House GOP Chair James Comer Unveils Anti-Fraud Bills After Minnesota And California Welfare Probes
The push to crack down on benefit fraud began after congressional and federal probes exposed large-scale abuse in Medicare and state welfare programs. Lawmakers held a heated, bipartisan House Ways and Means Committee hearing on hospice fraud. The session, led by Chairman Jason Smith, framed the issue as theft of tax dollars and Medicare benefits. Witnesses described sham hospices operating out of empty storefronts and even a burrito stand, and a psychotherapist reported being falsely enrolled and locked out of Medicare benefits despite not being terminally ill.
Investigations and enforcement followed. A task force suspended 447 hospices in the Los Angeles area over more than $600 million in suspected fraud. Federal authorities charged more than a dozen people in a separate scheme that used non-dying individuals to steal over $50 million. An interim Oversight finding in Minnesota reported possible thefts of at least $9 billion from welfare programs, with at least 92 people charged and more than 60 convictions.
Coverage of the story shifted as new details emerged. Early reporting focused on bipartisan hearings, concrete examples of provider abuse, and the broader problem of taxpayer losses. Later reporting emphasized the demographic background of many defendants in Minnesota cases, noting most convicted were of Somali descent. That change in emphasis moved some public attention from systemic vulnerabilities to the identities of those charged.
This week, House Republican Rep. James Comer unveiled two bills aimed at stopping such fraud. The Stopping Fraudulent Payments Act and the Pre-Payment Fraud Prevention and Treasury Data Access Act would bar agencies from sending payments when recipients are at elevated fraud risk or when transfers look improper. The measures would direct the Treasury Department to verify payee information before disbursing funds and give Treasury authority to block suspect payment requests. The House Oversight Committee plans to mark up both bills as soon as next Wednesday, and state officials have said they welcome federal anti-fraud efforts while noting states do not control Medicare billing.
📌 Key Facts
- Rep. James Comer has introduced two federal bills — the Stopping Fraudulent Payments Act and the Pre-Payment Fraud Prevention and Treasury Data Access Act — aimed at curbing fraud uncovered in recent Minnesota and California probes.
- The proposed legislation would bar agencies from sending payments to recipients deemed at elevated risk of fraud or when a transfer appears improper, and would direct the Treasury Department to verify payment and recipient information before disbursement and to block suspect payment requests.
- House Oversight plans to mark up both bills as soon as next Wednesday.
- A bipartisan House Ways and Means Committee hearing on hospice fraud was held on Capitol Hill, led by Chairman Jason Smith, with lawmakers framing the session as addressing the theft of tax dollars and Medicare benefits and vowing to end opaque fraud schemes.
- Witnesses at the hearing included Sheila Clark, president and CEO of the California Hospice and Palliative Care Association, who described sham hospices operating out of a burrito stand and empty storefronts that still passed surveys, and psychotherapist Dr. Lynn Ianni, who testified she was falsely enrolled in hospice and denied Medicare benefits for months despite not being terminally ill.
- The federal Task Force to Eliminate Fraud, led by Vice President JD Vance, recently suspended 447 hospices in the Los Angeles area over more than $600 million in suspected fraud; a separate federal crackdown charged more than a dozen people in a scheme using non-dying individuals to steal over $50 million.
- Oversight’s interim findings in the Minnesota probe estimate that fraudsters may have stolen at least $9 billion from welfare programs, with at least 92 people charged and more than 60 convictions reported, the majority of those charged described as Somali.
- California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office responded on X saying the state has no role in Medicare billing or payment and welcomed the Trump administration’s anti-fraud efforts.
📊 Analysis & Commentary (1)
"The piece argues that the hospice‑and in‑home‑care fraud exposed by recent congressional probes is not new but the result of decades‑long structural failures in California’s oversight, and calls for much stronger audits and enforcement."
đź“° Source Timeline (4)
Follow how coverage of this story developed over time
- Rep. James Comer has introduced two federal bills, the Stopping Fraudulent Payments Act and the Pre-Payment Fraud Prevention and Treasury Data Access Act.
- House Oversight Committee plans to mark up both bills as soon as next Wednesday.
- The bills would bar agencies from sending payments to recipients deemed at elevated risk of fraud or when a transfer is suspected to be improper.
- The legislation would direct the Treasury Department to verify payments and recipient information before disbursement and give Treasury authority to block suspect payment requests.
- Fox article reiterates Oversight's interim finding that fraudsters may have stolen at least $9 billion from Minnesota welfare programs, with at least 92 people charged and more than 60 convictions, mostly of Somali descent.
- Identifies witness Sheila Clark, president and CEO of the California Hospice and Palliative Care Association, and quotes her describing sham hospices operating out of a burrito stand and empty storefronts that still passed surveys.
- Details testimony from psychotherapist Dr. Lynn Ianni, who was falsely enrolled in hospice and locked out of her Medicare benefits for months despite not being terminally ill.
- Reports that the Task Force to Eliminate Fraud, led by Vice President JD Vance, recently suspended 447 hospices in the Los Angeles area over more than $600 million in suspected fraud.
- Notes a separate federal crackdown charging more than a dozen people in a scheme using non-dying individuals to steal over $50 million from taxpayers.
- Includes California Gov. Gavin Newsom's office response on X asserting the state has no role in Medicare billing or payment and welcoming Trump administration anti-fraud efforts.
- Confirms a heated, bipartisan House Ways and Means Committee hearing on hospice fraud took place Tuesday on Capitol Hill.
- Identifies Chairman Jason Smith, a Missouri Republican, as leading the hearing and publicly vowing that fraudsters' 'time operating in the dark is way over.'
- Frames the session explicitly as responding to 'theft of tax dollars and Medicare benefits,' sharpening the committee's focus on benefit theft in addition to general fraud.