Los Angeles Times

EDD fraud may total $ 2 billion

Debit card issuer says the scale of suspicious activity is distinctly high in California.

- By Patrick McGreevy

Suspicious activity in the state jobless benefit system is high, bank says.

SACRAMENTO — Bank of America estimated Monday that fraud in California’s unemployme­nt benefits system could total $ 2 billion, and said it has identified 640,000 accounts with suspicious activity that should be investigat­ed to determine whether they are bogus and should be shut down.

The bank, which has contracted with the state Employment Developmen­t Department to issue debit cards containing unemployme­nt benefits, issued the warning in a letter to state legislator­s. It represents the highest estimate of fraud yet in a system that has paid $ 110 billion since the COVID- 19 pandemic triggered a wave of joblessnes­s in California beginning in March.

A bank official said red f lags have been issued on claims f iled in the names of infants, children and centenaria­ns, as well as people living in states not contiguous to California.

“It is outrageous,” said Jon Coupal, president of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Assn. “We understand that there was an effort to push as much money into the economy as possible, but there has got to be some controls. Here it is like they have opened up a bag of cash in the middle of a tornado and hoped that it ends up someplace where it is supposed to be.”

The bank has worked with EDD to establish fraud prevention measures, including a series of filters and f lags that indicate suspected fraudulent activity, wrote Brian Putler, the bank’s director of California government relations.

“As a result of these efforts, we have identified more than 640,000 accounts for EDD to evaluate as to whether they are fraudulent and the associated card should be frozen or account closed,” Putler said.

The accounts identified as suspicious include 76,000 benefits cards sent to people in states that do not border California, which are deemed more likely to involve fraud than adjacent

states that might temporaril­y host out- of- work California­ns.

The bank said there were also “numerous cases” in which multiple cards, including hundreds in some instances, have been sent to a single mailing address.

Other issues include multiple cards using a common contact phone number or address, and benefits issued to infants or children as well as centenaria­ns or other elderly people not likely to be working, Putler wrote.

He said the scope of potential fraud is coming into better focus from an examinatio­n of 345,000 debit cards already frozen because of suspicious activity.

“Our assessment is that there is activity consistent with fraud in those accounts on the order of approximat­ely $ 2 billion,” the bank official wrote to legislator­s.

A representa­tive of the Newsom administra­tion confirmed in a statement that EDD is coordinati­ng with Bank of America to review debit card accounts that the bank has frozen based on fraud f lags.

“At this time, we are unable to confirm the estimate that [ Bank of America] provides because EDD is verifying identities on claims the department has separately identified as non- fraudulent,” said Crystal Page, a deputy secretary for the state Labor and Workforce Developmen­t Agency. “The Governor has made it clear we must weed out all abuse of our unemployme­nt system.”

Page said that if the bank does not unfreeze an account, the EDD continues to send checks on subsequent payments, adding: “We know how critically important these unemployme­nt benefits are during this challengin­g time.”

The bank’s estimate was in response to a recent letter from 59 state legislator­s to Bank of America Chief Executive Brian Moynihan demanding answers to festering problems in the benefits system run by the EDD.

After the EDD announced that nearly 350,000 of its debit cards had been frozen to investigat­e suspicious activity, the lawmakers wrote to Moynihan and said that their offices have been f looded with calls from panicked constituen­ts unable to access benefits on legitimate claims.

“Constituen­ts report they are unable to get through to your call centers, or when they do, the issue is not resolved,” the lawmakers wrote to the bank executive on Nov. 24.

In response, Putler wrote to legislator­s Monday, saying that although other states also experience unemployme­nt fraud, “The scale of program fraud in California is unique.”

The bank’s estimate was issued just days after state officials confirmed that $ 400 million in unemployme­nt benefits was paid on claims improperly f iled in the names of inmates in state prisons.

A group of nine district attorneys warned Gov. Gavin Newsom last week that they have received unverif ied informatio­n that some $ 1 billion in benefits has been paid on claims f iled by people outside the state, including claimants outside the country.

Putler warned lawmakers on Monday that the fraud problem has implicatio­ns far beyond the loss of taxpayer funds.

He cited conclusion­s by third- party security experts in the U. S. that organized crime rings may be using unemployme­nt funds to support other criminal enterprise­s, including illicit arms purchases and terrorist activities.

However, to make sure California­ns with legitimate claims are paid quickly, the bank has increased its staffing to handle problem claims and has proposed to the EDD that the contract be changed to provide a dedicated call center to help authentica­te blocked and frozen accounts, Putler said.

“We share with you and with EDD the objective of ensuring that legitimate claimants get the benefits they deserve while mitigating the impact of the unpreceden­ted fraud being experience­d,” he wrote.

Assemblyma­n Jim Patterson ( R- Fresno) responded to the bank’s letter Monday by saying too many California­ns with desperate need for unemployme­nt benefits are caught in limbo by the freezing of debit cards.

“Identifyin­g fraud must be a priority, but California­ns with no income cannot be sacrificed on the altar of incompeten­ce,” he said.

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