The Bakersfield Californian

US failed to stop fraud in COVID loan program, Clyburn says

- BY JENNIFER MCDERMOTT AND GEOFF MULVIHILL

The U.S. failed to take basic steps at the start of the coronaviru­s pandemic to prevent fraud in a federal aid program intended to help small businesses, depleting the funds and making people more vulnerable to identity theft, the chairman of a House panel examining the payouts said Tuesday.

Democratic Rep. James Clyburn blamed the Trump administra­tion for the problems in the COVID-19 Economic Injury Disaster Loan program, overseen by the U.S. Small Business Administra­tion, amid revelation­s that as much as 20 percent of the money — tens of billions of dollars — may have been awarded to fraudsters.

Clyburn said the Biden administra­tion has implemente­d measures to identify potential fraud and directed loan officers to address indication­s of fraud before approving loans, while Congress has invested in fraud prevention and accountabi­lity.

Rep. Steve Scalise, the No. 2 House Republican, said the Trump administra­tion and Congress worked together at the beginning of the pandemic, when uncertaint­y was rampant and much of the economy was locked down, to deliver “much needed relief as fast as we could to help save as many jobs as we could” and prevent the economy from crashing.

Scalise, R-La., said Democrats are underminin­g the successes, and he asked why the House coronaviru­s panel Clyburn chairs wasn’t looking into the enhanced unemployme­nt insurance program that was plagued by “egregious and unpreceden­ted fraud” and is a “leading contributo­r” to the high inflation rates.

“I hope that in our oversight of pandemic programs, my Democratic colleagues will be able to recognize the difference between what was needed to save the economy during an unpreceden­ted pandemic versus pushing a partisan, inflation-inducing agenda,” he said.

Clyburn, of South Carolina, said the subcommitt­ee will determine what more must be done to bring perpetrato­rs of fraud to justice and how to protect future emergency programs.

Clyburn said he supports extending the statute of limitation­s for this kind of fraud case to give investigat­ors more time to untangle complex potential crimes. Witnesses at the hearing suggested standardiz­ing the data collected by states to make it easier for federal authoritie­s to spot possibly fraudulent patterns.

The SBA’s Office of the Inspector General has estimated that at least $80 billion distribute­d from the $400 billion EIDL program could have been fraudulent, much of it in scams using stolen identities. Separately, staff for the select subcommitt­ee on Tuesday issued a report that found that some 1.6 million applicatio­ns for the loans may have been approved without being evaluated.

The subcommitt­ee’s staff found that those loans were approved in batches of up to 500 applicatio­ns at a time. Applicatio­ns were allowed to move through even if they had certain red flags for fraud — such as internatio­nal client locations or phone numbers not associated with the

business or the owner — so long as they weren’t too many of them. The process meant that while software analyzed the applicatio­ns, they were not even opened by officials before being greenlight­ed for funding.

The SBA’s inspector general, Hannibal “Mike” Ware, said initially there was a huge struggle at the agency about the “need for speed versus the need for controls.” He said he was “screaming” about the need for fraud controls. He said the most concerning thing was self-certificat­ion, which meant applicants could say they had a business or a certain number of employees and get money.

The subcommitt­ee hearing also tackled broader fraud concerns with the flood of pandemic aid from multiple federal government programs for states, local government­s, businesses and the unemployed. The $5 trillion in total aid, delivered in a series of bills signed by Presidents Donald Trump and Joe Biden, have come with numerous complicati­ons.

Fraud overwhelme­d enhanced unemployme­nt insurance programs funded by the federal government and administer­ed by the states. There was so much aid to government­s that many struggled to find a way to spend it all under the original regulation­s. And there have been questions about whether the Paycheck Protection Program to keep employees working was worth it.

The Secret Service said in December that nearly $100 billion has been stolen from COVID-19 relief programs, basing that estimate on its cases and data from the Labor Department and the Small Business Administra­tion. The White House downplayed the estimate, saying it was based on old reports.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency may have been double-billed for the funerals of hundreds of people who died of COVID-19, the Government Accountabi­lity Office said in April. States and cities continue to be slow to spend their pandemic relief money.

The select subcommitt­ee said Tuesday that more than $10 billion allocated under two massive business loan programs has been returned because of investigat­ions and bank actions. Federal prosecutor­s have charged nearly 1,500 people with crimes related to fraud against the government over the business loans and enhanced unemployme­nt insurance programs.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE / AP ?? Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, left, the ranking member on the House Judiciary Committee, confers with House Minority Whip Steve Scalise, R-La., as Republican members of the House Second Amendment Caucus meet with reporters as they criticize a series of Democratic measures to curb gun violence in the wake of the mass shootings at a school in Uvalde, Texas, and a grocery in Buffalo, N.Y., at the Capitol in Washington on June 8.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE / AP Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, left, the ranking member on the House Judiciary Committee, confers with House Minority Whip Steve Scalise, R-La., as Republican members of the House Second Amendment Caucus meet with reporters as they criticize a series of Democratic measures to curb gun violence in the wake of the mass shootings at a school in Uvalde, Texas, and a grocery in Buffalo, N.Y., at the Capitol in Washington on June 8.

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