Discussion:
They stole billions in COVID-19 relief money, but the feds won't be allowed to prosecute them
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Leroy N. Soetoro
2024-12-31 20:48:56 UTC
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https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2024/dec/30/stole-billions-covid-19-
relief-money-feds-won-allo/

The first fraudsters of the COVID-19 pandemic are about to get away with
their crimes.

Unless Congress steps in, the five-year statute of limitations on
unemployment fraud cases will expire in March. Congress approved hundreds
of billions of dollars in the initial round of assistance in March 2020.

As much as 40% of that money is estimated to be stolen.

Current law gives prosecutors five years to bring most government fraud
cases, including unemployment fraud.

Congress is considering doubling the statute of limitations but hasn’t
reached a compromise. The inspector general community, senior Republicans
and President Biden have proposed doubling the statute to 10 years and
letting states keep some of the fraudulent money they recover.

Sen. James Lankford, Oklahoma Republican, announced the latest legislation
two weeks ago.

“Making the government more efficient isn’t a partisan issue — it’s an
American issue,” he said. “Loopholes in the law let fraudsters get away
with billions in COVID recovery and Unemployment Insurance payouts while
forcing taxpayers to foot the bill.”

In December alone, prosecutors in Maryland announced indictments against
two men accused of bilking more than $1 million by filing for unemployment
benefits under stolen identities. Authorities said the scam lasted from
March 2020 through September 2021.

In New York, prosecutors charged a man with using a stolen identity to
claim benefits from September 2020 through March 2021.

In Massachusetts, federal prosecutors announced the Dec. 13 arrests of two
Boston-area corrections officers on charges of bilking the unemployment
system. One, Jasmine Murphy, attempted to alter her identity to prevent
the government from realizing she was employed while collecting the
unemployment benefits, prosecutors said.

Absent a congressional extension, the Special Inspector General for
Pandemic Recovery, which polices the Main Street Lending Program, will
shut down operations on March 28, five years after it was established.

About 70% of balloon loan payments are due after that date. The inspector
general said the payments already due have shown an “alarming rate of
defaults.”

A Republican bill to double the unemployment fraud statute of limitations
cleared the House in 2023.

Nearly all Democrats opposed portions of the bill. One provision trimmed
money allocated to states to modernize their unemployment systems. Another
would have required those who received overpayments, though not
necessarily from fraud, to pay back the money.

“Don’t punish people who may be caught up in this net that was not of
their making,” Rep. Earl Blumenauer, Oregon Democrat, said at the time.

Many bills introduced in the Senate have been bipartisan but have not
received substantive action. One was introduced by Sen. Ron Wyden, Oregon
Democrat, and Sen. Mike Crapo, Idaho Republican.

Eric Fejer, a spokesman for Mr. Crapo, said the senators are still looking
to take action.

“Sen. Crapo is aware of the deadline and is committed to finding a
solution,” he said.

The statute of limitations will probably have a negligible effect early
on, given that most of those who engaged in fraud continued it for months.
They remain liable five years after receiving their last ill-gotten check.

Jordan Burris, who served as a senior technology official in the federal
government and is now a vice president at Socure, a fraud-fighting
company, said the statute of limitations won’t reclaim the money.

“They could extend it for beyond five years, they could extend it to 20
years. Many of these fraudsters are advanced nation-states, and we’re not
going to claw it back,” he said.

He said the fraud fiasco underscores a bigger problem with government
spending: The feds are too intent on paying out cash than trying to track
down and reclaim misspent money.

More than three years into the pandemic and perhaps $300 billion in bogus
payments, just $1.2 billion in unemployment fraud has been recovered,
according to the Government Accountability Office.

“Our mindset needs to shift from going after and getting back money we’ve
already lost,” Mr. Burris said. “Our efforts need to go toward
prevention.”

Even if a state deems an unemployment case likely fraud, existing law
requires payments to be restarted within two weeks if the claimant
appeals. The state can’t hold a hearing before the deadline.

Mr. Lankford has introduced legislation to strike that automatic payout
restoration.

Congress has acted to double the statute of limitations for pandemic fraud
cases involving small-business loans, creating a 10-year prosecution
window.

For more information, visit The Washington Times COVID-19 resource page.

• Stephen Dinan can be reached at ***@washingtontimes.com.
--
November 5, 2024 - Congratulations President Donald Trump. We look
forward to America being great again.

The disease known as Kamala Harris has been effectively treated and
eradicated.

We live in a time where intelligent people are being silenced so that
stupid people won't be offended.

Durham Report: The FBI has an integrity problem. It has none.

Thank you for cleaning up the disaster of the 2008-2017 Obama / Biden
fiasco, President Trump.

