PPP boys are up: Prosecutors Struggle to Catch Up to a Tidal Wave of Pandemic Fraud

OfTheCross

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But those dollars came with few strings and minimal oversight. The result: one of the largest frauds in American history





In the midst of the pandemic, the government gave unemployment benefits to the incarcerated, the imaginary and the dead. It sent money to “farms” that turned out to be front yards. It paid people who were on the government’s “Do Not Pay List.” It gave loans to 342 people who said their name was “N/A.”

As the coronavirus shuttered businesses and forced people out of work, the federal government sent a flood of relief money into programs aimed at helping the newly unemployed and bolstering the economy. That included $3.1 trillion that former President Donald J. Trump approved in 2020, followed by a $1.9 trillion package signed into law in 2021 by President Biden.

But those dollars came with few strings and minimal oversight. The result: one of the largest frauds in American history, with billions of dollars stolen by thousands of people, including at least one amateur who boasted of his criminal activity on YouTube.

Now, prosecutors are trying to catch up.

There are 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.

Agents in the inspector general’s office at the Labor Department have 39,000 investigations going. About 50 agents in a Small Business Administration office are sorting through two million potentially fraudulent loan applications.

Officials already concede that the sheer number of cases means that some small-dollar thefts may never be prosecuted. This month, Mr. Biden signed bills extending the statute of limitations for some pandemic-related fraud to 10 years from five, a move aimed at giving the government more time to pursue cases. “My message to those cheats out there is this: You can’t hide. We’re going to find you,” Mr. Biden said during the signing at the White House.

Investigators say they hope the extra time will allow them to ensure that those who defrauded the government are ultimately punished, restoring a deterrent that had vanished in a flood of lies and money.

“There are years and years and years of work ahead of us,” said Kevin Chambers, the Justice Department’s chief pandemic prosecutor. “I’m confident that we’ll be using every last day of those 10 years.”

The federal government provided about $5 trillion in relief money in three separate legislative packages — an enormous sum that is credited with reducing poverty and saving the country from a prolonged, painful recession.

But investigators say that Congress, in its haste to get money out the door, devised all three packages with the same flaw: relying on the honor system.

For example, 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. Applicants did not need to provide proof they had lost income because of Covid-19; they simply had to swear it was true.

They were the Paycheck Protection Program, in which the government guaranteed loans made by private lenders, and the Economic Injury Disaster Loan program, in which the government itself gave out loans and smaller advance grants that did not have to be repaid. In both, the government trusted businesses to self-certify that they met key requirements.

Both the Labor Department and the Small Business Administration said that they had tried to screen those claims — and that they did reject billions of dollars’ worth of applications that did not make sense. But that was not enough.

In some cases, the programs missed schemes that were comically easy to spot. In one instance, 29 states paid unemployment benefits to the same person. In another, a Postal Service employee got an $82,900 loan for a business called “U.S. Postal Services.” Another individual got 10 loans for 10 nonexistent bathroom-renovation businesses, using the email address of a burrito shop.

In the Paycheck Protection Program, private banks were supposed to help with the screening, since in theory they were dealing with customers they already knew. But that left out many small businesses, and the government allowed online lenders to enter the program. This year, University of Texas researchers found that some of those “fintech” lenders appeared less diligent about catching fraud.
 

The region 219

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Some software engineering group is going to make a software that helps the prosecutors identify fraud in the next 3-5 years and then they'll really start knocking this shyt out of the park.
 

88m3

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I have a bigger issue with large companies that took the loans "legally"


At the end of the day the money will all go back to the government and help the economy
 

Arithmetic

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Greatest handout in US history. Royal fukk up. Should have just made a direct credit to everyone's mortgages and student loans instead
 
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Greatest handout in US history. Royal fukk up. Should have just made a direct credit to everyone's mortgages and student loans instead
I hate the word handout. My best friends business (he’s a dentist and owns his practice) would’ve failed without those PPP loans and his employees would be out of jobs. It was necessary but yeah there was a lot of fraud.
 

Arithmetic

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I hate the word handout. My best friends business (he’s a dentist and owns his practice) would’ve failed without those PPP loans and his employees would be out of jobs. It was necessary but yeah there was a lot of fraud.
Yeah, I'm speaking on the underserving/fraud/straight to pocket recipients. And that number is in the millions
 

OfTheCross

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TEXARKANA, Texas – A Maud, Texas man has been sentenced for federal violations related to a COVID-relief fraud scheme in the Eastern District of Texas, announced U.S. Attorney Brit Featherston today.

Samuel Morgan Yates, 35, pleaded guilty on May 6, 2022, to wire fraud and was sentenced to 68 months in federal prison today by U.S. District Judge Robert W. Schroeder, III. Yates was also ordered to pay $1,066,432 in monetary penalties for restitution and forfeiture.

According to court documents, Yates made two fraudulent applications to two different lenders for loans guaranteed by the SBA for COVID-19 relief through the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP). In the application submitted to the first lender, Yates sought $5 million in PPP loan proceeds by fraudulently claiming to have over 400 employees with an average monthly payroll of more than $2 million. In the second application, Yates claimed to employ over 100 individuals and was able to obtain a loan of over $500,000. With each application, Yates submitted a list of purported employees that he obtained from a publicly available random name generator on the internet. He also submitted forged tax documents with each application.

 

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Michigan woman sentenced to 10 years in prison for stealing more than $1 million in Covid relief funds​

Amber Ainsworth
Thu, December 7, 2023 at 5:09 PM GMT+2
bdd6b2b92b3e67a0bb996dbddf14771e

BENTON HARBOR, Mich. (FOX 2) - Theft of more than $1 million in Covid relief funds led to a prison sentence for a Michigan woman.
Roshell Beaty, 46, of Benton Harbor, and family members worked together on a scheme to steal $749,086 in unemployment insurance money from Michigan, California, Indiana, Illinois, and Arizona. Authorities say they did this by filing unemployment insurance claims in their own names in multiple states. They also made some claims by using fake identification documents.
They also stole $287,784 in business loans.

Beaty was sentenced to more than 10 years in prison after pleading guilty to two counts of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and one count of aggravated identity theft.
"The blatant disregard by the defendant to defraud unemployment insurance and loan programs during the COVID-19 pandemic while many individuals and families were struggling was staggering," said Special Agent in Charge Cheyvoryea Gibson of the FBI in Michigan. "Providing false information to fraudulently gain access to relief funds is a theft of taxpayer money. The FBI remains committed to working with our partners to investigate and hold those accountable who seek to defraud government assistance programs."
Beaty's three adult children and two other people have also been convicted in the scheme.



They're being rounded up. No way my Coli breh'thren didn't hit up those loans.
:sas2:


10 years this one got..:picard:
 

Professor Emeritus

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There's an argument the fraud and its prosecution is a net positive. It was just one-time weeding-out process to clear the country of dishonest entreprenuers and businesspeople. Normally they'd be skating by doing unethical shyt that no one would ever take out the time to get them hemmed up for, but this was an opportunity to get every immoral person in business to stick their necks out and commit an actual prosecuteable crime.

Brilliant anti-corruption program. :wow:
 
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There's an argument the fraud and its prosecution is a net positive. It was just one-time weeding-out process to clear the country of dishonest entreprenuers and businesspeople. Normally they'd be skating by doing unethical shyt that no one would ever take out the time to get them hemmed up for, but this was an opportunity to get every immoral person in business to stick their necks out and commit an actual prosecuteable crime.

Brilliant anti-corruption program. :wow:
Well damn I never thought of this shyt
 
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