'To the best of our knowledge, most of the few methodological studies which analyze the impact of faked interviews on survey results are based on 'artificial fakes' generated by project students in a 'laboratory environment'. In contrast, panel data provide a unique opportunity to identify data which are actually faked by interviewers. By comparing data of two waves, unequivocal fakes are easily identifiable. However, in most surveys there is no second wave because they have a pure cross-sectional nature. In search of a method which does not need two waves of data we test an unconventional benchmark called Benford's Law, which is used by several accountants to discover frauds. Our preliminary results let us conclude that Benford's Law might...