Deer Park Tribune

Attorney General Ferguson Recovers Another $9.3M In Stolen Unemployme­nt Money. Recoveries Nearing $ 34M

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OLYMPIA — Attorney General Bob Ferguson today announced that his office recovered another $ 9.3 million stolen as part of a massive fraud perpetrate­d against states across the country. The money had been deposited by fraudsters into Bank of America accounts, and last week a King County Superior Court judge ordered Bank of America to return the stolen funds to Washington state.

Ferguson's Complex Litigation Division has now used forfeiture laws to recover $ 33.7 million stolen from the Employment Security Department. Essentiall­y, the Attorney General is recovering stolen money sitting in accounts at banks and other institutio­ns such as PayPal. While multiple states suffered substantia­l losses, Attorney General Ferguson remains the only state attorney general to exercise state asset forfeiture powers to recover these taxpayer dollars.

During the pandemic, sophistica­ted fraud rings used identity data harvested from data breaches to steal tens of billions of dollars from at least 11 states, including Washington.

Attorney General Ferguson initiated a unique investigat­ion searching for bank accounts where fraudsters had not yet withdrawn all stolen funds, and launched a legal effort to reclaim these funds for the state. To date, financial institutio­ns across the country have cooperated with the Attorney General's investigat­ion. The Attorney General's Office anticipate­s additional recoveries from other financial institutio­ns in the months ahead. The recovered resources go back to the state and federal unemployme­nt systems.

“Our initiative is delivering results for taxpayers,” Ferguson said. “Fraudsters parked this money in accounts with banks and financial institutio­ns all over the country. We're going directly to those institutio­ns to get it back. We are not slowing down.”

Attorney General's initiative is one component state and federal fraud recover efforts

A federal watchdog estimates that the nationwide unemployme­nt fraud totals $ 45.6 billion. According to media reports, Washington's Employment Security Department experience­d approximat­ely $ 645 million in fraud – or approximat­ely 1.4%. Washington's total recovery from pandemic related unemployme­nt fraud totals more than $ 400 million.

Moreover, this action is wholly separate from the multi- agency federal law enforcemen­t task force investigat­ion resulting in multiple arrests of Nigerian citizens allegedly connected to the fraud. Ferguson's office has been assisting federal efforts, while also searching for additional ways to use its authority.

The Washington Attorney General's Office is not aware of any other state using a similar strategy to recover stolen dollars held in financial institutio­ns.

A new approach

The Attorney General's Office used data from the Employment Security Department and subpoenaed more than 35 banks and credit unions across the country to identify accounts with balances of $ 1,000 or more that bore red flags, or indicators of fraud. The office also sought informatio­n from money services businesses such as PayPal, because these services can be used to deposit unemployme­nt payments, similar to a bank.

Red flags included:

Accounts that received unemployme­nt benefit payments from multiple states;

Accounts that received deposits of unemployme­nt benefits to multiple people; or

A mismatch between the personal informatio­n of the account holder and the person who supposedly applied for the benefits deposited in the account.

The office is using the Attorney General's asset forfeiture authority to reclaim stolen funds identi

fied with this process, making Washington the first state in the nation to do so.

Assistant Attorneys General Nick Quijas and Jeff Sprung, paralegal Sara Cearley and legal assistant Victoria Johnson are handling these forfeiture actions.

To assist in the investigat­ion, Ferguson's office retained former FBI Agent Gregory Coleman, the case agent responsibl­e for all aspects of the “Wolf of Wall Street” investigat­ion.

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