Another Ohio public entity scammed out of more than $400,000
For the second time this week, Ohio Auditor Keith Faber released details of a public entity being scammed out of more than $400,000 in a payment redirection scheme.
Faber said Thursday that a Highland County employee transferred more than $400,000 to a person impersonating a vendor after the county failed to implement safe and training to make sure redirect requests were legitimate.
As previously reported by The Center Square, Faber announced earlier this week that an audit showed The Cleveland Public Library transferred almost $400,000 to a fake vendor as part of a payment redirect scam after the library also failed to adopt proper internal controls that would have detected the scheme.
More than a year ago, Faber issued a bulletin to all public offices on handling payment redirect requests.
Auditors said the September 2024 incident showed a Highland County employee received the request and transferred two payments totaling $450,120 to the fake account before the scam was discovered.
The county recovered more than $184,073 from the bank involved, and insurance covered another $263,546. However, state auditors issued a finding for recovery for the $2,500 insurance deductible.
“Prior to accepting the changes to payment information, none of the bulletin’s recommended steps were taken to independently verify that the request was legitimate. In addition, the county auditor had not adopted a policy or implemented training for employees in his office and in other county offices to recognize vendor redirect schemes,” auditors wrote in their report.
Latest News Stories
Bessent backs 3% deficit goal despite 5% budget forecasts
Constables hope to find missing children in immigration search effort
Lawmaker blasts reports of ‘equitable assessments’ at medical school
FOID changes advance in Illinois House, not called in Senate
Texas tops California, New York, with the most Fortune 500 headquarters
Nine candidates run in Las Vegas congressional district
U.S. seeks dismissal of lawsuit over deadly boat strikes
Seattle mayor reverses course, activates surveillance cameras for World Cup
Expert: GOP success this week doesn’t mean Nov. 3 victories
High-speed rail project criticized again after $3.5B contract
Platner leads Collins in Maine U.S. Senate race despite controversies
Illinois quick hits: Illinois parole absconder arrested in Tennessee