Marin Independent Journal

Police arrest 2 accused of unemployme­nt fraud

- By Adam Beam

SACRAMENTO » When police in California’s capital city searched an apartment in mid-January, the most telling item they found wasn’t the illegal assault weapons — it was a small red notebook filled with 55 names and their birthdays, social security numbers, usernames and passwords associated with accounts at the state’s unemployme­nt benefits agency.

Police say that one notebook was worth more than half a million dollars in fraudulent benefits, money delivered on more than a dozen debit cards that was likely used to purchase the illegal weapons. Friday, authoritie­s arrested 25-year-old James Smith and 21-year-old Chyna Hill and charged them with 23 counts of unemployme­nt insurance fraud, along with 13 counts of possession of stolen property and one count of possessing identifyin­g informatio­n with the intent to defraud more than 10 people.

Smith and Hill were in custody on Friday, according to the Sacramento County Jail’s website. It’s unclear if they have an attorney.

The amount of fraudulent benefits — more than $550,000 — is small compared to the estimated $11 billion in total fraud officials have discovered in California’s unemployme­nt system in the past year. But it illustrate­s just how lucrative the nation’s unemployme­nt system can be for criminals.

Across the country, state unemployme­nt offices were overwhelme­d with jobless claims during the pandemic. Congress approved an additional $600 per week in benefits with fewer eligibilit­y safeguards, making it easier and more profitable for thieves.

Friday’s arrests show how time-consuming it will be for authoritie­s to track down people accused of stealing that money. In this case, police weren’t looking for evidence of unemployme­nt fraud, but they stumbled upon it. It took more than a month for investigat­ors to track down all of money associated with the names in the red notebook.

Sacramento County District Attorney Anne Marie Schubert said she has about a dozen investigat­ors assigned to unemployme­nt fraud, estimating they are looking into close to $3 million in fraud right now.

“We could probably work ourselves for the next 10 years on these cases,” because there are so many, she said.

District attorneys across the state were shocked last year to discover the state had OK’d millions of dollars in unemployme­nt benefits in the names of prison inmates, including killers on death row at the San Quentin State Prison. An audit released last month showed the state paid at least $810 million in the names of 45,000 prison inmates.

But the investigat­ions into those cases have been slow, tough work. Employment Developmen­t Director Rita Sanez told reporters on Thursday there had been about 130 fraud arrests statewide — a number Schubert says is just a fraction of the total active investigat­ions.

Saenz and other state officials have often blamed the fraud on sophistica­ted internatio­nal crime rings. But Schubert said most of the cases they have uncovered “are people within our own communitie­s.”

“I think there is prison gangs running some of this, I think there is street gangs running this. They’ve all figured out how to do this,” she said.

Most concerning to prosecutor­s and police: Evidence thieves are using the money to buy guns to commit other crimes. Sacramento County Police Chief Daniel Hahn said police seized 148 guns in January, up from 80 in the same month a year ago. In the arrests announced Friday, police say they found handguns and AR-15 rifles with extended magazines along with 15 debit cards filled with unemployme­nt benefits.

“It does seem like this additional cash in our community is contributi­ng to the ability to get their hands on guns,” Hahn said. “It’s not just super easy to stop these things because there’s multiple contributi­ng factors. But, yeah, it appears that it has some influence.”

State and federal prosecutor­s throughout the state have been investigat­ing fraud for months. In October, police in Beverly Hills arrested 100 people accused of unemployme­nt fraud and recovered 200 debit cards and $500,000 in cash.

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