PPP fraud signs: Clusters of pandemic relief loans in Chicago went to the same addresses, including a homeless shelter

PPP fraud signs: Clusters of pandemic relief loans in Chicago went to the same addresses, including a homeless shelter

As COVID-19 raged in the spring of 2021, the federal government sent $1.4 million of pandemic relief checks to a single address a few blocks north of Garfield Park.

Most of the 69 applications for the federal Paycheck Protection Program loans asked for about $20,000 each. That meant they had claimed to previously have had at least $100,000 in yearly revenue.

Many of these “sole proprietors” said they were barbers, beauty salon owners and providers of “personal care services,” though state records show that not a single one of them was licensed to practice those professions in Illinois.

Beyond the income claims and the fact that the loans went to people unlicensed in their stated professions, something else was unusual about them: The address on all those loan applications was for Breakthrough Men’s Center, a West Side shelter for men without permanent homes. 

Most of those PPP loans ended up being forgiven, meaning they didn’t need to be repaid.

Clusters of loans going to a single address, as these did, raise red flags that should have triggered scrutiny by the lenders that approved them, experts say. But they say many lenders — particularly “fintechs” — were turning a blind eye to signs of fraud because they had a financial incentive not to spot it: They were getting reimbursed by the government for each loan.

PPP loans were intended to help people cover income losses prompted by the pandemic. But, three years since the pandemic began, there’s growing evidence that there was widespread fraud in the $800 billion program, including:

  • At least hundreds of Chicago and Cook County public employees, possibly more, are suspected of getting PPP checks after claiming to have phony side jobs.
  • Clusters of people with addresses in homeless shelters and transitional housing received checks to cover at least $100,000 in annual income for pandemic losses claimed for seemingly fictitious businesses.
  • Criminals cashed in on the bonanza, too. Sources say Chicago gang members got checks to buy guns, believed to have been a contributing factor in the city’s explosion of violence during the pandemic.

The fintech — financial technology — lenders were responsible for approving most of those shady loans, according to experts and government records. Such lenders face less stringent regulation than traditional banks do.

“I think there is a very good case to be made that some of these fintech lenders either knew or should have known that they were being exploited,” says Samuel Kruger, an assistant finance professor at the University of Texas at Austin. “Probably Congress and the [Small Business Administration], which supervised the program, should have been more aware and thoughtful about this upfront.”

In 2021, Kruger and his colleagues did a study that found Cook County had a “suspicious loan rate” of 35.5{ac23b82de22bd478cde2a3afa9e55fd5f696f5668b46466ac4c8be2ee1b69550}, compared with rates of 9.4{ac23b82de22bd478cde2a3afa9e55fd5f696f5668b46466ac4c8be2ee1b69550} in Los Angeles County and 8.9{ac23b82de22bd478cde2a3afa9e55fd5f696f5668b46466ac4c8be2ee1b69550} in New York County. 

Samuel Kruger, an assistant professor of finance at the University of Texas at Austin’s McCombs School of Business who studied PPP loan fraud in Cook County.

Samuel Kruger, an assistant professor of finance at the University of Texas at Austin’s McCombs School of Business who studied PPP loan fraud in Cook County.

Some of the study’s discoveries about Chicago were shocking, Kruger says. The researchers found that Cross River, a fintech identified by Congress as having slipshod underwriting, gave more than 930 loans to people who said they operated single-person “miscellaneous crop farming” businesses — in the city of Chicago. Many of the addresses were for apartments.

Kruger says traditional banks, which typically have relationships with customers they lend to, are thus less likely to be duped by phony applications.

Some lenders, which cumulatively reaped billions of dollars in revenue for participating in the program, have said the federal Small Business Administration should be held responsible for phony loans. The chief executive officer of Celtic Bank wrote in an internal email that “the industry should push hard to make sure the SBA accepts the fraud risk,” according to a congressional report in December. In a promotion, an executive for fintech Blueacorn described PPP loans as “$100 billion dollars of free money,” directing applicants to the company’s website to “find out in less than 30 seconds” whether they qualified for a PPP loan, the report said.

