Below is a press release from the Mississippi Department of Human Services:
A Tate County, Miss. resident surrendered to authorities on September 24, 2024, following a SNAP fraud investigation conducted by the Investigations Division of the Mississippi Department of Human Service (MDHS).
MDHS announced that Erica Napper of Tate County received $25,222.00 in SNAP benefits by not reporting household income and composition accurately to MDHS. Based on the evidence obtained during the investigation, the case was referred to the Tate County District Attorney's office. The Tate County District Attorney secured an indictment on August 7, 2024, and Napper later turned herself in to MDHS and Tate County officials on Tuesday, September 24, 2024.
"This is a great example of collaboration between our investigations team, County offices, District Attorney's office, and local law enforcement," stated MDHS Inspector General Sandra Griffith.
Agent Hunter Walton of the MDHS Investigations Division investigated the case. The Investigations Division is a subset of the MDHS Office of the Inspector General (OIG), which was created in August 2018 and charged with detecting, deterring, and preventing fraud, waste, and abuse. OIG has been responsible for millions of dollars collected from overpayments.
"This investigation demonstrates, once again, the strengthened controls we have in place to identify, investigate, and eliminate fraud in our programs," MDHS Executive Director Robert G. "Bob" Anderson said.
An indictment is only an allegation. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.
Suspected fraud can be reported to MDHS online any time by submitting the MDHS Fraud Tip Form at https://www.mdhs.ms.gov/report-fraud/, calling the Fraud Tip Line at 1-(800)-299-6905, or email at fraud@mdhs.ms.gov.