PA Office of Inspector General Announces June Welfare Fraud Adjudications

HARRISBURG – Eighteen Pennsylvania residents pleaded guilty to welfare fraud and/or were sentenced for their crimes during June, the Office of Inspector General announced.

“These 18 individuals have been ordered to pay a total of more than $70,000 in restitution,” Inspector General Kenya Mann Faulkner said. “An important part of our office’s mission is to help recover these ill-gotten funds so that scarce public resources remain available to those who truly deserve them.”

The following individuals were prosecuted and sentenced for fraudulently receiving public assistance benefits:

The Office of Inspector General’s Bureau of Fraud Prevention and Prosecution is responsible for investigating welfare fraud and conducting collection activities for programs administered by, or contracted through, the Department of Public Welfare.  

Each year, the Office of Inspector General works with county assistance offices statewide to identify suspected cases of public assistance fraud and with local district attorneys to bring the cases to prosecution.  

Anyone found guilty of welfare fraud could face a maximum sentence of seven years in prison, fines up to $15,000, mandatory restitution, and program disqualification.

The Office of Inspector General also relies on tips from the public. To report suspected fraud, call the Welfare Fraud Tipline at 1-800-932-0582. Callers may remain anonymous.

For more information about Pennsylvania’s Office of Inspector General, visit www.oig.state.pa.us.

Exit mobile version