Las Vegas Review-Journal

Charges may be just ‘tip of the iceberg’

Unemployme­nt benefit cards found

- By Colton Lochhead Review-journal Capital Bureau

CARSON CITY — A 38-year-old Las Vegas man was arrested last week on identity theft and counterfei­t charges, including possession of nearly a dozen unemployme­nt benefit cards that were not issued in his name, law enforcemen­t officials announced Monday.

According to a release from Nevada’s U.S. attorney’s office, Vincent Okoye was arrested on Friday after he was found with more than 100 credit and debit cards that were not issued in his name.

Of those, 11 had come from the Nevada Department of Employment, Training and Rehabilita­tion, or DETR, which oversees and administer­s the state’s unemployme­nt benefits program. Okoye also had 12 debit cards issued by Arizona’s unemployme­nt department.

The complaint against Okoye also notes that law enforcemen­t found 24 pieces of mail from DETR, with the names and addresses of other people, as well as a forged Canadian passport and postal mailbox master keys, and more than $100,000 in cash and money orders.

Nevada U.S. Attorney Nicholas Trutanich said in a statement that unemployme­nt insurance fraud is “widespread in Nevada’s unemployme­nt benefits system.”

Trutanich said that the case against Okoye is likely “just the proverbial ‘tip of the iceberg.’”

Trutanich said in a follow-up interview Monday that the state’s unemployme­nt system that is already at or beyond its capacity “is being further overwhelme­d by fraudsters.”

“These resources are intended for people on hard times, and they’re going to scammers,” Trutanich said.

Nevada saw the highest unemployme­nt rate in the nation after the coronaviru­s forced an economic

shutdown across most of the U.S. in the spring, including a nation-high unemployme­nt rate of nearly 30 percent in April. That rate has since fallen to 15 percent in June after most businesses were allowed to reopen.

States across the country have been hit with massive amounts of

possible fraudulent employment insurance claims, with states like Washington having lost $650 million and Maryland losing $500 million to such claims.

If convicted, Okoye faces up to 12 years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000. A court date for Okoye has not yet been set.

Kimberly Gaa, the administra­tor of the Nevada Employment Security Division, said Sunday that the

department expects to be audited by the federal government, and that the audit will find fraudulent payments.

Asked by Nevada lawmakers about the scope of the unemployme­nt fraud in Nevada, Gaa said “we don’t know the total number.”

Contact Capital Bureau Chief Colton Lochhead at clochhead@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @Coltonloch­head on Twitter.

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