Marin Independent Journal

State estimate hits $20M in unemployme­nt fraud losses

- By Adam Beam

SACRAMENTO >> California has given away at least $20 billion to criminals in the form of fraudulent unemployme­nt benefits, state officials said Monday, confirming a number smaller than originally feared but one that still accounts for more than 11% of all benefits paid since the start of the pandemic.

State officials blamed nearly all of that fraud on a hastily-approved expansion of unemployme­nt benefits by Congress that let people who were self-employed get weekly checks from the government with few safeguards to stop people from getting benefits who were not eligible to receive them.

“I don’t think people have captured in their mind the enormity of the amount of money has been issued errantly to undeservin­g people,” said Assemblyma­n Tom Lackey, a Republican from Palmdale, who brought along an illustrati­on of 29 dump trucks filled to the brim with $100 bills representi­ng just over half of that money lost to fraud.

The pandemic ushered in widespread fraud at unemployme­nt agencies across the country, with at least $87 billion in fraudulent payments approved by states, according to a June report from the inspector general’s office at the U.S. Department of Labor. In Arizona alone, state officials said scammers pocketed nearly 30% of all its unemployme­nt benefit payments.

In California, the fraud was so widespread that state officials OK’d at least $810 million in benefits in the names of people who were in prison, including dozens of infamous killers on death row. State officials even sent $21,000 in benefits to an address in Roseville under the name and Social Security number of U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, some of the $2 million in total fraudulent payments that were sent to that same address.

But Gov. Gavin Newsom’s administra­tion on Monday sought to assure state lawmakers that the fraud pipeline in California has been closed. Employment Developmen­t Department Director Rita Saenz said the state has implemente­d new identity verificati­on software that, along with other preventati­ve measures, has stopped an estimated $120 billion in fraud attempts.

Saenz told lawmakers on Monday during an oversight hearing that “2020 was an anomaly, a criminal assault on the unemployme­nt insurance program across the country.”

“We closed the door to that type of fraud last year,” she said.

But the department is still plagued with other problems. When people apply for unemployme­nt benefits, sometimes the informatio­n they file with the state is different than what their former employer filed. When this happens, state officials have to interview these people to resolve those issues.

But people are having to wait up to six months for these interviews. Saenz called this delay “unacceptab­le.” But she said the state has a new policy that pays people their benefits while they wait, as long as they pass the state’s fraud filters. Saenz said about half of the people waiting for interviews are being paid.

“Things are not improving fast enough for some. There are still some challenges ahead,” she said.

California has paid out more than $178 billion in unemployme­nt benefits since the start of the pandemic based on 25.5 million total claims. Saenz said that’s four times as much as the combined worst two years of the Great Recession a decade ago.

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