A Massachusetts woman has been sentenced for defrauding the state’s housing voucher program, exploiting outdated verification processes to collect benefits while living a lifestyle far from low-income eligibility. According to the Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Office of Inspector General, the defendant falsified income statements, submitted forged pay stubs, and concealed real estate ownership to continue receiving Section 8 housing assistance for nearly a decade.
Investigators found that while claiming to earn under $30,000 a year, the woman jointly owned two investment properties in Essex County and collected rental income through shell LLCs. She also received pandemic-era rental relief payments despite already benefiting from subsidized housing.
The fraud came to light after a data-matching pilot between HUD and the Massachusetts Department of Revenue flagged inconsistencies in reported income and property tax filings. Further review revealed overlapping Social Security numbers and recurring bank routing details linked to multiple fraudulent applications.
“This was a case of calculated deception — not hardship,” said Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Campbell. “Every dollar stolen is one taken from families waiting years for affordable housing.”
Following the investigation, the Massachusetts Housing Authority announced plans to implement identity verification enhancements, including digital wage verification, property ownership cross-checks, and analytics to detect duplicate applicant profiles.
The case underscores the ongoing vulnerability of state-administered benefits programs to falsified documentation and identity manipulation — particularly when manual verification is the norm.
Today’s Fraud of the Day is based on reporting from the Boston Globe and the Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office regarding housing benefit fraud investigations in 2025.


