Scammers got nearly 30% of Arizona virus unemployment pay
Most of the fraud happened in the first several months of the pandemic and hit federally funded emergency unemployment insurance programs. Those programs were designed to help people who normally would not be eligible for assistance because they had contract jobs or were so-called “gig workers” such as
The amount lost to fraud is between
The state was able to recover
The state was able to get more than
“I feel horrible for the taxpayer, for myself as a taxpayer, for all taxpayers, that this happened,” Wisehart said of the fraud loss. “But I’ll tell you, I would be way more angry at me and us if this was into 2021 and it extended beyond the first two or three months of the pandemic where it was true chaos.”
Pandemic unemployment fraud is not solely an
Besides fleecing taxpayers, the fraud prevented legitimate payments and turned thousands of Americans into unwitting identity theft victims. Many states have failed to adequately safeguard their systems, and the AP's review found some states would not publicly acknowledge the extent of the problem.
That was the case before Thursday in
Yet Wisehart knew as early as last summer that hundreds of thousands of fraudulent claims were being made. He said last September that the agency was holding onto as many as 900,000 claims because of suspected fraud.
Wisehart said in an interview Thursday that the agency was struggling after the pandemic hit to stand up the new emergency unemployment program. In
The state agency ended up hiring more than 2,500 workers for new call center and processing jobs and creating a new filing portal for the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance program.
The federal program's rules said unemployed workers only had to self-certify that they were eligible and that states were not able to delay payments to verify their identity and eligibility. When the extra
That made
That mainly worked, but the damage had been done.
Wisehart said the state's steps haven't eliminated scammers, but they are a vast improvement. They are now targeting people who have had their identify certified by the state for identify theft so they can get benefits.
“The fraudsters are going to continue to evolve, they’re going to continue to get smarter, and we’re going to need to continue to work nationally to prevent this from continuing to be a pervasive problem,” Wisehart said.
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