“This is not just the theft of the American people’s money, this is also theft of critical services that the American people rely on.”
Vice President JD Vance hosted the first meeting of the President’s Task Force to Eliminate Fraud on Friday at the White House, during which he and other officials spoke about the importance of rooting out fraud to restore trust among Americans who pay into these programs.
Vance said, “We think fraud has been a problem for a long time. It became a massive, massive problem under the Biden administration. We’re going to do a number of things. First of all, we’re going to turn back on those anti-fraud protections so that all of these cabinet officials are looking at what’s going on and focusing on it. The second thing is that we’re going to take a whole-of-government approach. So much of what’s going to make the anti-fraud task force work is that we’re communicating across different departments.”
He later added, “This is not just the theft of the American people’s money, this is also theft of critical services that the American people rely on.” He used the example of the wide-reaching fraud of Minnesota’s Medicaid-funded autism services by Somalian residents. “What we’ve seen is Somali fraudsters at an industrial scale taking advantage of that program to the tune of millions and millions of dollars.”
He said that there are “two separate tragedies” in regards to the Minnesota fraud: “The first tragedy is that you have people who pay into the federal government, who pay into the IRS, who pay their taxes, expecting that those taxes will go to help their fellow citizens, and it’s not going there. It’s going to help fraudsters. That’s tragedy number one. And the more important tragedy is that you have families who need these services who are unable to get them because people are getting rich off of fraud schemes instead of making sure that autistic children and their families get access to these resources.”
Task force chairman Andrew Ferguson, who also serves as the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) chairman, said the fraud erodes the American public’s trust. “For decades, Americans have turned over trillions of their tax dollars to social welfare programs to help their neighbors and fellow citizens through hard times. They have done so on the basis of social trust, the belief that their government, state and federal, will do the right things with their dollars, and that their fellow citizens will honestly participate in these programs. Fraud shreds the social trust on which these programs and our entire nation depend.”
He said that in working to combat fraud, “we will restore the social trust that has been lost because of mismanagement and fraud today, of so many members of the President’s Cabinet, including the vice president himself, is a testimony to the importance of our work and its priority in this administration.”
Vance and Ferguson have sent a memo to task force members addressing the issue of fraud in the federal government and outlining solutions to such a problem. They wrote that preventing fraud requires a “multi-pronged approach,” including recovering as much of the defrauded funds as possible, prosecuting those who have committed fraud, and preventing fraud before it can even occur.
The memo stated that the DOJ’s new Assistant Attorney General for Fraud will lead the Trump administration’s prosecutorial efforts but noted that “prosecutions alone will not stop the bleeding.” It stated that the federal government “simply does not have the resources necessary to recover all of the money lost to fraud once it has been paid out,” which is why it is important to prevent fraud from occurring before payments are made.
In working to prevent fraud from occurring, the task force will focus on programs that are “high-spend, low-verification,” meaning programs that pay out “large sums of money with low confidence or limited information about the ultimate recipients and the uses of those funds.” Such programs include Medicare and Medicaid, some federal benefits programs, and some loans issued under the Small Business Administration.
In regard to Medicaid and Medicare, a source familiar with the matter said that the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has flagged 70 hospice and home health providers in the Los Angeles area as being high-risk fraudulent providers. A source familiar with the matter said, “As the task force to root out waste, fraud and abuse ramps up its work, we expect this number to grow exponentially.” CMS is reportedly utilizing an AI-driven fraud detection system to flag or block claims identified as likely fraudulent, and this AI system will be scaled across the government for the anti-fraud task force.
Among the next steps identified in the memo for the task force are task force members reporting all anti-fraud measures currently being undertaken at agencies, investigating the Biden administration’s fraud prevention measures and whether the administration failed to use available tools to prevent fraud from taking place, proposing legislative measures to combat fraud, and identifying new technology and tools that can be used to combat fraud.
