A Florida man has been sentenced for orchestrating a large-scale unemployment insurance fraud scheme that exploited pandemic-era benefit programs by using stolen and synthetic identities to file hundreds of false claims. According to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) and the U.S. Department of Labor Office of Inspector General (DOL-OIG), the defendant submitted fraudulent unemployment applications across multiple states, directing benefit payments to prepaid debit cards and online payment platforms he controlled.
Between 2020 and 2022, investigators say the scheme generated more than $1.2 million in improper unemployment benefits. The defendant created fictitious claimant profiles using combinations of real Social Security numbers, altered birthdates, and fabricated employment histories. In many cases, the claims listed employers that either had no payroll records during the claimed periods or did not exist at all. The applications were designed to appear legitimate at first glance, exploiting overwhelmed systems and reduced manual review during periods of high claim volume.
The fraud began to unravel when workforce agencies noticed abnormal filing patterns across multiple jurisdictions. Analysts identified clusters of claims linked to the same IP addresses, devices, and bank routing numbers, despite being associated with different claimants. Additional red flags included repeated use of identical email formats, rapid sequential filings, and claims submitted from out-of-state locations inconsistent with reported employment histories.
Further investigation revealed that many legitimate individuals whose identities were used in the scheme were unaware of the fraud until they received tax forms reporting unemployment income they never applied for or received. These victims faced delays in resolving tax issues and restoring their identities, while agencies incurred additional administrative costs to unwind the false claims.
“This was a deliberate effort to exploit emergency assistance programs at scale,” said FDLE Commissioner Mark Glass. “The defendant took advantage of gaps in identity verification and cross-state coordination to repeatedly access public funds.”
The case highlights how unemployment insurance programs remain a target for organized identity-based fraud, even after pandemic-era expansions ended. Investigators emphasized the importance of real-time identity validation, device and network intelligence, and cross-agency data sharing to detect repeat activity and prevent fraud migration across states.
The defendant was sentenced to federal prison and ordered to pay restitution for the full amount of losses.
Today’s Fraud of the Day is based on reporting from the Florida Department of Law Enforcement and the U.S. Department of Labor Office of Inspector General regarding unemployment insurance fraud

