Miami Herald

U.S. watchdog estimates $45.6 billion in pandemic unemployme­nt fraud

- BY TONY ROMM

A federal watchdog on Thursday found that fraudsters may have stolen $45.6 billion from the nation’s unemployme­nt insurance program during the pandemic, using the Social Security numbers of dead people and other tactics to deceive and bilk the U.S. government.

The new estimate is a dramatic increase from the roughly $16 billion in potential fraud identified a year ago, and it illustrate­s the immense task still ahead of Washington as it seeks to pinpoint the losses, recover the funds and hold criminals accountabl­e for stealing from a vast array of federal relief programs.

The report, issued by the inspector general for the Labor Department, paints a grim portrait of the country’s jobless aid program beginning under the Trump administra­tion in 2020.

The weekly benefits helped more than 57 million families just in the first five months of the crisis — yet the program quickly emerged as a tempting target for criminals.

To siphon away funds, scammers allegedly filed billions of dollars in unemployme­nt claims in multiple states simultaneo­usly and relied on suspicious, hard-to-trace emails. In some cases, they used more than 205,000 Social Security numbers that belonged to dead people. Other suspected criminals obtained benefits using the identities of prisoners who are ineligible for aid.

The inspector general’s office said it had opened roughly 190,000 investigat­ive matters related to unemployme­nt insurance fraud since the start of the pandemic. But officials at the watchdog office warned they were not able to access more updated federal prisoner data and only focused their report on “high risk” areas — two factors raising the prospect that they could uncover billions in additional theft in the months to come.

The government also announced it had reached the “milestone” of charging 1,000 individual­s with crimes involving jobless benefits during the pandemic. Kevin Chambers, the director for coronaviru­s-related enforcemen­t for the Justice Department, described the situation in a statement as “unpreceden­ted fraud.”

But federal watchdogs offered fresh criticism of the Labor Department, raising concern that investigat­ors’ ability to access states’ unemployme­nt data — to further study the pandemic — could be in jeopardy after 2023. The trouble, which dates back to an internal government dispute that The Washington Post reported on this year, previously prompted the inspector general to raise alarms about its ability to find and pursue the theft.

Asked about the findings, a spokesman for the Labor Department pointed to a response letter included with the inspector general’s report. The agency said it is “committed” to helping states “combat the continuall­y changing and new types of sophistica­ted fraud impacting the UI system.”

Otherwise, the department said it had provided grants and other guidance meant to help states improve their systems for awarding and monitoring claims. And it described the contention that it had inhibited investigat­ions as “not fair,” citing the fact that it still must revise existing regulation­s.

Separately, a White House official said Thursday that the administra­tion is working to address the issue with accessing data. The individual spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe private discussion­s.

The new report on unemployme­nt fraud underscore­s the persistent challenge facing the federal government, two years after it approved the first of roughly $5 trillion in response to the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression. That money helped rescue the economy from collapse early in the pandemic, yet it quickly became a ripe target for waste, fraud and abuse, as The Post has documented in its year-long series tracking the spending, called the Covid Money Trail.

The scope of that theft has been vast: Earlier this week, federal prosecutor­s charged 47 defendants in an entirely different scheme targeting a program to provide free meals for needy children. The organizati­on, Feeding Our Future, allegedly stole more than $250 million from the meal program in what the Justice Department described as the largest, single fraud case targeting coronaviru­s aid to date.

Federal investigat­ors similarly have raised alarms and pursued charges involving roughly $1 trillion in loans and grants meant to help small businesses. But the trouble has surpassed mere theft: In some cases, the government’s generous aid proved ineffectiv­e or helped finance pet projects that had nothing to do with addressing the coronaviru­s, The Post has found. Republican governors, for example, tapped a $350 billion program meant to bolster their response to the crisis for a wide array of controvers­ial political causes, including tax cuts and immigratio­n crackdowns.

Beginning in 2020, Congress labored to expand unemployme­nt benefits to meet the magnitude of the crisis. Lawmakers allowed a wider range of out-ofwork Americans, including contractor­s for gig-economy companies such as Uber, to collect jobless aid for the first time. And Washington repeatedly augmented the size of those checks, at one point providing an extra $600 in weekly payments.

But the crush of applicatio­ns — amid historic unemployme­nt — quickly overwhelme­d the state workforce agencies that administer the program. Many of those agencies had been neglected for years, with underfunde­d staff relying on decades-old computers to process requests for financial support. The chaos immediatel­y opened the door for fraudsters, many of whom stole innocent Americans’ identities to obtain weekly checks in their name.

“Hundreds of billions in pandemic funds attracted fraudsters seeking to exploit the UI program — resulting in historic levels of fraud and other improper payments,” said Larry Turner, the inspector general for the Labor Department, in a statement.

Studying the program between March and October 2020, the inspector general last year found more than $16 billion in potential fraud in key highrisk areas. But the watchdog in recent months had warned that total was likely to rise, perhaps considerab­ly. Testifying to Congress this March, Turner said there could have been $163 billion in overpaymen­ts, a term that includes fraud as well as money wrongly sent to innocent Americans.

The amount was a projection, relying on a sample of federal spending to compute possible fraud across the nearly $900 billion in unemployme­nt payments made during the pandemic. But the figure raises the possibilit­y that the inspector general’s latest update, $45.6 billion, could continue to rise as it further scrutinize­s claims data.

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