A3 THE ASTORIAN • SATURDAY, MAY 23, 2020 States end spring Millions stolen in unemployment scam used salmon fi shery on Imposters stolen information Columbia River to take benefi ts By RACHEL LA CORTE Associated Press By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian With a forecast for the lowest return of upriver Chinook salmon in 21 years and at the urging of both commercial and recre- ational fi shermen, Oregon and Washington state fi sh- ery managers have closed the spring Chinook season on the Columbia River . The states had proposed an additional fi ve days of fi shing at a meeting this week, including one day for a commercial main stem tanglenet fi shery. Allowed impacts to Endangered Species Act- listed salmon were still on the table and fi shery man- agers try to provide addi- tional fi shing opportuni- ties when such impacts are available. But a recent update of run numbers showed a 12% downgrade for the upriver spring Chinook return. Though the forecast of 72,000 adult Chinook salmon was still within management buffers, it was the lowest return since 1999 and there were concerns about brood stock collec- tion for hatcheries. Commercial fi shermen and anglers asked the state to close the fi shery rather than extend it, citing con- servation concerns. “They almost never agree on anything,” said Rick Swart, a spokesman for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. But in this case there was a gen- eral consensus across the various groups. “I had some reserva- tions myself heading in,” said Tucker Jones, Colum- bia River Program manager for the Oregon Department Rick Bowmer/AP Photo Oregon and Washington state end spring salmon fi shery on the Columbia River. of Fish and Wildlife. He was not surprised by the response from fi shermen. “My experience with anglers and commercial fi shermen is they are inter- ested in opportunity when opportunity exists,” he said. “But they’re also pretty for- ward thinking and they’re not looking to mortgage the future for opportunity today.” For commercial fi sh- ermen, there was also the feasibility of the sin- gle-day tanglenet fi shery to consider. The spring season for gillnetters in select areas off the river’s main stem had already been very poor, said Jim Wells, an Asto- ria fi sherma n and president of Salmon for All, a com- mercial fi shing advocacy group. A single-day tanglenet fi shery farther upstream would not have helped, he said. Beyond concerns about the shortage of salmon, this late in the season the river is thick with shad, he noted. Fishermen running tangle- nets would have had diffi - culty complying with rules to return any listed fi sh caught to the water quickly if they were also sorting through that many shad. “So yeah, that was a pretty easy one for us to say, ‘No thanks,’” Wells said. OLYMPIA, Wash. — Impostors have used the sto- len information of tens of thousands of people in Wash- ington state to fraudulently receive hundreds of mil- lions of dollars in unemploy- ment benefi ts, the head of the state’s Employment Security Department said Thursday. Commissioner Suzi LeVine said the state is working with federal law enforcement, fi nancial insti- tutions and the U.S. Depart- ment of Labor to investigate the fraud and try to recover the money paid out during the huge spike in joblessness during the coronavirus crisis. LeVine said she can’t release specifi c numbers or details of the ongoing inves- tigation. But she said that countermeasures taken by the state have “prevented hundreds of millions of addi- tional dollars from going out to criminals and have pre- vented thousands of fraudu- lent claims being fi led.” LeVine said that in addi- tion to other measures the agency has already taken, they will continue to delay payments — a step they fi rst took last week — to all appli- cants in order to take extra steps to verify claims. Pre- viously, applicants set up for direct deposit receive their money within 24 to 48 hours. Now, they will need to wait an additional two days. The New York Times and Seattle Times have pre- viously reported that a U.S. Secret Service alert issued last week identifi ed Wash- ington state as the top tar- get so far of a Nigerian fraud ring seeking to com- mit large-scale fraud against state unemployment insur- ance programs. LeVine said she couldn’t speak to the details of the investigation, Seaside Golf Course and Lounge Elaine Thompson/AP Photo A barber shop remains closed because of the coronavirus outbreak in Seattle on Tuesday. but said that the Secret Ser- vice alert wasn’t directly shared with her, but that the agency received it through other sources. But LeVine said agency offi cials realized something was amiss before that alert, once they started receiv- ing communication from employers or employees who received information about unemployment bene- fi ts that the employee didn’t seek. More than 1.1 million people in Washington state have fi led for unemploy- ment benefi ts since busi- nesses started closing in March due to COVID-19, but state offi cials said Thurs- day they believe some por- tion of an increase in claims seen in the past week are due to so-called “impostor fraud” claims. LeVine said previously that there have been no data breaches at the agency, and that recent fraud attempts are cases where someone’s per- sonal information has been previously stolen from other sources — like during the 2017 Equifax breach — and is now being used to fi led for benefi ts. “These are very sophis- ticated criminals who have pretty robust collections of information on people, and they are activating and mon- etizing that information,” she said. More than 1.6 million claims for unemployment benefi ts — with some of that number refl ecting peo- ple who fi led multiple claims — were fi led for the week of May 10 through May 16, and more than $1 billion was paid last week to 565,764 individ- ual claims. To date, the state has paid out nearly $3.8 bil- lion in benefi ts to more than 768,000 people, including federal money that is pro- viding the unemployed with an additional $600 per week on top of the state’s weekly maximum benefi t of up to $790 per week. Levine noted that the state’s weekly maximum benefi t — the second highest in the nation — plus the addi- tional federal weekly money “does make us a more attrac- tive target overall.” Washington state’s stay- at-home order — in place since March 23 — has been extended through at least May 31. The state’s unem- ployment rate has jumped to a record 15.4% last month and the state’s economy lost 527,000 jobs last month. LeVine said that a jump in new unemployment bene- WANTED Alder and Maple Saw Logs & Standing Timber Northwest Hardwoods • Longview, WA Contact: John Anderson • 360-269-2500 fi t claims last week — long after most business closures occurred — point to addi- tional fraud attempts across various industries. “It is a broad spectrum of employers in both the pub- lic and the private sector who have had this impacting their employees,” LeVine said. Over the past two months, nearly 39 million people nationwide have fi led for unemployment aid due to the economic impacts of the coronavirus. Washington state Gov. Jay Inslee announced a four- stage reopening plan earlier this month, and has allowed counties with fewer new cases to apply to jump ahead to the second stage, which allows some businesses to reopen, including dine-in restaurants at half capacity. Ten counties have already been approved, and Inslee announced Tuesday that 10 more counties are now eligi- ble to apply. More than 19,115 peo- ple in Washington state have tested positive for the coro- navirus, and at least 1,044 have died. The virus causes mild to moderate symp- toms in most patients, and the vast majority recover. But it is highly contagious and can cause severe illness and death in some patients, particularly the elderly and those with underlying health conditions. 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