determining whether to include copies (or electronic versions or scanned images) of entity information in the audit file:
The requirement to retain email communication from the entity is dependent on the significance of the correspondence and whether that correspondence provides evidence, observations, or other findings.
The overall objective is for the audit file to be the sole repository for all documents required to be retained in connection with the audit (OAG Audit 1111 Nature, purpose, and extent of audit documentation).
Email messages need to retain their structure, content, and their business context. Structure refers to the layout of the message and the attachments and related messages. Context refers to the information documenting the source and destination of the message, the subject matter, dates, and other related information.
In order to maintain their value as evidence, email messages must be maintained in a manner that prevents them from being altered or manipulated. The originator of email messages and attachments should retain them in hard copy or in an accessible electronic format. OAG Audit 1192 Confidentiality, safe custody, integrity, accessibility, and retrievability of engagement documentation provides guidance concerning removing the password or encryption before saving in PROxI or in the audit working paper software.
Word processing, spreadsheet, presentation, or similar documents also form part of audit documentation and are sometimes stored temporarily on USB keys, local hard drives, central servers or other storage media. Team members need to transfer any of these documents temporarily stored outside the audit file to the audit file before its finalization. Note that such documents may already have been saved as attachments to emails or as other working papers. In this case, additional copies of the same document do not need to be kept. Once they transfer them, team members delete these documents from the original location. Any other data that is not transferred is considered similar to a desk file and is deleted.