xi's moments
Home | Americas

US pandemic-aid fraud put at 'unprecedented' $45.6b

By AI HEPING in New York | CHINA DAILY | Updated: 2022-09-24 08:17

People shop at a grocery store on May 12, 2022 in New York City. [Photo/Xinhua]

Criminals may have stolen $45.6 billion from the United States' unemployment insurance program during the pandemic, according to a federal report issued on Thursday.

The Labor Department's inspector general said the fraud was carried out by using the Social Security numbers of more than 205,000 dead people and the identities of federal prisoners ineligible for aid, among other tactics. Scammers filed billions of dollars in unemployment claims in multiple states simultaneously.

Earlier this past week, federal prosecutors charged 47 defendants in a 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 COVID-19 aid to date.

A year ago, potential fraud from a vast array of federal relief programs was put at $16 billion.

Kevin Chambers, the director for coronavirus-related enforcement for the Justice Department, described the situation in a statement as "unprecedented fraud".

The country's jobless aid program began under the administration of Donald Trump in 2020. The weekly benefits helped more than 57 million families in just the first five months of the crisis.

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. The government also announced it had charged 1,000 individuals with crimes involving jobless benefits during the pandemic.

Officials at the watchdog office said they couldn't access more updated federal prisoner data and only focused their report on "high risk" areas, raising the prospect that they could uncover billions in additional theft in the months to come.

At a congressional hearing this spring, the inspector general estimated there could have been "at least" $163 billion in unemployment-related "overpayments", a projection that included wrongly paid sums as well as "significant" benefits obtained by criminals.

Rescue packages

The US has recaptured just over $4 billion of that, the Labor Department said in March — roughly 2.4 percent of the wrongful payments.

In the earliest days of the pandemic, when roughly 1 million people were out of work daily in the US, Congress approved massive rescue packages totaling nearly $900 billion, according to the Labor Department.

But criminals found ways to exploit the nation's under-resourced state unemployment agencies. They employed tools known as botnets to fire off thousands of applications, federal officials said, often with a single computer click.

They openly swapped tips for defrauding the government on popular websites and apps, including the messaging service Telegram, the officials said.

Agencies contributed to this story.

 

Global Edition
BACK TO THE TOP
Copyright 1995 - . All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC). Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form. Note: Browsers with 1024*768 or higher resolution are suggested for this site.
License for publishing multimedia online 0108263

Registration Number: 130349