Under Barack Obama's leadership, the United States of America became the
The World According To Garp. Obama sold out heterosexuals for Hollywood
queer liberal democrat donors.
pothead
2024-12-31 22:37:38 UTC
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Permalink
Post by Leroy N. Soetoro
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2024/dec/30/stole-billions-covid-19-
relief-money-feds-won-allo/
The first fraudsters of the COVID-19 pandemic are about to get away with
their crimes.
Unless Congress steps in, the five-year statute of limitations on
unemployment fraud cases will expire in March. Congress approved hundreds
of billions of dollars in the initial round of assistance in March 2020.
As much as 40% of that money is estimated to be stolen.
Current law gives prosecutors five years to bring most government fraud
cases, including unemployment fraud.
Congress is considering doubling the statute of limitations but hasn’t
reached a compromise. The inspector general community, senior Republicans
and President Biden have proposed doubling the statute to 10 years and
letting states keep some of the fraudulent money they recover.
Sen. James Lankford, Oklahoma Republican, announced the latest legislation
two weeks ago.
“Making the government more efficient isn’t a partisan issue — it’s an
American issue,” he said. “Loopholes in the law let fraudsters get away
with billions in COVID recovery and Unemployment Insurance payouts while
forcing taxpayers to foot the bill.”
In December alone, prosecutors in Maryland announced indictments against
two men accused of bilking more than $1 million by filing for unemployment
benefits under stolen identities. Authorities said the scam lasted from
March 2020 through September 2021.
In New York, prosecutors charged a man with using a stolen identity to
claim benefits from September 2020 through March 2021.
In Massachusetts, federal prosecutors announced the Dec. 13 arrests of two
Boston-area corrections officers on charges of bilking the unemployment
system. One, Jasmine Murphy, attempted to alter her identity to prevent
the government from realizing she was employed while collecting the
unemployment benefits, prosecutors said.
Absent a congressional extension, the Special Inspector General for
Pandemic Recovery, which polices the Main Street Lending Program, will
shut down operations on March 28, five years after it was established.
About 70% of balloon loan payments are due after that date. The inspector
general said the payments already due have shown an “alarming rate of
defaults.”
A Republican bill to double the unemployment fraud statute of limitations
cleared the House in 2023.
Nearly all Democrats opposed portions of the bill. One provision trimmed
money allocated to states to modernize their unemployment systems. Another
would have required those who received overpayments, though not
necessarily from fraud, to pay back the money.
“Don’t punish people who may be caught up in this net that was not of
their making,” Rep. Earl Blumenauer, Oregon Democrat, said at the time.
Many bills introduced in the Senate have been bipartisan but have not
received substantive action. One was introduced by Sen. Ron Wyden, Oregon
Democrat, and Sen. Mike Crapo, Idaho Republican.
Eric Fejer, a spokesman for Mr. Crapo, said the senators are still looking
to take action.
“Sen. Crapo is aware of the deadline and is committed to finding a
solution,” he said.
The statute of limitations will probably have a negligible effect early
on, given that most of those who engaged in fraud continued it for months.
They remain liable five years after receiving their last ill-gotten check.
Jordan Burris, who served as a senior technology official in the federal
government and is now a vice president at Socure, a fraud-fighting
company, said the statute of limitations won’t reclaim the money.
“They could extend it for beyond five years, they could extend it to 20
years. Many of these fraudsters are advanced nation-states, and we’re not
going to claw it back,” he said.
He said the fraud fiasco underscores a bigger problem with government
spending: The feds are too intent on paying out cash than trying to track
down and reclaim misspent money.
More than three years into the pandemic and perhaps $300 billion in bogus
payments, just $1.2 billion in unemployment fraud has been recovered,
according to the Government Accountability Office.
“Our mindset needs to shift from going after and getting back money we’ve
already lost,” Mr. Burris said. “Our efforts need to go toward
prevention.”
Even if a state deems an unemployment case likely fraud, existing law
requires payments to be restarted within two weeks if the claimant
appeals. The state can’t hold a hearing before the deadline.
Mr. Lankford has introduced legislation to strike that automatic payout
restoration.
Congress has acted to double the statute of limitations for pandemic fraud
cases involving small-business loans, creating a 10-year prosecution
window.
For more information, visit The Washington Times COVID-19 resource page.
Except in NYS where they changed the laws just so they could prosecute Trump
for the Carroll crap.
--
pothead