On Dec. 8, the SBA suspended Blueacorn from working with the agency and opened an investigation into Celtic Bank and other lenders.

In Chicago, ongoing PPP fraud investigations are focusing on employees of the Chicago Public Schools, the police and fire departments, the Cook County clerk of court’s office, the chief judge’s office and other county agencies.

In a recent report, Will Fletcher, who heads the CPS Office of Inspector General, said he’d found evidence that full-time school employees engaged in PPP fraud. His office — which initially matched 900 names and addresses of CPS employees to a list of loan recipients — so far has told the Board of Education that four employees have been found to have committed fraud.

Two of those employees have resigned, one was fired, and the case of a fourth has been referred for termination, according to CPS spokeswoman Sylvia Barragan, who says all have been listed as ineligible for rehire at CPS.

According to Fletcher’s report: “Many more PPP investigations are nearing completion. The OIG is engaged in discussions with state and federal law enforcement regarding the OIG’s PPP matters.”

A Chicago Sun-Times examination of PPP loan records found that homeless shelters’ addresses were used by dozens of people to obtain loans from fintechs.

At least 69 sole-proprietor applications listed their business address as 402 N. St. Louis Ave., home of Breakthrough Men’s Center, blocks north of Garfield Park on the West Side. Breakthrough “provides mail services for a variety of individuals who are experiencing homelessness,” an agency spokeswoman says.

Breakthrough Men’s Center, 402 N. St. Louis Ave.

Breakthrough Men’s Center, 402 N. St. Louis Ave.

Anthony Vazquez / Sun-Times

Alexandra Cesario, Breakthrough’s chief development officer, calls the Sun-Times’ findings “very concerning” and says, “We are looking into how our address may have been used or misappropriated to submit these alleged fraudulent applications.”

Another 36 loan recipients listed the address of a Salvation Army center at 825 N. Christiana Ave. in Humboldt Park.

One recipient who used the Salvation Army address claimed he was a crop farmer. A dozen other people said they operated barber shops or beauty salons, though they didn’t have licenses to operate such businesses. Almost all got loans of about $20,000, the maximum based on a yearly income of at least $100,000.

The center itself never applied for a PPP loan, according to Brian Duewel, its communications director.

“Residents do not keep their mailing privileges following discharge,” Duewel says. “However, there’s no way to tell if someone uses our address after they move out. If mail comes in after a resident moves out, we do give them a courtesy call to let them know that we have received mail addressed to them.”

Duewel says the Salvation Army planned to contact federal officials regarding the names the Sun-Times identified as getting a PPP loan using the facility’s address.

Thirty-three more PPP applications gave their address as 5816 W. Division St. — the Westside Health Authority, which provides mental health services and transitional housing for people getting out of prison.

“Some of the clients that are homeless — some of their case managers accept mail for them at that location,” says Morris Reed, Westside’s chief executive officer. “I guess they were vulnerable to this kind of stuff.” 

Bobby E. Wright Comprehensive Behavioral Health Center, 5816 W. Division St.

Bobby E. Wright Comprehensive Behavioral Health Center, 5816 W. Division St.

Anthony Vazquez / Sun-Times

The Sun-Times found evidence criminals were able to exploit the PPP program, too.

Charles Liggins, Kenneth Roberson and Tacarlos Offerd applied for loans in 2020, according to court records. All have been charged by federal authorities in the Aug. 4, 2020, Gold Coast killing of rapper FBG Duck.

According to a federal affidavit, during a phone call with an inmate in the Cook County Jail on June 19, 2020, Roberson explained how to apply for a phony PPP loan. 

“I’m telling them I’m doing agriculture,” Roberson said. “They can’t do s— about it.” 

Roberson wasn’t employed and didn’t own an agriculture business, according to the affidavit. 

