The Reporter (Vacaville)

State gets $1.1B back in fraudulent benefits

- By Adam Beam

SACRAMENTO >> About $1.1 billion in unused unemployme­nt benefits returned to California on Tuesday, money state officials said was most likely attempted fraud during the pandemic.

The money had been sitting on 780,000 Bank of America debit cards that were never used. State officials worked with Bank of America to make sure those benefits did not belong to people with legitimate claims who were just having difficulty activating their cards. Once they were satisfied, the government took the money back.

Before the pandemic, less than $10 million per year in unused benefits returned to the state. but Tuesday, the Newsom administra­tion announced it was $1.1 billion from 2020, a sign of the size and scale of fraud that targeted the nation's most populous state.

State officials could not say all of the reasons why fraudsters would not use those debit cards.

In some cases, people who had not applied for unemployme­nt benefits had received debit cards in the mail — a sign that someone had stolen their identity and used it to apply for assistance. Some of those people then returned those debit cards without using them.

Regardless, Tuesday's announceme­nt was the largest to date of likely fraudulent unemployme­nt claims in California. Most of the money was returned to the U.S. government, not the state, because nearly all of the fraud was aimed at a new federal program designed to benefit independen­t contractor­s who are not normally eligible for unemployme­nt benefits.

California was the first state to issue a statewide stay-at-home order during the pandemic, forcing many businesses to close and putting millions of people out of work. Since March 2020, the state has paid $183 billion in unemployme­nt benefits based on 27.3 million new and reopened claims.

The California Employment Developmen­t Department was quickly overwhelme­d by all of the applicatio­ns.

Facing intense public pressure, state and federal officials relaxed some rules to get the money out faster and to make more people eligible for assistance.

Criminals took advantage of that to steal about $20 billion in benefits through a variety of brazen schemes, including using the names of people who were obviously not eligible to receive the money, such as inmates on death row and a sitting U.S. senator. Given the complexity of finding and prosecutin­g these criminals, experts believe most of that money is gone for good.

A state audit released last year blamed Gov. Gavin Newsom's administra­tion for “significan­t missteps and inaction” that contribute­d to the size of the fraud.

In the months since the pandemic began, the Newsom administra­tion has implemente­d new identity verificati­on software that state officials say has stopped $125 billion more in attempted fraud.

Newsom also hired former U.S. Attorney McGregor Scott to help the state investigat­e and prosecute people for stealing unemployme­nt benefits. In the past 15 months, the state has launched 1,525 investigat­ions resulting in 467 arrests, 162 conviction­s and more than $3.4 million in money seized.

“We will continue working with law enforcemen­t to put fraudsters behind bars and recover every stolen dollar that we can,” Scott said.

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