A federal employee pleaded guilty Thursday to fraud, admitting she used teleworking so she could claim to be working full-time for three different government agencies at the same time. Here’s what you need to know about the federal telework fraud case:
The guilty plea
Crissy Monique Baker admits to defrauding taxpayers:
- Used teleworking to work for three government agencies simultaneously
- Pleaded guilty Thursday to fraud charges
- Admitted to costing taxpayers $225,866.99 in payments for time she didn’t actually work
- Sometimes billed government for more than 24 hours of work in single day
The three government positions
Baker held multiple federal jobs without approval:
- Full-time management and program analyst at Housing and Urban Development
- Contractor position doing human resources work at AmeriCorps
- Contractor position at National Institutes of Health
- Did not get approval from HUD for other work
The employment timeline
Baker’s overlapping job schedule:
- Started AmeriCorps contractor work Sept. 1, 2021
- Began full-time HUD analyst position Oct. 25, 2021 as GS-13
- Added NIH contractor work May 16, 2022
- Triple-dipped until NIH contract ended Dec. 2, 2022
- Continued AmeriCorps contracting through April 30, 2023
The impossible work hours
Baker reported physically impossible daily schedules:
- During June 2022 reported 13 different days working 26 hours
- Claimed 10 hours at HUD and 8 hours each at NIH and AmeriCorps
- Also reported five days working between 15 and 18 hours
- Additional days with 10 hours and 4 hours reported
- Baker admitted inflating hours worked for HUD
The contractor payments
Government paid contracting companies significant amounts:
- AmeriCorps paid for 141 hours in June 2022 at $70.87 per hour
- NIH paid for 149 hours same month at $108 per hour
- Payments went to contracting companies employing Baker
- Court documents don’t reveal contracting company names
The telework enabler
Remote work allowed fraud to go undetected:
- “She was able to successfully conceal her employment because she teleworked in all three positions”
- Baker’s telework jobs coincided with pandemic
- Agency buildings emptied out during COVID-19
- Federal employees adopted remote working as standard
The presidential policies
Leaders have different approaches to telework:
- President Biden made some efforts to get employees back to office
- President Trump ordered agencies to get employees back to in-person work
- Government Accountability Office says fewer people want federal jobs without telework
- Tradeoff exists between remote work flexibility and in-person requirements
The investigation scope
Multiple agencies involved in uncovering fraud:
- Investigation included inspectors general from nine agencies
- AmeriCorps, HUD, Energy Department, FDIC participated
- Homeland Security, GSA, Health and Human Services involved
- IRS and Pension Benefit Guarantee Corporation included
- FBI and Defense Department Criminal Investigative Service assisted
The defendant details
Baker awaits sentencing for fraud charges:
- Crissy Monique Baker, 45 years old
- Resident of Fairfax
- Scheduled to be sentenced Sept. 30
- Court documents don’t say how Baker’s scam was spotted
The unanswered questions
Key details remain undisclosed:
- Names of contracting companies not revealed in court documents
- Method of discovering Baker’s fraud scheme not disclosed
- Washington Times reached out to Baker’s lawyer for comment
- HUD also contacted for comment on case
Read more:
• Triple-dipping teleworker: Fed employee claimed to be working three jobs at once
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