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House Oversight’s COVID-19 subcommittee is demanding to know what the Justice Department is doing about the billions of dollars in COVID-19 pandemic aid that was allegedly stolen by "international" criminals.

Subcommittee chair Rep. Brad Wenstrup, R-Ohio, wrote a letter to Attorney General Merrick Garland requesting a full rundown of how many COVID relief dollars were stolen "by international actors or organizations," including which countries, and how many of those instances the Department of Justice (DOJ) is looking into.

His panel is also seeking an analysis of how many Americans were impacted by the fraud and any DOJ communications related to officials’ efforts to crack down on it.

"This massive growth in government spending caused inflation and expanded the government to unprecedented levels," Wenstrup said, referring to the $4.6 trillion spent on the U.S. COVID-19 response as of the beginning of this year.

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Brad Wenstrup

Subcommittee Chairman Brad Wenstrup, R-Ohio, is demanding a full accounting of COVID-19 fraud recovery efforts, including related to crimes by "international actors."

"Worse still, these costly COVID-19-era programs were rife with waste, fraud and abuse. Criminals inside and outside the United States stole approximately $280 billion in taxpayer funds intended for struggling families, businesses, hospitals and others."

He cited a report that some of those stolen funds were taken by foreign actors committing identity theft.

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"Some of these fraudulent actors were based outside the United States and may involve international criminal organizations. Estimates imply that at least half of all stolen COVID-19 relief funds went to Russian, Chinese and Nigerian criminals," Wenstrup wrote.

U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland

Attorney General Merrick Garland. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

"As of March 2022, the Department stated that it had taken criminal and civil enforcement actions in matters alleging over $8 billion in pandemic relief fraud, but it is unclear if this is limited to domestic fraud. It is highly concerning that possibly billions of taxpayer dollars intended to help Americans suffering the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic were stolen by organized criminal rings in foreign countries."

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In addition to the specific information sought, the subcommittee is also looking for a staff-level briefing on "the Department’s civil and criminal actions to date in response to reports of fraud, waste, and abuse of coronavirus pandemic relief funds by overseas or international actors and criminal organizations."

COVID testing site

Wenstrup cites reports arguing that billions of dollars' worth of pandemic fraud was likely committed by international actors.

A spokesperson for the subcommittee's Democratic minority affirmed that COVID fraud should be prosecuted and defended the Biden administration's response to the pandemic.

"For millions of American families and small businesses, COVID-19 relief funds provided a crucial lifeline as a global pandemic threatened our nation’s health and economy. International criminal organizations that exploited much-needed pandemic relief to defraud the United States government must be held accountable," the spokesperson told Fox News Digital. 

"Under the Biden administration, the Department of Justice has investigated and prosecuted fraudsters, already seizing more than $1.4 billion in stolen relief funds across the country. As Republicans threaten to defund our nation’s law enforcement to shield former President Trump from justice, Select Subcommittee Democrats stand ready to support and invest in the Department’s ongoing work to hold domestic and international bad actors accountable and prevent fraud in the event of future crises."

The DOJ last week announced charges against 371 defendants whose alleged COVID fraud offenses run more than $830 million. 

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"The Justice Department has now seized over $1.4 billion in COVID-19 relief funds that criminals had stolen and charged over 3,000 defendants with crimes in federal districts across the country," Garland said at the time.

The DOJ did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the subcommittee’s letter.