Yeah, $36 billion — an unfathomable amount of money — has been stolen by fraudsters as Uncle Sam continues passing out that helicopter stimmy money:
The federal legislation enormously increased weekly payouts and expanded unemployment benefits to many new classes of workers, with little in the way of verification or qualification requirements. This welfare expansion was just reauthorized in the second major COVID-19 spending package, which Congress passed in mid-December. Sadly, lawmakers didn't bother to address the runaway fraud that had plagued the first round of COVID relief efforts.
An astonishing $36 billion has been lost to fraud in pandemic unemployment benefits, the Department of Labor reports. To put this figure in context, the entire unemployment system only paid out about $26 billion in 2019.
That's right: Bureaucrats lost to fraud more than is usually paid out in an entire year. The $36 billion lost—and that's just the fraud we know about—amounts to an average of roughly $1,894 lost per current unemployment beneficiary. (What would we think of a private system that lost nearly $2,000 for each customer served?)
This article even tells the story of a Nigerian student who's stolen tens of thousands by defrauding the Covid payments. He brags about it, calling it "easy money."