"Give a man a fish and you turn him into a Democrat for life"
"Teach a man to fish and he might become a self-sufficient conservative Republican"
"Don't underestimate Joe's ability to fuck things up,"
--- Barack H. Obama
Anonymous
2024-12-31 23:17:33 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by pothead
Except in NYS where they changed the laws just so they could prosecute Trump
for the Carroll crap.
Bullshit.
Siri Cruise
2024-12-31 23:39:41 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by pothead
Post by Leroy N. Soetoro
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2024/dec/30/stole-billions-covid-19-
relief-money-feds-won-allo/
The first fraudsters of the COVID-19 pandemic are about to get away with
their crimes.
Unless Congress steps in, the five-year statute of limitations on
unemployment fraud cases will expire in March. Congress approved hundreds
of billions of dollars in the initial round of assistance in March 2020.
As much as 40% of that money is estimated to be stolen.
Current law gives prosecutors five years to bring most government fraud
cases, including unemployment fraud.
Congress is considering doubling the statute of limitations but hasn’t
reached a compromise. The inspector general community, senior Republicans
and President Biden have proposed doubling the statute to 10 years and
letting states keep some of the fraudulent money they recover.
Sen. James Lankford, Oklahoma Republican, announced the latest legislation
two weeks ago.
“Making the government more efficient isn’t a partisan issue — it’s an
American issue,” he said. “Loopholes in the law let fraudsters get away
with billions in COVID recovery and Unemployment Insurance payouts while
forcing taxpayers to foot the bill.”
In December alone, prosecutors in Maryland announced indictments against
two men accused of bilking more than $1 million by filing for unemployment
benefits under stolen identities. Authorities said the scam lasted from
March 2020 through September 2021.
In New York, prosecutors charged a man with using a stolen identity to
claim benefits from September 2020 through March 2021.
In Massachusetts, federal prosecutors announced the Dec. 13 arrests of two
Boston-area corrections officers on charges of bilking the unemployment
system. One, Jasmine Murphy, attempted to alter her identity to prevent
the government from realizing she was employed while collecting the
unemployment benefits, prosecutors said.
Absent a congressional extension, the Special Inspector General for
Pandemic Recovery, which polices the Main Street Lending Program, will
shut down operations on March 28, five years after it was established.
About 70% of balloon loan payments are due after that date. The inspector
general said the payments already due have shown an “alarming rate of
defaults.”
A Republican bill to double the unemployment fraud statute of limitations
cleared the House in 2023.
Nearly all Democrats opposed portions of the bill. One provision trimmed
money allocated to states to modernize their unemployment systems. Another
would have required those who received overpayments, though not
necessarily from fraud, to pay back the money.
“Don’t punish people who may be caught up in this net that was not of
their making,” Rep. Earl Blumenauer, Oregon Democrat, said at the time.
Many bills introduced in the Senate have been bipartisan but have not
received substantive action. One was introduced by Sen. Ron Wyden, Oregon
Democrat, and Sen. Mike Crapo, Idaho Republican.
Eric Fejer, a spokesman for Mr. Crapo, said the senators are still looking
to take action.
“Sen. Crapo is aware of the deadline and is committed to finding a
solution,” he said.
The statute of limitations will probably have a negligible effect early
on, given that most of those who engaged in fraud continued it for months.
They remain liable five years after receiving their last ill-gotten check.
Jordan Burris, who served as a senior technology official in the federal
government and is now a vice president at Socure, a fraud-fighting
company, said the statute of limitations won’t reclaim the money.
“They could extend it for beyond five years, they could extend it to 20
years. Many of these fraudsters are advanced nation-states, and we’re not
going to claw it back,” he said.
He said the fraud fiasco underscores a bigger problem with government
spending: The feds are too intent on paying out cash than trying to track
down and reclaim misspent money.
More than three years into the pandemic and perhaps $300 billion in bogus
payments, just $1.2 billion in unemployment fraud has been recovered,
according to the Government Accountability Office.
“Our mindset needs to shift from going after and getting back money we’ve
already lost,” Mr. Burris said. “Our efforts need to go toward
prevention.”
Even if a state deems an unemployment case likely fraud, existing law
requires payments to be restarted within two weeks if the claimant
appeals. The state can’t hold a hearing before the deadline.
Mr. Lankford has introduced legislation to strike that automatic payout
restoration.
Congress has acted to double the statute of limitations for pandemic fraud
cases involving small-business loans, creating a 10-year prosecution
window.
For more information, visit The Washington Times COVID-19 resource page.
Except in NYS where they changed the laws just so they could prosecute Trump
for the Carroll crap.
Trump has not been prosecuted for his rape of E. Jean Carroll.
--
:-<> Siri Seal of Horseshit #000-001. Horseshit. Bullshit. Shit. @
'I desire torrid wild-eyed bungholery.' /|\
I'm saving up to buy a big zucchini to This post / \
shove 30cm up my growler! insults basic decency.
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