The
push, led by White House adviser Gene Sperling, will seek to
demonstrate renewed toughness on pandemic fraud ahead of
promised investigations by House of Representatives Republicans
on the trillions of dollars in COVID-19 pandemic aid approved
under both former President Donald Trump, a Republican, and
Biden, his Democratic successor.
The aid, among other things, helped pay for expanded
unemployment benefits to workers and forgivable loans under the
Paycheck Protection Program to companies if they kept workers
employed.
The funding request includes $600 million to help investigate
large-scale fraud by criminal syndicates, $600 million for fraud
and identity theft protection, and $400 million to help victims
who have had their identities stolen, according to the White
House.
In addition, Biden wants Congress to increase the statute of
limitations on serious pandemic unemployment insurance fraud to
10 years, the White House said.
The money would help triple the size of the COVID Strike Force
teams created by the Justice Department. In one case, an
investigation by the task force recovered $286 million in stolen
pandemic relief funds, and investigators have identified several
equally important cases, according to the White House.
The money would also help improve the website IdentityTheft.gov
to help it provide individuals with a one-stop shop to report
identity crimes and to receive personalized identity theft
recovery assistance.
The U.S. is already probing many fraud cases pegged to federal
assistance programs, such as the Paycheck Protection Program,
unemployment insurance and Medicare.
The federal government likely awarded about $5.4 billion in
COVID aid to people with questionable Social Security numbers, a
federal watchdog said in a report last month.
Sperling, who oversees the COVID aid response for the White
House, told reporters the renewed focus on pandemic fraud has
nothing to do with coming Republican investigations.
"We've been actively focused on this from day one," Sperling
said.
He said he would begin meeting with lawmakers on Thursday to
discuss the legislative package.
(Reporting by Jarrett Renshaw in Philadelphia; Editing by Tim
Ahmann and Leslie Adler)
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