August 03, 2009 2:57 pm ET
On ABC's Good Morning America, Chris Cuomo falsely suggested "a new report" found that $72 billion has been misspent this year under the Obama administration. In fact, according to the Heritage Foundation study that Cuomo cited, "The federal government made at least $72 billion in improper payments in 2008," and the Government Accountability Office (GAO) similarly found that "[a]gencies reported improper payment estimates of $72 billion for fiscal year 2008" -- when President Bush was still in office.
From the August 3 edition of ABC's Good Morning America:
CUOMO: And now we keep hearing all of these billions of dollars, how -- where is it going? It's so hard to digest. But a new report breaks it into numbers that are a little easier to understand. Look at it this way: It finds that federal spending will average nearly $34,000 per household this year. That's up $8,000 since just last year. And it may go up even more as lawmakers look to extend unemployment benefits. Here's a good one also: $72 billion spent by our government to the wrong people, in either double payments or missed payments. Can you believe that? It's true.
Cuomo cited a study by the conservative Heritage Foundation. During the segment, Cuomo referred to a "new report" while an on-screen graphic cited the Heritage Foundation, but Cuomo did not mention the group by name or indicate that it is a conservative think tank.
The Heritage Foundation study said the federal government made at least $72 billion in improper payments in 2008 -- not this year. In a July 27 "special report" titled "Federal Spending by the Numbers 2009," the Heritage Foundation stated, "The federal government made at least $72 billion in improper payments in 2008" [emphasis added]. The study stated that its sourcing for the figure is "[o]n file at the Heritage Foundation."
GAO also reported "improper payment estimates of $72 billion for fiscal year 2008." An April 22 GAO report on "improper payments" similarly found that "[a]gencies reported improper payment estimates of $72 billion for fiscal year 2008, which represented about 4 percent of the $1.8 trillion of reported outlays for the related programs."
&mdash A.S.
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