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Tuesday, June 23, 2026

California Employment Development Department Contract Employee Sentenced to 25 Months for Pandemic-Related Fraud - Department of Justice

Assistant U. S. Attorney Stephen H. Wong (619) 546-9464

NEWS RELEASE SUMMARY – December 20, 2021

SAN DIEGO – Nyika Gomez, a San Diego resident and former contract employee with the California Employment Development Department (EDD), was sentenced in federal court to 25 months in prison and ordered to pay $93,248 dollars in restitution in connection with a scheme to submit fraudulent pandemic unemployment insurance claims for California state prisoners.

As part of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act of 2020, Congress provided new unemployment benefits for those affected by the COVID-19 pandemic who would not otherwise qualify for unemployment insurance. In California, the EDD administers unemployment insurance benefits. In Arizona, benefits are administered by the Arizona Department for Economic Security (AZDES).

Gomez was sentenced on December 15. According to her plea agreement, in July 2020, Gomez devised a scheme to defraud the EDD and AZDES by submitting Pandemic Unemployment Assistance claims for prisoners and other persons who were not eligible for such assistance, including making up false claims about their employment. Gomez submitted more than $214,344 in fraudulent claims and collected $93,248 on those claims. Gomez arranged for the stolen benefits – paid out in the form of a debit card – to be mailed directly to her residence, or to the residence of someone working with her. Gomez returned some of the proceeds to the prison inmates by...



Read Full Story: https://www.justice.gov/usao-sdca/pr/california-employment-development-depart...