A once-trusted Georgia lawmaker confesses to stealing taxpayer relief money, exposing how easy it was to exploit the nation’s rushed pandemic safety net.
Karen Bennett, who represented suburban Atlanta’s House District 94 for 12 years, stood before a federal judge on Wednesday and admitted she deliberately misled the Georgia Department of Labor to collect unemployment insurance she knew she did not qualify for.
The 70-year-old Democrat’s plea to a single felony count of making false statements carries a maximum five-year prison term, yet prosecutors have agreed to request no incarceration and no supervised release in exchange for full restitution of the $13,940 before her April 15 sentencing.
How the Scheme Unfolded
According to charging documents, Bennett certified each week that COVID-19 quarantine orders prevented her from working at Metro Therapy Providers, a company she herself owns. In reality:
- Her role was purely administrative and performed from a home office.
- The firm never stopped operating; revenue briefly dipped then rebounded.
- She simultaneously collected $905 a week from the African Methodist Episcopal Church as a minister—income she never disclosed on state forms.
By concealing both her continued ownership income and her church salary, Bennett qualified for the federally funded $600 weekly boost that Congress created in March 2020 to keep families afloat.
A Pattern in the Caucus
Bennett is the second Georgia House Democrat implicated in pandemic-aid fraud. Rep. Sharon Henderson of Covington remains in office while fighting indictment for allegedly stealing $17,811 through similar false certifications. A state review commission meets Thursday to advise Governor Brian Kemp on whether to suspend Henderson pending trial.
The twin cases spotlight an uncomfortable reality: even elected officials tasked with safeguarding public funds found the emergency programs ripe for abuse.
Why This Matters Beyond One Plea
- Trust Erosion: Voters already cynical about congressional stock-trading scandals now see state-level relief money siphoned by the very lawmakers who appropriated it.
- System Design Flaws: Congress pumped $878 billion into unemployment systems that still rely largely on self-attestation. Bennett’s prosecution is a rare exception; the Labor Department’s inspector general estimates $191 billion in pandemic unemployment could have been paid improperly nationwide.
- Political Fallout: With a March 10 special election set to replace Bennett, Republicans are poised to frame the contests as a referendum on Democratic oversight of federal dollars in a district that narrowly backed Biden in 2020.
What Happens Next
Judge Eleanor Ross will decide whether to accept the no-prison recommendation. Even if she does, Bennett’s felony conviction strips her of a state pension worth roughly $37,000 a year and bans her from holding public office again under Georgia law.
Meanwhile, federal prosecutors in Atlanta have hinted the investigation is “active and ongoing,” raising the likelihood that more public—or private—figures could face charges before the statute of limitations expires in 2027.
Bottom line: Bennett’s swift guilty plea offers a textbook example of how emergency generosity collided with weak verification, and why every future crisis aid package will carry stricter oversight strings attached.
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