The Arizona Republic

IRS contractor gets more scrutiny in House report

- Fatima Hussein

WASHINGTON – House investigat­ors reported Thursday that a federal contractor that provided identity verificati­on services for the Internal Revenue Service exaggerate­d the amount of money being lost to pandemic fraud in an apparent attempt to increase demand for its product and that it also overstated its capacity to provide services.

The investigat­ion of ID.me, which uses facial recognitio­n to verify identities in some cases, was launched in April after critics of the software company said it could be a target of cyberthrea­ts and presented privacy concerns. Other advocates were critical of a private company taking on what should be a core government task of verifying people’s identities to receive benefits.

The report found that in 14 states that contracted with ID.me for identity verificati­on services – including California, Texas, and Florida – wait times for ID.me video chats reached an average of more than four hours. The company claimed it answered calls in far less time.

The report said ID.me asserted that there were significan­tly higher levels of pandemic fraud compared to other assessment­s that were based on expert analysis. It did so in an apparent effort to boost interest in its services.

The committees cited ID.me CEO Blake Hall’s assertion that “America has lost more than $400 billion to fraudulent claims,” though the Department of Labor’s Office of Inspector General has identified $45.7 billion in potential unemployme­nt fraud.

Terry Neal, a spokespers­on for ID.me, said “calling ID.me’s estimate too high or baseless is premature and we welcome additional oversight on this important matter.” Neal pointed to statements from officials in five states that credit ID.me with helping to prevent billions in fraud.

The report was commission­ed by the House Select Subcommitt­ee on the Coronaviru­s Crisis and the Committee on Oversight and Reform after privacy advocates and lawmakers called for the company to be investigat­ed.

“It is deeply disappoint­ing that a company that received tens of millions in taxpayer dollars to help Americans obtain these benefits may have hurt their ability to access that critical relief,” said Rep. Jim Clyburn, D-S.C., who chairs the coronaviru­s crisis subcommitt­ee.

Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y, who chairs the oversight committee, said she was “deeply concerned about ID.me providing inaccurate informatio­n to federal agencies in order to be awarded millions of dollars in contracts.”

Neal said “we regret the long wait times that individual­s endured while we fought to clear fraud out of the system. This situation was short-lived and temporary and caused by historic fraud.”

“Excluding specific episodes, wait times have generally been below 30 minutes as they are today,” Neal said.

Earlier this year, the IRS announced it would suspend its use of ID.me’s facial recognitio­n technology to authentica­te people who create online accounts after the practice was criticized by privacy advocates and lawmakers.

 ?? FILE
SUSAN WALSH/AP ?? A report says ID.me, a contractor for the IRS and other federal agencies, exaggerate­d levels of pandemic fraud, apparently to create more interest in its services.
FILE SUSAN WALSH/AP A report says ID.me, a contractor for the IRS and other federal agencies, exaggerate­d levels of pandemic fraud, apparently to create more interest in its services.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States