Oroville Mercury-Register

Fraud overwhelms pandemic-related unemployme­nt programs

- By Geoff Mulvihill and Andrew Welsh-Huggins

COLUMBUS, OHIO >> With the floodgates set to open on another round of unemployme­nt aid, states are being hammered with a new wave of fraud as they scramble to update security systems and block scammers who already have siphoned billions of dollars from pandemic-related jobless programs.

The fraud is fleecing taxpayers, delaying legitimate payments and turning thousands of Americans into unwitting identity theft victims. Many states have failed to adequately safeguard their systems, and a review by The Associated Press finds that some will not even publicly acknowledg­e the extent of the problem.

The massive sham springs from prior identity theft from banks, credit rating agencies, health care systems and retailers. Fraud perpetrato­rs, sometimes in China, Nigeria or Russia, buy stolen personal identifyin­g informatio­n on the dark web and use it to flood state unemployme­nt systems with bogus claims.

The U.S. Justice Department is investigat­ing unemployme­nt fraud by “transnatio­nal criminal organizati­ons, sophistica­ted domestic actors, and individual­s across the United States,” said Joshua Stueve, a spokesman for the department’s criminal division.

The Labor Department inspector general’s office estimates that more than $63 billion has been paid out improperly through fraud or errors — roughly 10% of the total amount paid under coronaviru­s pandemic-related unemployme­nt programs since March.

“We’re all learning that there is an epidemic of fraud,” said U.S. Rep. Kevin Brady of Texas, the ranking Republican on the House’s powerful Ways and Means Committee. Brady said the $63 billion estimate “is larger than the entire budget of the Department of Homeland Security.”

“These are frightenin­g levels of fraud,” he said.

California has been the biggest target, with an estimated $11 billion in fraudulent payments and an additional $19 billion in suspect accounts. Colorado has paid out nearly as much to scammers — an estimated $6.5 billion — as it has to people who filed legitimate unemployme­nt claims.

 ?? KEITH SRAKOCIC — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Web pages used to show informatio­n for collecting unemployme­nt insurance in
Virginia, right, and reporting fraud and identity theft in Pennsylvan­ia, are displayed on the respective state web pages, Friday in Zelienople, Pa. Massive fraud in the nation’s unemployme­nt system is raising alarms even as President Joe Biden and Congress prepare to pour hundreds of billions more into expanded benefits for those left jobless by the coronaviru­s pandemic.
KEITH SRAKOCIC — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Web pages used to show informatio­n for collecting unemployme­nt insurance in Virginia, right, and reporting fraud and identity theft in Pennsylvan­ia, are displayed on the respective state web pages, Friday in Zelienople, Pa. Massive fraud in the nation’s unemployme­nt system is raising alarms even as President Joe Biden and Congress prepare to pour hundreds of billions more into expanded benefits for those left jobless by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States