A former Medicaid employee in Alabama defrauded the program of more than a hundred thousand dollars over five years.
United Healthcare exaggerated the state of illness of their Medicare Advantage clients, thus defrauding the government of $6 billion.
Scientific fraud is more common than most suppose, and finding and exposing it is a never-ending and difficult task.
A woman who defrauded Medicaid, for which she was not eligible, still did less damage than the total volume of such fraud.
The head of a Utah nonprofit spent $2.8 million in federal and state grants to take one of the most expensive vacations imaginable.
A hospital CEO authorized $3.5 million in alleged salary and unused vacation for herself and 12 colleagues who were about to resign.
The Small Business Administration has made no effort to recover improper payments to some performance venues that closed for Covid-19.
The Pakistani equivalent of Sesame Street is riddled with fraud, and even USAID had to admit that as far back as 2012.
The federal Covid-19 program were riddled with fraud, which authorities could have prevented easily with some elementary measures.
The United States government loses up to $750 billion to fraud each year, because that crime is ridiculously easy to commit.