Brandon Miller

Brandon Miller is charged with Paycheck Protection Program fraud and running an operation that shipped guns to gang members in Chicago.

Warren County, Kentucky, jail.

In another pending case, Brandon Miller, a South Sider who’s a soldier at Fort Campbell, Kentucky, is charged with participating in a ring to defraud PPP in 2021.

In one email exchange, a woman who’s accused of being part of that scheme said she knew a man who made $300,000 from phony PPP loans used to start a construction business and start flipping houses. That woman eventually got a $20,832 loan, according to prosecutors.

Miller is among a dozen people also charged in a pending gun-running conspiracy case. Federal prosecutors say he led an operation that shipped at least 90 guns from Kentucky and Tennessee to a Gangster Disciples faction in Chicago.

The head of a violence prevention group in Chicago says PPP fraud has contributed to a proliferation of guns during the pandemic and likely has contributed to the huge rise in shootings during 2020 and 2021.

“I heard over and over that people were buying guns with PPP,” says the person, who spoke on the condition of not being identified by name.

A federal agent, who also spoke on the condition of anonymity, says he’s seen evidence of PPP fraud in gun and drug raids he’s conducted. “It’s the fraud Olympics — the World Series of fraud,” the agent says.

Nationally, PPP fraud was so pervasive that it overwhelms the capacity of the Justice Department and law enforcement agencies to prosecute it, Kruger says.

“The DOJ is putting substantial resources against pandemic fraud, but I wouldn’t be surprised if they could never go after anything other than the tip of the iceberg on this,” he says.

Last year’s congressional report on PPP fraud said federal prosecutors have filed more than 1,000 cases of PPP fraud involving more than $1.5 billion in losses to taxpayers and that fraud in the program is estimated to be in the hundreds of billions of dollars.

In their 2021 study, the University of Texas researchers concluded that:

  • A lack of rigorous verification of information on PPP applications seems to have led to “substantial losses to taxpayers.”
  • That fintech lending, “though quite successful at adapting to new environments and quickly disbursing funds, needs to improve due diligence practices.”
  • That “PPP saved relatively few jobs at an extremely high cost.”
  • And that “many lenders either encouraged such loans, turned a blind eye to them or had extremely lax oversight procedures.”

Kruger says the Sun-Times’ findings about clusters of loans going to the same addresses is likely to also be true elsewhere around the country.

“The picture that you’re painting suggests culpability not only for the people who got those loans but also for a lack of oversight for not seeing these patterns earlier,” he says.

Contributing: Tom Schuba

Bay Area startup Sequin addresses gender, racial disparities by helping educate women on finance

Bay Area startup Sequin addresses gender, racial disparities by helping educate women on finance

SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) — When it will come to finances, the taking part in industry may possibly not be equal for gentlemen and women of all ages. The disparities are even better for minorities. Now, a person Bay Space startup is hoping to degree the actively playing field.

Liz Aguilar graduated from Stanford College in June with options to attend law faculty upcoming 12 months. For now, to save money she’s living with her mother and father.

“My mom and dad taught me a good deal about conserving. They did not converse to me about investing or shares, bonds, something like that, mainly for the reason that I imagine that they were being not really common with it as perfectly,” reported Aguilar.

Aguilar is just not on your own.

A 2022 Lender Of The us Report located Gen Z females are saving fewer than their male friends.

The stats for Black and Hispanic females are even worse.

In accordance to a TIAA institute 2021 report, in contrast to White women, Black and Hispanic ladies are a lot more probable to deal with financial troubles that depress their financial very well-staying.

More: Healthcare personal debt dropped from credit history scores: This is how you can make confident it’s eliminated

They’re also extra probable to interact in high-priced borrowing behavior, which includes producing only the minimum payment on their credit score card.

A thing Aguilar says her moms and dads taught her not to do. Nonetheless she suggests she wished she understood far more.

