State financial officers protect, recover $28B in tax dollars in 2025

Spread the love

Conservative state treasurers, auditors and comptrollers protected and recovered $28 billion in taxpayer dollars from “waste, fraud, and abuse” in 2025, according to a report from the State Financial Officers Foundation.

CEO of State Financial Officers Foundation OJ Oleka told The Center Square that the “revelations” in his organization’s report “underscore the fact that accountability matters and that it does not come automatically.”

“Simply put, taxpayer dollars do not protect themselves,” Oleka said.

“In every instance where fraud was stopped, waste was exposed, and money was saved for taxpayers, it was because a principled financial officer demonstrated leadership, vigilance, and courage,” Oleka said. “They upheld their fiduciary duty and went above and beyond.’

“In the places where fraud was able to spread, proactive oversight and accountability could’ve made a difference,” Oleka said.

When asked what can be done to prevent fraud and corruption in the first place, Oleka said: “At least one thing states can do is elect a strong financial officer willing to be a relentless watchdog over public funds.”

Oleka said “the fraud crisis in Minnesota could very well have been prevented had the state not abolished its Treasurer role years ago.”

Oleka told The Center Square that the State Financial Officers Foundation’s report “underscores why, according to surveys, state financial officers are the most trusted elected officials on money matters — more than Congress, state legislators, or governors.

“Stopping fraud is an important tool to improve affordability and reduce the national debt,” Oleka said. “Eliminating fraud and wasteful spending means the government prints less money, which means a higher value for everyone’s dollar.”

According to the report, in 2025, State Financial Officers Foundation (SFOF) members “protected over $28 billion in state funds.”

SFOF is a “cohort of 40 officers from 28 states,” as explained in the report.

These SFOF members “stopped approximately $5.7 billion in waste, fraud, and abuse,” and “oversaw $22.3 billion in investment earnings and unclaimed property returned directly to citizens” in 2025.

For example, according to SFOF, Florida Chief Financial Officer Blaise Ingoglia “identified approximately $1.86 billion in excessive or wasteful local government spending.”

Meanwhile, Kentucky Auditor Allison Ball “identified approximately $1 billion in Medicaid waste and lapsed education funds.”

In a third of dozens of examples of state financial officers exposing fraud and stewarding tax dollars, SFOF revealed that Utah State Treasurer and SFOF national chairman Marlo Oaks oversaw “investment earnings of $1.5 billion and returning ~$43 million in unclaimed property.”

In a statement, Marlo Oaks told The Center Square that the report “makes one thing clear: when you remove independent financial oversight, taxpayers pay the price.”

“The massive fraud uncovered in Minnesota is a stark reminder of what happens when accountability is weakened,” Oaks said.

“Across the country, state financial officers are doing the job taxpayers expect, identifying billions in waste, fraud, and abuse, generating strong investment results, and returning billions in unclaimed property to rightful owners,” Oaks said.

“That’s not partisan; it’s fiduciary duty,” Oaks said. “America’s state financial officers will continue to expose fiscal misconduct and protect the hard-earned dollars of the American people.”

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Trump deploys California National Guard to Portland

Trump deploys California National Guard to Portland

By Dan McCalebThe Center Square President Donald Trump on Sunday deployed California National Guard troops to Portland after a federal judge in Oregon on Saturday temporarily blocked the president from...
Peace on the line two years after Oct. 7 attacks

Peace on the line two years after Oct. 7 attacks

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square Tuesday marks the second anniversary of the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas terror attack; the impact of that day continues to be felt worldwide. Israel has...
U.S. Supreme Court looks to start consequential new term

U.S. Supreme Court looks to start consequential new term

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The U.S. Supreme Court will hear the first oral arguments of its new term on Monday, with several high-profile cases already on the docket. The...
U of I scrutinized over perceived preference for international students

U of I scrutinized over perceived preference for international students

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The University of Illinois faces scrutiny over its Spring 2026 Master’s in Accounting program, with the...
lake land college.2

Lake Land College one of 10 national recipients of the Association of Community College Trustees (ACCT) Scaling Apprenticeship grant

Lake Land College was recently named one of 10 recipients of the Association of Community College Trustees (ACCT) Scaling Apprenticeship grant. With funding from Ascendum Education Group and in partnership...
Youngkin, Johnson call for AG candidate to withdraw after violent texts emerge

Youngkin, Johnson call for AG candidate to withdraw after violent texts emerge

By Dan McCalebThe Center Square Gov. Glenn Youngkin and U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson are calling on Virginia attorney general candidate Jay Jones to exit the race after it was...
ICE agents shoot armed woman in suburban Chicago during attack

ICE agents shoot armed woman in suburban Chicago during attack

By Dan McCaleb | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Border Patrol agents near Chicago shot an armed woman Saturday who was part of a group of...
Pritzker: Trump to federalize Illinois National Guard

Pritzker: Trump to federalize Illinois National Guard

By Dan McCaleb | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – President Donald Trump will federalize 300 Illinois National Guard troops, Gov. J.B. Pritzker said in a statement...
City taxpayer burden swells, as Chicago pension debt rises

City taxpayer burden swells, as Chicago pension debt rises

By Glenn Minnis | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Chicago taxpayers now face unfunded debt from its municipal, laborers, police, fire and teachers’ pensions that...
Clark County Logo

Clark County Amends Liquor Ordinance, Keeps Sunday Morning Sales Ban

Article Summary: The Clark County Board approved changes to its liquor ordinance, extending closing times to midnight and increasing violation penalties, but ultimately rejected a proposal to allow Sunday morning...
USDOT puts $2.1 billion of taxpayer funds for CTA under review

USDOT puts $2.1 billion of taxpayer funds for CTA under review

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – More than $2 billion in federal taxpayer infrastructure funding granted by the Biden administration for Chicago Transit...
2025Royalty-2024King-CrownBearers.Cropped

2025 C-W Homecoming Royalty

King Luke Karras & Queen Lucy Moore Luke is the son of Robin & Tony Karras; Lucy is the daughter of Helen & Tyler Moore Duke Nolan Clement & Duchess...
SeniorClassCandidate-Royalty

Senior Homecoming Attendents

Kayla Clark & Nolan Clement Kayla is the daughter of Jodi & Josh Clark; Nolan is the son of Becky & Doug Clement Julia Eckerty & Kellen Sullivan Julia is...
JuniorClassAttendents

Junior Homecoming Attendents

Anna Karras & Will Moore Anna is the daughter of Robin & Tony Karras; Will is the son of Helen & Tyler Moore Aubrey Meyer & Drake Worby Aubrey is...
SophomoreClassAttendents

Sophomore Homecoming Attendents

Gyllyane Gilbert & Jett Self Gyllyane is the daughter of Caryn Gilbert & Nick Gilbert; Jett is the son of Tawnya & Steve Self Claire Kusterman & Weston Hupp Claire...