Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Finding in audit of fraud: DHS lax

- BRIAN FANNEY

The state agency tasked with administer­ing food programs that were plagued by fraud totaling millions of dollars was the subject of several critical findings released Friday by Arkansas Legislativ­e Audit.

The programs, to feed hungry children, include an at-risk after-school component during the school year and a summer nutrition program to feed children while school is out.

An ongoing fraud investigat­ion pursued by the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e, the FBI, the Internal Revenue Service and the U.S. Marshals Service has unearthed more than $11 million in fraud in the programs.

The state Department of Human Services failed to develop internal controls, was behind in performing compliance reviews, did not require receipts for reimbursem­ent claims and had an insufficie­nt system for monitoring nonprofit institutio­ns, Arkansas Legislativ­e Audit told legislator­s.

In response, Keesa Smith, deputy director of the department, told members of the Legislativ­e Joint Auditing Committee that it had entered into contracts with outof-state firms that specialize in ensuring the federal dollars are spent properly.

“When you look at the finding results, often we were in the process of making the necessary correction­s,” she said. “We don’t take any instance of fraud lightly.”

Assistant U.S. Attorneys Jana Harris, Allison Bragg and Cameron McCree have said Human Services Department “insiders” paved the way for the others to sign up as sponsors for food-providing programs operated by the Child and Adult Care Feeding Program. In some cases, no children were served.

Tonique Hatton of North Little Rock and Gladys Elise Waits of England, who both worked for the Human Services Department, have admitted to being the “gatekeeper­s” who, in return for bribes, made it possible for the others to defraud the program.

Of 14 people charged in nine indictment­s related to the scheme since December 2014, two were convicted in a jury trial in April and await sentencing; five pleaded guilty and have been sentenced; and seven others who pleaded guilty before trial also await sentencing.

Sen. Terry Rice, R-Waldron, was the only lawmaker to follow up on the audit findings during the meeting.

“We need to do everything we can to at least make people understand somebody’s looking at this or we’re inviting fraud,” he told Human Services Department officials.

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