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House panel says lax screening helped facilitate PPP fraud

WASHINGTON (AP) 鈥 Financial technology firms abdicated their responsibility to screen out fraud in applications for a federal program designed to help small businesses stay open and keep workers employed during the pandemic, a report by a House inves
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FILE - House Majority Whip James Clyburn, D-S.C., leaves the chamber at the Capitol in Washington, Nov. 17, 2022. Financial technology firms abdicated their responsibility to screen out fraud in applications for a federal program designed to help small businesses stay open and keep workers employed during the pandemic, a report by a House investigations panel said Thursday, Dec. 1. The House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis, chaired by Clyburn, launched its investigation of the firms in May 2021 after public reports that the firms were linked to disproportionate numbers of fraudulent loans issued under the Paycheck Protection Program. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) 鈥 Financial technology firms abdicated their responsibility to screen out fraud in applications for a federal program designed to help small businesses stay open and keep workers employed during the pandemic, by a House investigations panel said Thursday.

The House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis launched its investigation of the firms in May 2021 after public reports that the firms were linked to disproportionate numbers of fraudulent loans issued under the Paycheck Protection Program.

Former President Donald Trump rolled out the Paycheck Protection Program to help small businesses stay open and keep their workers employed. President Joe Biden maintained the program and directed money to more low-income and minority-owned companies. All told, was spent on the program.

The financial technology firms reviewed PPP applications for lenders, which would ultimately distribute PPP money to businesses.

The report said two start-ups, Blueacorn PPP and Womply Inc. 鈥 which reviewed one in every three funded PPP loans in 2021 鈥 were connected to significant percentages of PPP loan applications with indicators of fraud.

It said the firms used questionable screening procedures and business practices in reviewing the loans, leading to 鈥渢he needless loss of taxpayer dollars,鈥 the report said. The firms 鈥渢ook billions in fees from taxpayers while becoming easy targets for those who sought to defraud the PPP.鈥

Neither firm responded immediately to a request for comment.

The report said Womply's fraud prevention practices were so lax that lenders describe its systems as 鈥減ut together with duct tape and gum.鈥 It said Womply's software became a preferred product for criminal enterprises seeking to defraud the government of PPP loans. The firm also received over $5 million in PPP loans for itself, which the Small Business Administration later determined it was ineligible to receive.

Womply said in a in January that the firm's role in the screening process was limited. 鈥淲omply did not approve PPP loan applications, issue PPP loans, or otherwise serve as a lender in the PPP. Womply helped connect borrowers with PPP lenders, which were responsible for reviewing, approving, submitting, funding, and servicing the PPP applications and loans,鈥 the company's lawyers wrote.

Womply referred 128,813 PPP applicants to lenders in 2020, and 2,584,420 applicants to lenders in 2021.

鈥淲e must learn from this inexcusable misconduct to erect guardrails that will help ensure that federal programs 鈥 including emergency assistance programs in future crises 鈥 are administered more effectively, efficiently, and equitably while keeping waste, fraud, and abuse to an absolute minimum,鈥 said Rep. Jim Clyburn, D-S.C., who chairs the coronavirus crisis subcommittee.

Clyburn said the committee鈥檚 findings were sent to the Justice Department and the Small Business Administration.

In March, the Government Accountability Office that while agencies were able to distribute COVID-19 relief funds quickly, 鈥渢he tradeoff was that they did not have systems in place to prevent and identify payment errors and fraud鈥 due in part to 鈥渇inancial management weaknesses.鈥

Billions have been fraudulently claimed through various pandemic relief programs 鈥 including Paycheck Protection Program loans, unemployment insurance and others that were rolled out in the midst of the worldwide pandemic that shut down global economies for months.

The U.S. Secret Service in fraudulently obtained pandemic loans and returned the money to the Small Business Administration.

Fatima Hussein, The Associated Press

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