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Government Swamped with PPP Fraud Claims

The Wall Street Journal reports the federal government is swamped with reports of potential fraud in the Paycheck ProtectionĀ Program (PPP), according to government officials and public data.

Growing evidence suggests that the self-certification vetting process created anĀ opportunity for people to take advantageĀ of the program’s open-door design, theĀ report says.

The SBA’s inspector general found ā€œtens ofĀ thousandsā€ of companies that receivedĀ PPP loans when they were ineligible, theĀ report says. This could includeĀ corporations created after the pandemicĀ arrived, businesses that had more thanĀ 500 employees and companies that owe the federal government money, hence are named in a do-not-pay database.

Some eligible companies mayĀ have received more than they should have.

The FBI has opened several hundred PPP-related investigations that involve almostĀ 500 suspects and hundreds of millions ofĀ dollars, the report says. The U.S. JusticeĀ Department already has charged 73Ā defendants in fraud cases related to PPP.

The Treasury Department in September received 2,495 suspicious-activity reports involving business loans from banks and otherĀ depository institutions, more than the total for any year dating backĀ to 2014, according to public data.

Many other PPP loans are falling into a gray area in whichĀ businesses received one despite seeing revenue increase during theĀ pandemic.Ā Prosecutors are probing some of those casesĀ but findingĀ it difficult to bring charges, in part because Congress set a low barĀ for obtaining the funds, according to law enforcement officialsĀ familiar with the matter.

Prosecutors face hurdles in proving business owners lied whenĀ they said they needed money in the pandemic’s chaotic early days—even if profits kept coming in later, officials said.