Coronavirus

Feds Sent $1.4B in Stimulus Checks to More Than 1 Million Dead People

The finding is part of a sweeping review of the federal government’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic by the Government Accountability Office, an independent nonpartisan congressional agency

President Donald Trump's name appears on the coronavirus economic assistance checks that were sent to citizens across the country on April 29, 2020. The initial 88 million payments totaling nearly $158 billion were sent by the Treasury Department this spring as most of the country remained under stay-at-home orders due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images (File)

More than a million Americans who had died received COVID-19 stimulus payments totaling $1.4 billion, a government watchdog said in a report to Congress released Thursday, NBC News reported.

The finding is part of a sweeping review of the federal government’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic by the Government Accountability Office, an independent nonpartisan congressional agency. The report paints a clearer picture of what critics called a muddled rollout by the Internal Revenue Service and the Treasury Department of more than 160 million payments worth $269 billion.

Congress passed a massive $2 trillion stimulus package, called the CARES Act, in March to soften the economic blow of the coronavirus pandemic for American workers and businesses.

GAO’s report said Treasury officials said that, to meet the CARES Act's mandate to deliver payments as "rapidly as possible," Treasury and the IRS sent out the first three batches of payments using previous operational policies and procedures for stimulus payments "which did not include using [Social Security Administration] death records as a filter to halt payments to decedents."

Read the full story on NBCNews.com

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