“When I received to higher education, I took an econ course. My male counterparts would mention the stock current market and they would talk about their investments. I imagine I was nevertheless quite dropped even in my Sophomore, Junior 12 months. Even nowadays, I imagine I really don’t have as terrific of an comprehending as I would like to,” claimed Aguilar.

“I do believe that I would have benefited a whole lot had I been taught a little little bit additional about money literacy,” she continued.

Online video: Here’s why income is however essential and important when having to pay, in accordance to shopper advocates

Vrinda Gupta expert comparable challenges.

“Developing up, I definitely watched my mother in unique seriously battle with the U.S. money procedure and not sense self-assured,” reported Gupta.

It in component, drove her final decision to do the job in finance, developing and launching credit score cards right until she had a wake-up get in touch with encounter.

“I was turned down from the credit rating card that I aided develop,” Gupta discussed. “I felt just as helpless as my immigrant mom felt in the money process and I did not want to truly feel that way,” she ongoing.

Extra: San Francisco launches new certain income application for transgender neighborhood

Details investigation of Federal Reserve Scientific tests on Family Economics and Choice-Earning from 2019 to 2021 observed that for all 3 many years, ladies were turned down for credit score a lot more normally than guys.

Gupta states women are extra most likely than men to have licensed consumer accounts make up the bulk of their credit score historical past, which may possibly explain the difference.

She’s now the CEO & Co-Founder of Sequin, a bank account and debit card geared precisely to young gals.

Sequin membership includes accessibility to fiscal instruction classes. “As we talk to youthful gals, disproportionally, what we hear was I was under no circumstances taught about finances and I constantly felt the guys realized a little something that I failed to, and that’s what we are seeking to make confident we do not hear anymore,” mentioned Gupta.

“It definitely is some thing that would attractiveness to me,” said Aguilar.

Sequin also offers personal savings on females-targeted manufacturers combating the pink tax, ladies shelling out more for the identical or equivalent items and expert services than gentlemen.

While the debit card is geared in the direction of gals, Gupta states Sequin welcomes anyone irrespective of gender id.

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Elon Musk addresses advertisers and asks them to keep using Twitter

Elon Musk addresses advertisers and asks them to keep using Twitter



CNN
 — 

Twitter owner Elon Musk pleaded with advertisers to keep making use of his platform on Wednesday as he sketched out his ideas for consumer verification, material moderation and even his intention to increase banking attributes to Twitter in entrance of a are living viewers of more than 100,000 consumers.

In the course of an hour-long Twitter Spaces session attended by associates from Adidas, Chevron, Kate Spade, Nissan and Walgreens, Musk mentioned he desired Twitter to “be a drive that moves civilization in a optimistic route.”

An indicator of achievements, he said, would be whether his conclusions direct to expansion in buyers and promoting, whilst failure would suggest the opposite.

The assortment of important advertisers and makes listening to Musk’s remarks underscored the powerful curiosity — and perceptions of chance — produced by Musk’s erratic management of the firm more than the previous 7 days, from launching (and then un-launching) merchandise changes to his sweeping layoffs that strike 50 {ac23b82de22bd478cde2a3afa9e55fd5f696f5668b46466ac4c8be2ee1b69550} the organization.

To his critics, and to businesses that have paused advertising on Twitter, Musk questioned to be presented a chance.

“I recognize if individuals want to give it a minute and see how matters are evolving,” he stated. “But seriously, the best way to see how matters are evolving is just use Twitter. And see how your expertise has modified. Is it much better? Is it even worse?”

Musk frequently urged skeptics to use the platform although addressing thoughts about his proposal to offer you blue test marks to consumers who concur to pay $8 a thirty day period — a system whose rollout has been marred by uncertainty and abrupt variations.

