The DWP will be granted new powers to lift money directly out of the pockets of benefit fraudsters, as the government vows to crackdown on welfare scams.
Work and Pensions Secretary, Liz Kendall, has vowed to update her department’s 20-year-old powers branding their current investigatory capacities as ‘absurd’.
She said her inspectors we’re struggling to ‘keep pace’ with fraudsters duping the state, the Telegraph reports.
In the biggest shake-up in the DWP for over two decades, benefit fraud investigators will soon be able to recover debts of those who have overclaimed – directly from their bank accounts,
Officials have previously blamed an ‘increasing propensity’ for deceit across British society for the continued increase of scams since the pandemic.
Work and Pensions Secretary, Liz Kendall, (Pictured) has vowed to update her department’s 20-year old powers branding their current investigatory capacities as ‘absurd’
The DWP will be granted new powers to lift money directly out of the pockets of benefit fraudsters, as the government vows to crackdown on welfare scams (File image)
In the department’s latest annual report and accounts, DWP officials were revealed to have assumed there will be a 5 per cent increase in fraud each year.
Some £9.7billion of taxpayers’ cash was overpaid in benefits – due to fraud and error – during 2023-24, which accounted for 3.7 per cent of total benefit expenditure.
This compared to £8.3billion and 3.6 per cent in 2022-23, as the rate of benefit overpayments continued to remain well above pre-pandemic levels.
In a letter to the Telegraph, Ms Kendall said: ‘We’re in an absurd situation where DWP’s powers have not been updated for 20 years, meaning fraudsters have new ways of taking public money, and we need to keep pace with them
‘My team are still, in 2024, sending letters to gather evidence for those suspected of welfare fraud, slowing them down to snail’s pace when they could be shutting down serious fraud cases.’
However privacy campaigners have warned that the new powers would coerce companies into ‘snoop[ing]’ on the country’s poorest people.
Silkie Carlo, director of Big Brother Watch, told the Telegraph: ‘This blank cheque to force private companies to snoop and report on the country’s poorest citizens to the state is intrusive, excessive and will create a culture of fear among millions of people claiming benefits.
‘For a Labour government to introduce tough investigatory powers more typical of a counter-terror context to Britain’s welfare system is an alarming attack on privacy and yet another assault on the poor.’
Some £9.7billion of taxpayers’ cash was overpaid in benefits – due to fraud and error – during 2023-24, which accounted for 3.7 per cent of total benefit expenditure
DWP officials highlighted a ‘notable uptick in shoplifting’ as part of an ‘increasing propensity’ for deceit across British society
They also said there was evidence of ‘softened’ attitudes toward benefits fiddling in recent years
The current rules mean the only way to retrieve debt from benefit fraudsters is by taking them to court.
However the fresh legislation would mean investigators would be granted authority to take money out of peoples wages and bank accounts.
They would also be given powers to take items from an individual in order to settle debts.
Their new powers will also extend further, as they will have the ability to force private companies to hand over evidence – including airlines and ferry companies, meaning a closer eye can be kept on people’s travel.
As it stands they can only compel financial institutions, gas, electricity and water companies as well as employers to give the evidence.
This comes shortly after five Bulgarian fraudsters raked in £54million from Britain’s biggest ever benefit scam were today jailed for more than 25 years last May.
The Eastern European gang hijacked 6,000 identities to make claims for Universal Credit and used the names of children living in Bulgaria as part of the five year scam.
They set up three ‘benefit factories’ across London churning out bogus tenancy agreements, counterfeit payslips and forged letters from landlords, employers, and GPs to trick the DWP.
The group appeared to be hiding in plain sight – posting photos on social media smiling and posing behind the counter of Antonia’s Foods supermarket in Wood Green.
Two of the criminals – Galina Nikolova, 38, and Stoyan Stoyanov, 27 – pictured together in 2020 while on holiday in Turkey. Ringleader Nikolova was jailed for eight years, while Stoyanov was handed a four year prison term
Gyunesh Ali, 33, was also part of the gang. He was jailed for seven years and three months
Patritsia Paneva, 26, (left) wept as she was sentenced to three years and two months imprisonment. Tsvetka Todorova, 52, (right) was jailed for three years, but was released on licence because she had served 625 days on remand
Nikolova seen standing behind the counter of Antonia’s Foods in Wood Green, pouting at the camera alongside an unknown man
Huge stacks of cash found during the investigation
A system involving burner phones lowered down to waiting customers via a bucket pulley mechanism was also used to improve the scam’s efficiency.
The enormous haul of money gained from their ‘complex financial web’ of claims was laundered through a number of accounts, then withdrawn in cash – with £750,000 in bank notes found stuffed in suitcases at one of their homes.
The shameless gang were hauled in front of a judge at Wood Green Crown Court who said ringleader Galina Nikolova, 38, was responsible for at least £25million lost to UK taxpayers.
Gyunesh Ali, 33, even took a video of himself throwing wads of cash at unknown woman.
Ali, Nikolova, and her boyfriend Stoyan Stoyanov, 27, along with Tsvetka Todorova, 52, and Patritsia Paneva, 26, were arrested on 5 May 2021.
Last month a couple pretended to have 18 children in a £300k tax credit fraud scam were ordered to pay back just £2 between them.
‘Greedy’ HMRC worker Tracy Ashbridge applied for handouts for children that did not exist and lied about her own family having severe disabilities.
The 44-year-old, who was jailed last September, also used her position at work to alter former legitimate claimants’ details to get her hands on money.
On one occasion Ashbridge sent her husband Robert a text which read: ‘Shall we have another child?’
When he asked how they would manage, she responded with: ‘Not physically, LOL’
The mum-of-four, who earned 11k-per-year in the role she had held since 2012, used a total of nine bank accounts to receive the dishonest payouts between 2015 and 2019.
She tried to pocket a total of £434,128 and admitted six charges of fraud.
Pictured: Tracy Ashbridge, who applied for handouts for 18 children that did not exist
Pictured: Robert Ashbridge, who admitted one fraud charge but prosecutors said he also ‘encouraged’ his wife’s outrageous dishonesty.
During a Proceeds of Crime Act hearing at Newcastle Crown Court in July it was determined that the total amount she made through her crime was £305,952 but after an investigation revealed she had no assets she was ordered to pay back just £1.
At a further hearing in September her husband, 45, was found to have made £22,385 through his role in the scam but the court heard he also has no assets and he was ordered to pay the same sum of £1 or face seven days in jail.
The husband, who worked as a chef at a care home, admitted one fraud charge but prosecutors said he also ‘encouraged’ his wife’s outrageous dishonesty.
The couple, of Plough Road, Sunderland, could still be ordered to pay back the money they made through crime if they come into any future windfall.