(1)
There is established an office of fraud and accountability within
the department for the purpose of detection, investigation, and
prosecution of any act prohibited or declared to be unlawful in
the public assistance programs administered by the department.
The secretary will employ qualified supervisory, legal, and
investigative personnel for the program. Program staff must be
qualified by training and experience.
(2) The director of the office of fraud and accountability
is the head of the office and is selected by the secretary and
must demonstrate suitable capacity and experience in law
enforcement management, public administration, and criminal
investigations. The director of the office of fraud and
accountability shall:
(a) Report directly to the secretary; and
(b) Ensure that each citizen complaint, employee complaint,
law enforcement complaint, and agency referral is assessed and,
when risk of fraud or abuse is present, is fully investigated,
and is referred for prosecution or recovery when there is
substantial evidence of wrongdoing.
(3) The office shall:
(a) Conduct independent and objective investigations into
allegations of fraud and abuse, make appropriate referral to law
enforcement when there is substantial evidence of criminal
activity, and recover overpayment whenever possible and to the
greatest possible degree;
(b) Recommend policies, procedures, and best practices
designed to detect and prevent fraud and abuse, and to mitigate
the risk for fraud and abuse and assure that public assistance
benefits are being used for their statutorily stated goals;
(c) Analyze cost-effective, best practice alternatives to
the current cash benefit delivery system consistent with federal
law to ensure that benefits are being used for their intended
purposes; and
(d) Use best practices to determine appropriate utilization
and deployment of investigative resources, ensure that resources
are deployed in a balanced and effective manner, and use all
available methods to gather evidence necessary for proper
investigation and successful prosecution.
(4) By December 31, 2011, the office shall report to the
legislature on the development of the office, identification of
any barriers to meeting the stated goals of the office, and
recommendations for improvements to the system and laws related
to the prevention, detection, and prosecution of fraud and abuse
in public assistance programs.
[2011 1st sp.s. c 42 § 22; 2008 c 74 § 3.]
NOTES:
Findings -- Intent -- Effective date -- 2011 1st sp.s. c 42: See notes following RCW 74.08A.260.
Finding -- 2011 1st sp.s. c 42: See note following RCW 74.04.004.
Finding -- 2008 c 74: See note following RCW 51.04.024.