Last week a government report revealed
that COVID-19 relief efforts led to possibly the largest fraud in the history
of America.
The
Washington Post reported that unemployment benefits of an
estimated $163
billion were paid to undeserving individuals due to either error or
fraud.
In the Economic
Injury Disaster Loan program, around $58
billion was paid to companies that shared the same addresses, phone
numbers, bank accounts, or other data as other applicants — a clear indication
of fraud.
Why did this happen?
The first reason
is antiquated computer systems
The federal and state
governments have separate databases to store the same information and separate
systems to perform the same function. At times departments within both state
and federal governments have separate databases for the same data.
The outcome is data
redundancy, data inconsistency and no proper tracking.
The second reason is
the lack of coordination between state and federal governments and a
lack of regard for taxpayer funds.
For instance, an
expanded unemployment benefit gave workers an extra $600
per week in federal jobless funds on top of what they received from
their state. The program was funded by the federal government but
administered by states, which often had loose rules around qualifying.
The antiquated computer systems, a lack of coordination, and a
causal attitude towards public money resulted in the following:
Unemployment benefits were dispatched to the incarcerated, the imaginary, and the
departed.
People who were on the government’s “Do Not Pay List” and with “N/A” in their name were also
recipients of government benefits.
Firms that were
too big to
qualify received their welfare money, hence the money was spent on Rolexes, Rolls-Royces, yachts, mansions, and a Pokémon
trading card.
The third reason was the prevalence of frauds.
Quite often to receive the benefits,
the applicants weren’t required to provide proof their income had suffered due
to COVID-19, instead, they had to swear it was true. This obviously was an opportunity
for fraudsters. Even fictitious
farms received welfare money.
The antiquated system
was also exploited by identity thieves and scam artists exploited the system while
those in need were probably left in the metaphorical rain.
For instance, a
mother-daughter duo in Westchester County, N.Y., is
accused of running the equivalent of a consultancy service where they
helped others falsify the existence of a business to claim loans from the
Economic Injury Disaster program. The government charged both with wire fraud.
They have pleaded not guilty.
The
New York Times reported that the volume of fraud in federal pandemic programs is
such that even after two years of work and hundreds of prosecutions they have
merely scratched the surface.
It was reported that
currently 500 people working on pandemic-fraud cases across the offices of 21
inspectors general, plus investigators from the F.B.I., the Secret Service, the
Postal Inspection Service, and the Internal Revenue Service.
The federal
government has already charged 1,500 people with defrauding pandemic-aid
programs, and more than 450 people have been convicted so far. But those
figures are dwarfed by the mountain of tips and leads that investigators still
have to chase.
The inspector
general’s office at the Labor Department has 39,000
investigations in progress.
The Justice
Department has charged people with about $1 billion in fraud so far, and is
investigating other cases involving $6 billion more, investigators said.
The NYT reported that
the Small Business Administration sent its inspector general two million loan
applications to check for potential identity theft.
At the Labor
Department, the inspector general’s office has 39,000 cases of suspected
unemployment fraud, a 1,000 percent increase from pre-pandemic levels.
But prosecutors face
a key disadvantage. The investigations take months and prosecutions take even
longer.
The question remains
if the government was unable to properly track funds dispatched within its own
country, what about monies sent to foreign countries?
The US committed
approximately $10.6
billion in the form of aid and assistance to Ukraine since the
beginning of the conflict. But unlike the investigations about COVID-19 fraud,
there will be none in Ukraine. The Ukrainian government officials and
businesses have a reputation for corruption. How much of the relief money
actually reached Ukrainians in peril? We will never ever know.
It is commendable
that the government is holding COVID-19 fraud accountable but what about the
powerful who used questionable methods to enrich themselves?
What about government
officials writing op-eds advocating
war while sitting on the board of weapons
manufacturers? What about politicians receiving handsome
speaking fees and million-dollar
contracts after retirement? What about politicians who use campaign
funds to pay
handsome salaries to family members?
What about Hillary
Clinton accepting
donations from private individuals and even foreign governments for
the Clinton Foundation while she was touring the world as secretary of state?
What about the donations drying up after she lost the 2016 election to Donald
Trump? What about politicians passing favorable policies for a certain
sector of business and receiving employment in the same sector after
retirement?
None of these will
ever be investigated or punished because they belong to the ‘ruling class.
This lack of regard
for public money and the two-tier system for accountability is why public
trust in government has eroded.
Also appears on American Thinker
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