San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Scammer uses Feinstein’s name, feds say

- By Carolyn Said Carolyn Said is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: csaid@ sfchronicl­e. com Twitter: @ csaid

Dianne Feinstein has been a U. S. senator from California for almost three decades, during which her name and image have graced countless news pieces. But apparently no one at the California Employment Developmen­t Department noticed when Feinstein — or rather a scammer using her name and Social Security number — filed for unemployme­nt benefits, collecting $ 21,000.

That same fraudster collected at least $ 200,000 in benefits using a number of names at an address in Roseville ( Placer County), federal investigat­ors said Thursday.

“Think about this for a minute: EDD issues a debit card to Senator Dianne Feinstein!” Assembly member Jim Patterson, RFresno, said in a statement. “How does that happen? I’ll tell you how, EDD is complicit in the fraud by mailing out Social Security numbers to scammers; or they are utterly incompeten­t by not even checking eligibilit­y before they issue the debit card.”

EDD said it’s committed to combating fraud. “EDD has enhanced its fraud detection and prevention tools to ensure only valid claimants receive timely benefits,” Nancy Farias, EDD’s chief deputy director of

external affairs, legislatio­n and policy, said in a statement. “We will work with law enforcemen­t to hold those accountabl­e who seek to defraud the unemployme­nt system.”

Investigat­ors say widespread unemployme­nt fraud in California has added up to hundreds of millions of dollars for scammers, many of them prison inmates. A surge of jobless claims and a new federal program allowing selfemploy­ed people

to collect benefits created fertile ground for the scams.

Bank of America, which issues the debit cards for unemployme­nt benefits, noticed that a sitting senator was receiving them and began an investigat­ion.

On Thursday, federal investigat­ors said they’d arrested Andrea M. Gervais, also known as Andrea Dangerfiel­d, in the case; they said she had worked for EDD until two years ago. EDD fired her for altering a

money order to make it payable to herself, according to an affidavit.

In separate cases made public Thursday, three other women were charged with unemployme­nt fraud: Nyika Gomez, 40, also a former EDD employee; Sholanda Thomas, 36, an inmate at Central California Women’s Facility in Chowchilla ( Madera County); and Christina Smith, 37, a parolee from the Chowchilla prison. Thomas and Smith conspired to submit fraudulent jobless claims for almost $ 300,000 using their own names and those of several inmates, according to an indictment. Gomez, a San Diego resident who worked at an EDD call center this summer, allegedly conspired on unemployme­nt scams with her boyfriend, a prisoner serving 94 years to life at California State Prison, Sacramento, for murder, the U. S. attorney’s office for the Southern District of California said.

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