Full Extent of COVID Fraud Will 'Never Be Known With Certainty'
A new GAO report details federal prosecutors' attempts to put the horse back in the barn.

A couple claiming to run a farm that employed dozens of people used fake employee records to get more than $1 million in COVID-19 relief payments when they actually employed no one on a farm that did not exist.
A social media influencer created fake documents to score more than $400,000 in COVID-19 funds meant to help small businesses, then used the money to buy cryptocurrency and gifts for his girlfriend.
A state employee whose job was to stop unemployment benefits fraud helped other fraudsters navigate around fraud prevention systems so they could steal more than $1 million, including federal tax dollars made available to states during the pandemic.
Only now, nearly four years after the federal government approved an unprecedented amount of emergency spending in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, are investigators getting a full picture of all the ways that schemers and thieves raided programs. Congress approved about $4.6 trillion in COVID-19 emergency spending, and so much of it was stolen that auditors now say we'll likely never have a full accounting of it all.
"When the federal government provides emergency assistance, the risk of payment errors—including those attributable to fraud—may increase because the need to provide this assistance quickly can lead agencies to relax or forego effective safeguards," the Government Accountability Office (GAO) explained in a new report summing up efforts to recoup stolen funds. "Because not all fraud will be identified, investigated, and adjudicated through judicial or other systems, the full extent of fraud associated with the COVID-19 relief funds will never be known with certainty."
As Reason has previously reported, auditors believe that about $200 billion was fraudulently disbursed from two programs run by the Small Business Administration (SBA) during the pandemic. That's about one-sixth of all spending run through the SBA's Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) and the Economic Injury Disaster Loan (EIDL) program. Additionally, the GAO believes that between $100 billion and $135 billion in federal unemployment funds—provided to states on a temporary basis during the pandemic—were lost to fraud.
One former U.S. attorney has called it "the biggest fraud in a generation."
It's far too late to put all those horses back in the barn, but state and federal officials are trying to do what they can. The latest GAO report details those ongoing efforts, including the nearly 1,400 individuals who have been found guilty of fraud connected to COVID-19 relief efforts. As of June, the GAO reported, there had been 1,051 sentences handed down in those cases, often requiring restitution of fraudulent payments. Hundreds of people have been given jail time, including 33 who have received sentences of 10 years or more.
There are more than 500 other cases still pending in the court system, according to the GAO. Congress has extended the statute of limitations on COVID-related fraud to 10 years, so it's a good bet that prosecutors will be adding to those numbers for quite a while.
But recovering all the lost funds is impossible. In some cases, officials aren't even trying: The SBA decided earlier this year not to pursue collections actions against individuals who haven't repaid EIDL loans of $100,000 or less. The SBA says trying to collect those loans would be more costly than whatever might be recouped—and since many of the loans were probably given out fraudulently, tracking down who got what will be extra difficult.
The GAO does not have a running total of how much has been recovered in the form of restitution payments as a result of successful prosecutions, a spokeswoman for the office tells Reason. That's due in part to the fact that the amount of restitution ordered by the courts and what is actually repaid to the government are often different amounts.
What has been reported, however, leaves a wide gap. For example, the GAO reported in May that states had identified about $55.8 billion in fraudulent and nonfraudulent unemployment overpayments that occurred between March 2020 and March 2023. Of that, about $6.8 billion had been recovered.
Of course, none of these calculations of COVID-19 aid lost to fraud include other types of pandemic-era spending that was clearly wasteful and unnecessary, even if it didn't meet the legal standard for fraud. Much of the aid delivered to cities and states was blown on frivolities like golf courses or was used to pad public employees' paychecks. Iowa spent $12.5 million of its $4.5 billion cut of the federal bailout on a new baseball stadium near the Field of Dreams movie set, while Michigan spent $25.6 million on a travel marketing campaign.
The federal and state officials who approved that spending won't be seeing the inside of a jail cell, even though the distinction between using COVID-19 aid to build a baseball stadium and using PPP funds to buy a luxury car is mostly an aesthetic one.
