Los Angeles Times

Dozens of arrests in EDD cases

Task force says it has opened hundreds of inquiries into alleged jobless fraud involving people in prisons, jails.

- By Patrick McGreevy

SACRAMENTO — A California task force formed five months ago to investigat­e fraudulent unemployme­nt claims involving incarcerat­ed people said that there have so far been 68 arrests and that it has opened 1,641 other inquiries.

The report last week by the statewide task force comes after local prosecutor­s warned that potentiall­y tens of thousands of fraudulent claims have been filed involving people in prison and jail that could total $2 billion.

Gov. Gavin Newsom announced in November that he was asking state officials to form a task force with federal prosecutor­s and county district attorneys who had already begun investigat­ing improper claims filed in the names of people behind bars, including those on death row.

The Newsom administra­tion released an update on its investigat­ions April 26, shortly after Secretary of State Shirley N. Weber reported there were sufficient signatures to qualify for the ballot an effort to recall the governor.

“This coordinate­d and targeted partnershi­p between government and law enforcemen­t has been very successful so far in detecting and disrupting COVID-19related fraud schemes,” Mark Ghilarducc­i, director of the Governor’s Office of Emergency Services, said in a statement.

Some state lawmakers

remain critical of Newsom, saying the state did not act fast enough to stop fraud in prisons.

“His response to the outrageous amount of fraud was so underwhelm­ing, the same D.A.s he’s now wisely working with actually started cracking down on [Employment Developmen­t Department] fraud without him,” Assemblyma­n Jim Patterson (R-Fresno) said.

Before Newsom formed the task force, nine district attorneys and a federal prosecutor said in November they saw indication­s that potentiall­y tens of thousands of fraudulent claims were filed in the names of people in prison or jail who are ineligible to receive unemployme­nt benefits.

Those whose names were used in claims include San Quentin inmate Scott Peterson, who was convicted of killing his wife and unborn son but denied seeking unemployme­nt benefits.

Investigat­ors said some claims were filed in the names of inmates without their knowledge, but several cases have emerged in which incarcerat­ed people coordinate­d with friends and family to file fraudulent claims.

Until late last year, the state prison agency refused to share the personal informatio­n of prisoners, including Social Security numbers, with the state Employment Developmen­t Department to allow the EDD to match it with unemployme­nt claims, but attorneys later determined that the informatio­n could be shared.

On April 26, the state Senate Labor Committee approved a bill by Sen. Shannon Grove (R-Bakersfiel­d) that requires the prison agency to share informatio­n with the EDD.

State officials said law enforcemen­t in regional task forces have served 382 search warrants, 94 charges have been filed, and 68 people have been arrested outside the prison system.

In Southern California, law enforcemen­t agencies said they have launched 68 investigat­ions since August that involved 100 search warrants and 23 people being charged, with nine arrested outside prison.

Sacramento County Dist. Atty. Ann Marie Schubert said last week that the amount paid to criminals may total $20 billion, although the EDD has said that it has identified about $11 billion in fraud, which includes people who are not in prison.

“The magnitude of EDD fraud in California is astronomic­al,” Schubert said in a statement released by the Newsom administra­tion. “While there is much work to be done, significan­t progress has been made not only to identify those committing these crimes but also to prevent further EDD fraud.”

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