Antelope Valley Press

Criminals stealing jobless benefits

- By SARAH SKIDMORE SELL AP Personal Finance Writer

Criminals are seizing on a surge in job losses to steal unemployme­nt benefits from Americans nationwide. This complicate­s an already tough situation for millions of financiall­y strapped Americans and overwhelme­d state unemployme­nt offices.

While there’s no exact measure of how many fraudulent claims have been made, states from Washington to Maine say they’ve seen an increase and numerous federal agencies are working to fight it.

“About 10% of (unemployme­nt insurance) payments are improper under the best of times, and we are in the worst of times,” Scott Dahl, the inspector general for the U.S. Labor Department, told the House Subcommitt­ee on Government Operations. Dahl estimated that at least $26 billion in benefits could be wasted, with the bulk of that going to fraudsters.

This forces unemployed workers, already reeling from the loss of a job, to fight for the benefits they need and are entitled to.

“We are deeply concerned about the well-being of these people and when they will get this resolved and get the money they need to live on,” said Eva Velasquez, president and CEO of the nonprofit Identity Theft Resource Center, which has seen a sharp jump in calls for help with unemployme­nt fraud.

Since mid-March, 42.7 million people have applied for unemployme­nt benefits, though some have been rehired as states allow businesses to reopen. On Thursday, the federal government said 21.5 million people are receiving jobless aid. That creates added opportunit­y for criminals. An extra $600 a week in benefits makes it more lucrative.

Additional­ly, state unemployme­nt agencies have been overwhelme­d by claims and are working to get payments to those in need as fast as possible. In some cases, security experts say the new processes, added workload and outdated systems may have made it easier for criminals to act.

“This is El Dorado for them and it’s pure hell for victims,” said Adam Levin, founder of data security firm CyberScout.

Security experts say the bulk of the fraud appears to be committed by criminals using stolen data to make claims using someone else’s identity. The informatio­n has often been gleaned from prior data breaches or direct attacks on state systems.

In many cases, victims don’t know they have been affected until they apply for benefits and find out someone has beat them to the punch. Some even find their benefit payments halted when a criminal usurps their benefits.

Victims should report a suspected fraud to the state, their employer and file a police report. But resolving the issue and getting proper payment means going through the state agency that processes unemployme­nt benefit claims, which is potentiall­y already overwhelme­d.

The U.S. Secret Service issued a memo last month that suggested a well-organized Nigerian fraud ring was targeting state unemployme­nt systems, according to the New York Times, which got a copy of the document. But agents were still working to pinpoint who was involved and from where. The memo said that Washington was the hardest-hit state but there was evidence of attacks in North Carolina, Massachuse­tts, Rhode Island, Oklahoma, Wyoming and Florida. The California cybersecur­ity firm Agari estimated last week that at least 11 states have been targeted.

On Thursday, officials in Washington said the state has recovered $333 million out an estimated $550 million to $650 million paid out fraudulent­ly.

Those with jobs are also targets of the fraudsters. Blake Victor Kent said that last week he got a letter from the Massachuse­tts Department of Unemployme­nt Assistance informing him that they had commenced payments for his unemployme­nt claim.

“That’s funny, because I am still employed,” he said.

Kent thought his informatio­n may have been exposed when he was a victim of a data breach a few years back. But his employer, Massachuse­tts General Hospital, sent an email a few days later to staff saying they were aware of a number of such cases for employees.

In other cases, criminals are targeting people with false job offers, assistance filing unemployme­nt and to glean personal informatio­n. Other people may also be targeted and used as “mules” to move money for the criminals.

Experts warn that if a criminal has enough informatio­n to make an unemployme­nt claim, they have enough informatio­n to commit other acts of identity theft. So people need to protect themselves from further harm by freezing their credit and monitoring their credit regularly for any irregulari­ties.

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 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this May 26 file photo is a sign at the headquarte­rs for Washington state’s Employment Security Department at the Capitol in Olympia, Wash. State officials say they believe they have recovered about half of the up to $650 million in unemployme­nt benefits paid to criminals who used stolen identities to file claims during the Coronaviru­s pandemic.
ASSOCIATED PRESS In this May 26 file photo is a sign at the headquarte­rs for Washington state’s Employment Security Department at the Capitol in Olympia, Wash. State officials say they believe they have recovered about half of the up to $650 million in unemployme­nt benefits paid to criminals who used stolen identities to file claims during the Coronaviru­s pandemic.

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