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Armed-robbers trying to find and charge the scam-robbers. Remember the good old days when people actually *earned* money.
100% fraud.
That's what I came here to say.
All of it. End of story.
That is what I came here to say. We do know for certain and it was 100%
One if the many reasons why the federal government should have never coughed up any money for covid relief.
The alternative was for people to get shot.
COVID was going to leave a bad taste in your mouth either way.
The alternative was mass death on a scale far greater than we actually experienced.
Cite, retard?
Lol
I identify as a survivor of COVID.
Individual citizens or even companies abusing federal grant programs isn't the covid-19 fraud I'm concerned about.
Yup, well until the FBI seizes the assets of one of your customers who owes you money. Just had it happen on a home were installing the HVAC system in, owners had like 10 ppe loans for shell companies.
Oh. Sorry. You are never getting paid. The FBI might be only of the only government agencies incompetent enough to lose an entire house they have seized.
The real scandal is the "loans" that were all forgiven.
Not even close.
The covid largesse was 99% safe and effective.
and shrike would say no downside as it helps the GDP narrative!
Folks should needle him regarding that logical fallacy.
You'd need a wheelbarrow to cover such a largesse.
only caused the dollar to lose a 1/3 of its purchasing power
The Fed's at, what, 98% loss?
Scamdemic.
I was such a chump...for only requesting what my business realistically qualified for. We were still lucky to survive the shutdowns.
Another restaurant owner I know came out of COVID with a very nice new Italian car.
Same. I crunched the numbers and got what I was legitimately entitled to. Funny thing. Nobody ever asked to see my financials and the "loan" was forgiven almost immediately. I could have gotten 10 times as much.
If the only fraud in this whole mess were merely financial...
Full Extent of COVID Fraud
Fatass Donnie fed the Swamp creatures he talks about all the time.
Once again ... Democrats wrote, pitched and pushed the bill.
Republicans always suck when they side with Demonrats but it hardly makes them the point of blame.
"My mask protects you, your mask protects me!" -Benjamin Franklin
"That's nonsense, I invented masks. Benjamin Franklin is the devil."
-Fauci
“Regarding the senior senator from Delaware, Fuck Joe Biden.”
- Benjamin Franklin
No, the federal government is the biggest fraud in history. Unless maybe China’s government is bigger, but second biggest is nothing to brag about.
Huh. Seems Reason is still messing with the comment system. The original had the blockquotes in the right place, but it quoted the whole thing. I edited it to fix it, it still quotes the whole thing.
Maybe in a month or a year we'll get some new feature. I notice the comment history hasn't been working for a long time.
Makes me wonder how they can crap on something which never changes.
Here is an italicized non-quoted paragraph.
Too bad EDIT doesn't show all the tags, like blockquote.
Here is an italicized non-quoted paragraph, and it's first.
Here is a third paragraph, pure vanilla.
*
*
Make sure the bug still exists. This second paragraph is not blockquoted.
Well, there you go. An initial blockquote tag ignores your end tag and quotes everything.
Then this vanilla paragraph. Does that initial space hide the bug?
I think they just apply code updates from their third party and they get what they get.
Yeah, but then that third party is dinking with the code for no reason.
They have a reason!
If they don't put out updates they won't get PAID!
MAF1A - Make America Fraud #1 Again
That's a good notion, at least. They've governed better than the government.
ya wouldn't the real story be the fraud-turtles all the way down?
Surely this headline could have been saved for a different article.
"Full Extent of COVID Fraud Will 'Never Be Known With Certainty''
Are we talking about the money the government shoveled, or the bullshit the government shoveled?
This ostensibly Libertarian rag is going to quibble about the money endlessly to ignore the entire thing was a fraud and the full extent of the human rights violations committed with their full progressive endorsement. Fact is 100% of the money doled out was done under fraudulent pretenses.