The House passed a bill on March 11 to extend the statute of limitations when it comes to prosecuting unemployment fraud stemming from the COVID-19 pandemic.
The vote tally was 295–127. Eighty-three Democrats joined all 212 Republicans in voting for the measure.
The statute of limitations is currently five years.
There are 1,648 investigations surrounding COVID-19 fraud that have not yet resulted in criminal charges, according to the committee.
“Given the volume of existing cases currently under investigation, there is no reason that Congress should not act to ensure law enforcement stays on this beat and goes after these criminals,” said Smith.
“Taking them off the streets will not only ensure justice is done but will also help prevent those same crime organizations from being free to defraud the American taxpayer once again.”
Additionally, the House passed on March 11 a resolution to repeal Biden-era regulations from the Internal Revenue Service.
The vote tally on the measure, introduced by Rep. Mike Carey (R-Ohio), was 292–132 with one voting “present.” Seventy-six Democrats joined all 216 Republicans in voting for it.
The regulations “included rules that would apply to brokers that generally act as agents and dealers in transactions with their customers involving digital assets, which are defined generally as any digital representation of value that is not cash and is recorded on a cryptographically secured distributed ledger.”
Digital assets include cryptocurrency.
The IRS regulations include “rules that would apply to brokers that act as digital asset middlemen, a new category of broker proposed to address the use of digital assets to make certain payments and to reflect the clarified definition of broker under the Infrastructure Act.”
The resolution was introduced in accordance with the Congressional Review Act, which allows Congress to repeal regulations issued within the past 60 legislative days.
Both the bill and resolution now head to the Senate. Only a simple majority is needed for the resolution while 60 votes are needed to advance the bill in overcoming a filibuster.