WASHINGTON, D.C. – The U.S. Small Business Administration Office of Inspector General (SBA OIG) has successfully facilitated the return of more than $15 million in taxpayer funds associated with potentially fraudulent Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) and Economic Injury Disaster Loan (EIDL) loans, spanning over 1,000 loans identified through fraud indicators.
These recoveries are part of a broader effort under Inspector General William W. Kirk, who was sworn in earlier this year, to aggressively identify, track, and recover funds tied to fraud.
As part of these efforts, SBA received wires totaling $15 million from two financial institutions:
- $3+ million returned to SBA on March 31, 2026
- $12+ million returned to SBA on April 2, 2026
To date, SBA OIG has coordinated the direct return of over $86.7 million in taxpayer funds from financial institutions tied specifically to potentially fraudulent pandemic-era loans, including PPP and EIDL funds. These recoveries are part of SBA OIG’s broader pandemic fraud enforcement efforts and contribute to more than $2.8 billion in total investigative recoveries involving suspected fraud across SBA’s COVID-19 relief program.
The funds were identified through fraud analysis of accounts exhibiting indicators of potential abuse. Many of these accounts have been frozen for years, requiring validation, legal review, and coordination to facilitate their return.
SBA OIG conducted this work in coordination with SBA program officials and the Office of General Counsel, consistent with its independent oversight role and its mission to promote accountability and safeguard taxpayer resources.
“Fraud against SBA programs is fraud against the American taxpayer,” said Inspector General Kirk. “We are continuing to identify funds linked to fraud, support their recovery, and ensure accountability. The passage of time does not diminish our responsibility to pursue these funds.”
These efforts represent a continued, data-driven approach to addressing pandemic-related fraud and reinforcing safeguards to prevent future abuse of federal relief programs.
“Every dollar recovered is a dollar returned to the American taxpayer—and a clear signal that oversight continues,” Inspector General Kirk added.
SBA OIG will continue working with SBA and appropriate authorities to identify fraud schemes, support recovery efforts, and strengthen program integrity.
The Office of Inspector General encourages financial institutions that suspect fraud, waste and abuse or misuse of SBA programs to report it to the SBA OIG Hotline.
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Media Contact SBA-OIG:
Andre N. Harris
Acting Director of External & Congressional Affairs
U.S. Small Business Administration, Office of Inspector General
Phone: (202) 893-5308
Email: DeAundre.Harris@sba.gov