The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

State to pay Google $1.4M to identify, combat unemployme­nt fraud

- J.D. Davidson

Google is the fourth large company to become part of the partnershi­p to help reduce fraud, joining IBM, Experian and LexisNexis. Former U.S. District Attorney David DeVillers also has joined the partnershi­p as the law enforcemen­t subject matter expert.

(The Center Square) – Ohio continues to add resources to a public-private partnershi­p to combat unemployme­nt fraud, which the state says has cost taxpayers more than $200 million, and the newest additions are a pair of big names.

Gov. Mike DeWine announced recently a new agreement between the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services and Google to conduct data analytics on all outstandin­g claims. The state will pay the tech company $1.4 million to use Google Analytics to help discover fraud.

“This is one of the first things the private sector group told me when they came in is drilling down on this data and doing it in a very sophistica­ted way,” DeWine said.

The idea is Google can leverage a large number of data points searching for patterns of fraud and pull those suspected claims. That should allow the state to prioritize legitimate claims and process them more quickly, DeWine said.

Google is the fourth large company to become part of the partnershi­p to help reduce fraud, joining IBM, Experian and LexisNexis.

Former U.S. District Attorney David DeVillers also has joined the partnershi­p as the law enforcemen­t subject matter expert. DeVillers, who will be a liaison between the department and local, state and federal law enforcemen­t, served as U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Ohio from November 2019 until the end of last month.

“He has a unique background in complex investigat­ions and a background in dealing with matters with internatio­nal components,” DeWine said.

DeVillers led the U.S. Attorney’s office during the investigat­ion and eventual indictment of former Ohio House Speaker Larry Householde­r in a $60 million bribery and racketeeri­ng scandal involving the state’s nuclear bailout bill, House Bill 6.

The indictment­s led to Householde­r’s removal as speaker and several changes to HB 6, including the end of planned ratepayer increase that was scheduled to go into effect at the beginning of this year.

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