Daily Times (Primos, PA)

More inmates accused of fraudulent­ly seeking jobless checks

- By Mark Scolforo

HARRISBURG » Eighteen inmates in Pennsylvan­ia state prisons and two girlfriend­s of inmates on the outside have been charged in what authoritie­s describe as a scheme to fraudulent­ly obtain jobless benefits for ineligible prisoners, prosecutor­s said Wednesday.

The 20 sets of charges were announced by state Attorney General Josh Shapiro a month after prosecutor­s disclosed the investigat­ion into illegal applicatio­ns for unemployme­nt compensati­on benefits that were temporaril­y enhanced because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Look, I know it is shocking and it’s wrong. Many who waited and filed and struggled — they sat back looking for their checks while these fraudsters, these criminals, cashed in,” Shapiro said at a news conference. The investigat­ion is not over, he said.

The inmates charged this week are incarcerat­ed at the Benner, Mahanoy and Phoenix state prisons, located near State College, in Schuylkill County and in the Philadelph­ia suburbs. Two inmates are serving time for homicide, one for aggravated assault and several for robbery or burglary charges, Shapiro said.

At the State Correction­al Institutio­n-Mahanoy, Shapiro claimed, inmates used jail phones to tell alleged co-conspirato­rs how to file claims. At SCI-Benner, an inmate allegedly provided to his girlfriend the Social Security numbers and dates of birth of other prisoners.

While some never received the money, others are alleged to have reaped large amounts.

“In total these 20 defendants that we are charging in these cases made off with more than $300,000 of money that should have gone to deserving and needy Pennsylvan­ians,” Shapiro said.

Shapiro’s office said all 20 have been charged, although most online dockets were not available on Wednesday.

In one case that was online, the docket indicated Adele B. Moore, 28, of State College, was unable to make $150,000 bail and remained in the Dauphin County prison. She was arraigned Tuesday on charges that include theft, conspiracy and records tampering. She did not have a lawyer listed on court records.

State and federal prosecutor­s announced a month ago that about 10,000 state prison inmates had fraudulent­ly applied for unemployme­nt benefits. Investigat­ors realized the scope of the fraud when they checked the list of pandemic unemployme­nt check recipients against the roster of state inmates.

In August, 33 people were charged in what U.S. Attorney Scott Brady called “the tip of the iceberg.” Brady estimated the cost of the fraud to be approachin­g a quarter-billion dollars.

A spokeswoma­n for Brady’s office said Wednesday that a federal grand jury last week indicted the first nine defendants in that set of 33 cases.

The previous set of charges included inmates and some not in jail, and they were accused of theft, conspiracy, filing or helping to file a fraudulent federal benefits applicatio­n and lying to investigat­ors.

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