Tackling the biggest fraud in US history 鈥 pandemic relief
Hundreds of billions of dollars were stolen in the rush to aid small businesses and individuals. Now the U.S. is trying to claw some money back.听
Hundreds of billions of dollars were stolen in the rush to aid small businesses and individuals. Now the U.S. is trying to claw some money back.听
A New Jersey man donning a curly orange wig defrauded California and the federal government of more than $1.67 million in pandemic relief funds. They finally caught up with him nearly three years after opening the floodgates of cash.
Next Monday, Eric Michael Jaklitsch is scheduled to be sentenced in two related cases,听according to the Department of Justice.
Nearly as extraordinary as the scale of the fraud Mr. Jaklitsch attempted is the degree to which he succeeded. Of the at least听$1,280,680 he sought in loans from the Small Business Administration, he was approved for all but $140. And California apparently failed to notice that the same man had filed at least 78 different claims, authorizing Bank of America to mail out dozens of debit cards loaded with unemployment benefits to addresses under his control.听
With estimates indicating that听as much as $560 billion, or nearly 20%, was听stolen out of more than $3 trillion distributed through the three main pandemic aid programs, Mr. Jaklitsch鈥檚 case illustrates the twin challenges now facing states and the federal government as they grapple with what is likely the biggest fraud in U.S. history.
First, they are racing to catch those who committed fraud, particularly the sophisticated criminals and syndicates who saw outsize opportunity in the rapid, massive flows of pandemic relief funds. And second, they are seeking to address long-standing vulnerabilities in government benefit systems that such cases have brought into stark relief.听听
A range of individuals and groups, from Chinese, Nigerian, and Russian criminal syndicates, to federal prisoners applying under fake names like 鈥淧oopy Pants,鈥 to U.S. citizens posing as other people 鈥 including someone pretending to be California Sen. Dianne Feinstein 鈥 partook in the illicit pandemic gold rush. Many did so using identity theft, buying individuals鈥 personal data for pennies in dark corners of the internet and circumventing traditional identity verification techniques.
Now Congress is investigating in earnest. And the White House is asking lawmakers to allocate $1.6 billion to bolster investigation and prosecution of pandemic fraud, as well as improving identity verification and other tools to prevent such theft going forward.听
鈥淲e owe it to the American people to get to the bottom of the greatest theft of American taxpayer dollars in history,鈥 said House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer, a Kentucky Republican, as he opened what he said would be the first of many hearings on pandemic fraud on Feb. 1. 鈥淲e must identify where this money went, how much ended up in the hands of fraudsters or ineligible participants, and what should be done to ensure it never happens again.鈥
The scope of fraud and how it happened听
Benefit fraud has been a persistent problem, but the growth in large-scale identity theft 鈥 together with the massive flows of money during the pandemic 鈥 has made the problem much worse.
Over the past 18 years, the improper payment rate for unemployment insurance claims ranged from听9% to 13%. During the pandemic, that rate jumped to 21%, according to a report from the Department of Labor鈥檚 Inspector General Office. Many outside experts see that estimate as conservative.
Indeed, one of the major challenges at this stage is accurately estimating the total amount of fraud in the expanded unemployment insurance (UI) as well as the two main programs for businesses: the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) and Economic Injury Disaster Loans (EIDL).听
A year ago, the Department of Labor鈥檚 inspector general estimated UI fraud at $163 billion, and听told Congress听it would likely turn out to be higher. Cybersecurity and identity verification company ID.me, which听more than two dozen state workforce agencies have hired听to help weed out fraudsters, estimates it at $400 billion.听
PPP fraud has been estimated at $80 billion of $800 billion distributed,听NBC reported. And the Small Business Administration鈥檚 inspector general estimated听that $78 billion of the $378 billion distributed through EIDL may have been fraudulent, although that was two years ago, while the agency was still plowing through a huge backlog of complaints about potential fraud.听
California, which ranks among the world鈥檚 top five economies by gross domestic product, was the hardest hit by UI fraud.
At the end of the day, both the federal government and states share responsibility for the scope of fraud, says McGregor Scott, special counsel for California鈥檚 fraud investigation.
He says Congress passed legislation 鈥渋n a panic鈥 in the spring of 2020 that was well intentioned but essentially created whole new categories of people eligible for UI overnight 鈥 and significantly increased the amount of benefits available per individual.
鈥淚t created wide lanes for fraudsters to drive down,鈥 says Mr. Scott.听
Prior to the pandemic, employers vouched for claimants鈥 identity and employment. When the federal government expanded unemployment coverage to include self-employed workers, they were able to self-assert that information without any additional verification.听Similarly, applicants seeking loans for their businesses under the $800 billion PPP self-certified their applications.听
鈥淣o one can walk into a bank today and get a loan and say, 鈥楴o, no, really, I鈥檓 this person, give me the money鈥 鈥 but that鈥檚 what was going on,鈥 said DOJ Inspector General Michael Horowitz, who chairs the Pandemic Response Accountability Committee, at the Feb. 1 Oversight hearing.听
In the early months of the听pandemic, there was an understandable urgency to getting relief funds to individuals and businesses. But some protections that could have easily been utilized were bypassed. For example, PPP loans were not cross-checked with 鈥渄o not pay鈥 databases, which would have flagged 57,000 loans worth $3.6 billion by August 2020,听according to the White House. In addition, the legislation passed by Congress in the spring of 2020 was interpreted by many to discourage using businesses鈥 tax records to verify their loan applications, a practice that the Biden administration reinstated in 2021.听
鈥淚 will be the first to say all three of those programs did enormous good for tens of millions of people,鈥 says听Gene Sperling, the Biden administration鈥檚 coordinator of the American Rescue Plan, a $1.9 trillion pandemic relief package enacted in spring 2021.听鈥淏ut I would hope that when people look back, they realize that there were guardrails that were taken down at the onset of the pandemic, where the differential in speed was not worth this degree of massive fraud it led to,鈥 he adds, referring to decisions taken by the Trump administration in 2020.听听
鈥淪trike force teams鈥 to catch criminals
Mr. Jaklitsch was apprehended thanks to the work of one of three 鈥渟trike force teams鈥 set up by the Department of Justice in September 2022. The teams, based in California, Florida, and Maryland, combine the firepower of multiple agencies to investigate and prosecute large-scale pandemic relief fraud, including multistate and transnational schemes.听
The California strike team, supported by U.S. attorney offices in both Sacramento and Los Angeles, also led to the sentencing of Daryol Richmond, a former gang member who got five years in jail after pleading guilty to his role in a scheme to submit up to $25 million in fraudulent claims, $5.5 million of which were paid out.听
鈥淚鈥檓 hopeful that we see the strike team concept expand to other districts,鈥 says Phillip Talbert, U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of California, whose office is part of the California team.