Consumers who fork out for Twitter Blue, the platform’s membership support, will not be required to present figuring out facts other than a credit score card and a cellular phone quantity, Musk confirmed. Twitter will sooner or later default to displaying tweets from Twitter Blue subscribers, when tweets from users who do not spend for a blue look at mark, he stated, would be relegated to a independent webpage on the site and correctly buried until viewers sought out that content.

Manufacturers will be anticipated to foot the monthly bill for their possess verification on Twitter Blue, Musk said. He did not go into particulars about a independent, gray verification badge Twitter is developing for important makes, federal government accounts and media retailers — a feature the firm has said will not be obtainable for purchase but rather bestowed on high-profile accounts to distinguish them from those people who paid out for blue test marks. On Wednesday Twitter briefly appeared to have rolled out the gray examine mark aspect for some customers, nevertheless Musk quickly right after tweeted that he had “killed it.” A Twitter merchandise manager functioning on the feature left the doorway open up for its eventual launch.

Musk also argued, opposite to some of his critics, that nicely-resourced purveyors of mis- and disinformation would not be in a position to video game the method mainly because they would promptly run out of cell phone numbers and credit history cards, or at some point tire of the work.

Musk sought to distill lots of of the difficulties of working a social media system into a binary.

“Thinking of it as an information problem, real truth is signal and falsehood is sounds,” he mentioned. “And we want to increase the signal-to-noise ratio as a lot as attainable.”

Musk’s expansive plans for Twitter contain introducing economic merchandise to the blend. It could start out, he mentioned, with Twitter allowing for users to spend each individual other by the system, with the organization placing up every consumer with an first reward of $10 to exam it out. Over time, Musk added, Twitter will offer you the skill for users to transfer dollars out of its process to 3rd-celebration banks — and then to market place its possess banking products and services.

“The up coming step would be a funds industry account so you can get an incredibly significant generate on your stability,” Musk reported, incorporating that debit playing cards and checks could also be a portion of the program.

Past week, Twitter submitted registration paperwork to the US governing administration that indicated its intent to be part of the payments market, and to comply with specified banking polices. A copy of the paperwork seen by CNN showed that the Treasury Department’s Fiscal Crimes Enforcement Network received the registration filing by “Twitter Payments LLC” on Nov. 4. A FinCEN spokesperson declined to comment on Twitter’s filing, which had been very first documented by the New York Times on Wednesday.

Musk acknowledged brands’ considerations about the existence of hate speech and other offensive written content on the system.

“I do not feel acquiring despise speech following to an ad is excellent, naturally,” he mentioned with a chuckle.

Yoel Roth, Twitter’s head of integrity and protection, reported Twitter is expanding its expense in concepts to fight hateful information.

“We assume there’s a great deal of other things we can do, from warning messages to interstitials, to minimizing the access of that content material, that we have not entirely explored in the previous,” Roth said, vowing to apply those people strategies speedily. Twitter has executed a lot of of these actions in the past, significantly in reaction to election and Covid-19 misinformation.

Musk mentioned he and his teams are at work modifying a great deal of Twitter’s existing codebase, partly to assist new capabilities these types of as longform movie. That feature, he mentioned, will in the beginning let compensated people to down load 10 minutes of superior-definition online video right before progressively lengthening that time restrict to 40 minutes and then a number of several hours.

And he emphasized the relevance of Community Notes, previously acknowledged as Birdwatch, a crowdsourced simple fact-examining attribute that Twitter has been tests with some of its customers.

Community Notes, he stated, “will obviate the have to have for a large amount of the articles things that is now in position, I imagine.”

The sprawling dilemma-and-response session once in a while delved into the metaphorical and philosophical.

At a person place, Musk appeared to admit that his dedication to “free speech” was not complete.

“There’s a huge variance concerning freedom of speech and independence of achieve,” he explained.

Musk also explained Twitter’s existing verification method as a “lords and peasants situation” and as opposed it to the American Groundbreaking War.

“In the United States, we fought a war to get rid of that things,” he reported. “Maybe this is a dumb decision, but we’ll see.”