FedScoop - Missing E-Tran controls saw SBA issue $692M in duplicate pandemic relief loans
This article was originally published in FedScoop.
The Small Business Administration issued $692 million in duplicate pandemic relief loans because it failed to add the proper controls to its electronic application system, according to its Office of Inspector General.
E-Tran didn’t always prevent duplicate Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans made between April 3 and Aug. 9, when the loans were disbursed. Reasons included the computer script for detection stopped working, lender submissions used employer identification numbers and Social Security Numbers interchangeably, and some buyers applied via multiple lenders, according to SBA OIG‘s report.
The House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis requested the report, in part, because it wants to ensure E-Tran vulnerabilities are addressed before the remaining $150 billion in PPP loans are disbursed.
“Loans given to ineligible borrowers place taxpayer funds at risk of financial loss and delayed the amount of available critical capital needed for eligible businesses to withstand the effects of the pandemic during the first round of PPP funding,” reads the report.
Congress appropriated $659 billion, all told, for PPP loans intended to cover struggling small businesses’ payroll, rent and utilities.
About 4,260 borrowers received multiple PPP loans, despite SBA working with lenders to implement E-Tran controls in May. OIG found SBA temporarily turned off those controls between June 23 and 30 to resolve duplicate loans already identified with lenders, leading to more duplicate loans being made during that time.
OIG recommended SBA review potential duplicate loans and recover improper payments, review E-Tran controls to ensure those loans aren’t forgiven, strengthen controls for future PPP-type programs, and improve guidance for lenders — all of which SBA agreed to do.
“The inspector general’s report is consistent with the select subcommittee’s findings last year that billions of dollars in PPP loans issued by the prior administration may have been diverted to fraud, waste and abuse,” Rep. Jim Clyburn, a Democrat from South Carolina who chairs the subcommittee, said in a statement. “Today’s report is yet more evidence of the Trump Administration’s poor implementation of PPP, which ignored the intent of Congress by failing to get vital assistance to the neediest small businesses.”
SBA argued it was unlikely that borrowers intentionally exploited E-Tran’s initial vulnerabilities because only lenders have access, but OIG was quick to point out fraud still occurred.
The agency’s loan review plan states PPP loans are subject to automated screening. But software company Giant Oak ran the Department of Justice‘s first 57 PPP loan fraud defendants through its GOST screening platform and found 25% of them had committed fraud previously that should have barred them from receiving relief, CEO Gary Shiffman, who’s also a Georgetown professor, told FedScoop.
“That’s a very strong indication that they weren’t doing screening,” Shiffman said. “And in their statements, they were trying to get the money out quickly, so they were relying on the investigation as the deterrent.”
Most fraudsters assume the odds of an investigation into a loan less than $150,000 is low, and investigating fraud after the fact is “incredibly inefficient” compared to deterring it all together with screening, he added.
SBA did not respond to multiple requests for comment.
Fraud occurred 16% of the time when the Federal Emergency Management Agency disbursed relief after hurricanes Katrina and Rita, which in PPP’s case could mean as much as $105.4 billion in jeopardy, Shiffman said.
If SBA is committed to screening now, it will need to abandon static lists of past criminal convictions in favor of machine learning that examines patterns of fraudulent behavior, he said.
Machine-learning models can create prioritized lists of the highest to lowest threats, and if SBA vets the top 1%, then they’ve done a “phenomenal job,” Shiffman said.
Gary M. Shiffman, PhD, is an economist working to solve problems related to human violence. A Gulf War veteran and former Senate National Security Advisor, Chief of Staff at US Customs and Border Protection, DARPA Principal Investigator, and Georgetown University professor, he founded two technology companies, Giant Oak, Inc, and Consilient, Inc. He is the author of The Economics of Violence (2020), and his essays have appeared in media outlets such as The Hill, the Wall Street Journal, USA Today, TechCrunch, and others.