Monday, December 26, 2022

In Fraud Case, DHS Admits It OK'd 90% Of A Set Of Fee Waivers

 The Department of Homeland Security has, in effect, pleaded guilty to reducing its own income by failing to reject 90 percent of a set of some 320 fraudulent fee waiver applications in a new and interesting fraud case.

What she did was to complete applications for immigration benefits for the individuals, collect the fees that they owed DHS for the benefit in question, and then, unknown to the clients, file papers for them seeking to waive the $600 - $900 in fees for the benefit in question.

The number 320 times $750 for the average fee equals $240,000.

The press release continues: "Vidalez is suspected of having submitted over 320 applications on behalf of her clients, and about 90% were granted fee waivers ..." In other words, USCIS approved fee waivers for nearly 300 people who were able to pay.

During the Obama administration it created a form that made applying for a fee waiver much easier.

The agency generally rubber-stamps 85-90 percent of applications; the approval rate for fee waivers is not unexpected, but it is useful - and unusual - to see it in print.

The case number in the PACER system is 3:22-mj-02982-MAT. To the best of my knowledge USCIS does not publish any statistics on these fee waiver applications, which are designated as form I-912.

https://cis.org/North/Fraud-Case-DHS-Admits-It-OKd-90-Set-Fee-Waivers

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