Indeed, the White House has recommended tripling the number of strike teams as part of its $1.6 billion pandemic anti-fraud proposal, pending funding approval from Congress.
Mr. Sperling says the proposal would better allocate government resources, allowing inspectors general to seek civil remedies in cases of up to $1 million 鈥 up from the current cap of $150,000 under the Fraud Civil Remedies Act 鈥 while boosting the Justice Department鈥檚 ability to tackle more sophisticated cases.听听
The proposal would听not only increase the number of听strike force听teams but also make them more robust.听
When Attorney General Merrick Garland announced the strike force teams in September, he said the Department of Justice had seized more than $1.2 billion and charged over 1,500 defendants across the country. Since then, the strike force teams have听led to arrests, charges, and/or sentences in at least half a dozen other major cases in addition to Mr. Jaklitsch鈥檚 and Mr. Richmond鈥檚, with many more underway.
鈥淭he Justice Department鈥檚 COVID Fraud Strike Forces continue to build on the outstanding work being done around the country by our prosecutors and law enforcement partners,鈥 said听Michael C. Galdo, the Justice Department鈥檚 acting director of COVID-19 Fraud Enforcement, in a statement to the Monitor. 鈥淔raudsters hiding overseas will not stop our prosecutors from working with our law enforcement partners around the globe to bring those to justice who stole from the American people.鈥
Large-scale identity theft
In May 2022, Yvette Mayfield, city clerk in the oil town of Taft, California, was alerted by her employer that someone posing as her had claimed to have been laid off and was seeking unemployment benefits. She also got a notification from Bank of America that her benefits card was ready 鈥 but it went to someone else with another address.听
She says the city called California鈥檚 Employment Development Department听but never heard back, and all she could do was report 鈥渉er鈥 benefits card as stolen, and Bank of America canceled it. Then the fraudulent applicant managed to order a replacement card. Again, she was able to get Bank of America to intervene, but it left her feeling as if there was widespread fraud 鈥 and little that victims of identity theft could do about it. 听
鈥淣obody ever told me, 鈥榃e can stop this; we can fix this,鈥欌 says Mrs. Mayfield, who now monitors her credit closely.听
California initially estimated the state鈥檚 UI fraud at $11 billion in early 2021, but听revised that estimate to $20 billion before the end of the year. As of June 2022, it had recovered $1.1 billion.听
While the losses in California are the most of any state, Blake Hall, CEO of ID.me, credits the state for responding early to fraudulent claims and working to tighten its systems, and for being more transparent than other states.听
Mr. Hall says policymakers should have foreseen the potential for such massive fraud, which states 鈥 in charge of dispersing UI benefits 鈥 were unprepared to deal with.听
鈥淚t鈥檚 very naive for a policymaker to look at that program and to say there鈥檚 not going to be rampant fraud when you have billions of dollars that are literally protected by the honor system,鈥 says Mr. Hall. 鈥淪tates did not have adequate funding for just basic protections.鈥
Next steps
The White House is trying to fix that now. Its proposal would allocate $600 million toward fraud prevention, including tools that would prevent identity theft. It would also put $400 million toward helping victims of identity theft, and $600 million toward investigating and prosecuting major or systemic pandemic fraud.听
Haywood Talcove, CEO of LexisNexis Risk Solutions for Government,听which works with the government to prevent identity fraud, says zero fraud would be impossible to achieve. But he says a handful of measures 鈥 including improved front-end identity verification, comparing names of applicants across states to prevent听duplicate payments, and boosting staffing for program integrity 鈥撎齝ould get the rate of fraud as low as 3%, which he calls a 鈥渨orld-class number.鈥
Meanwhile, the strike force teams are benefiting from President Joe Biden鈥檚 extension of the statute of limitations from five to 10 years for PPP and EIDL fraud, so they can bring to justice the most sophisticated criminals. The White House has proposed likewise giving them a decade to prosecute UI fraud. However, recovering stolen funds is still a race against the clock.
In a听case听investigated by the Maryland strike force team, Alexander Barabash pleaded guilty last month to wire fraud, after repeatedly lying on PPP loan applications, and will have to pay a money judgment of $1,295,000 and forfeit $504,869.54 in his business bank account, as well as his interest in a Maryland property. But it鈥檚 not always possible to recover the funds stolen, or recoup the original value of assets purchased with them.
鈥淲e claw back as much as we can,鈥 says Mr. Talbert, the U.S. attorney in Sacramento. 鈥淏ut the longer it takes to identify the fraudster and bring them to justice, the less likely it is that there are assets that we can claw back.鈥澨
* Editor's note: A name spelling and a job title in this story were corrected.