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Brought to you by the Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency
Federal Reports
Report Date
Agency Reviewed / Investigated
Report Title
Type
Location
Department of Justice
Investigative Summary: Findings of Misconduct by then Assistant United States Attorney for Misuse of Position and Misuse of Government Computer
DOJ Press Release: Middlesex Man Admits Paycheck Protection Program Fraud Scheme and Obtaining Funds from a Deposited Stolen and Altered U.S. Treasury Check
We conducted a performance audit of National Endowment for the Arts (Arts Endowment) awards issued to the Massachusetts Cultural Council (Council). Based on our review, we determined the Council generally met the financial and compliance requirements set forth in the award documents. However, the Council did not fully comply with Federal grants management requirements. For instance, the Council: did not report actual costs on one of three Federal Financial Reports (FFR); did not follow its FFR reporting policy; included unsupported costs and costs incurred outside the award period on all three FFRs; included unallowable fundraising, foreign travel, and entertainment costs on two of three FFRs; included unallowable sub-awards on two of three FFRs; did not follow Federal Financial Accountability and Transparency Act reporting requirements; and did not provide the required notification to all its Federal award participants; and did not submit its FFR and FDR reports by the reporting deadlines. Thus, we are questioning $3,014,242 in unsupported and unallowable costs, with a potential refund of $60,000 due to the Arts Endowment. There are 16 recommendations to address the findings, ten to the Council and six to the Arts Endowment.
This report was submitted to the Comptroller General in accordance with Section 5 of the Government Accountability Office Act of 2008. The report summarizes the activities of the Office of Inspector General (OIG) for the six-month reporting period ending March 31, 2021. During the reporting period, the OIG issued one audit report and began three performance audits. In addition, the OIG closed four investigations and two self-initiated inquiries, and opened seven new investigations. The OIG processed 46 hotline complaints, many of which were referred to other OIGs for action because the matters involved were within their jurisdictions. The OIG remained active in the GAO and OIG communities by briefing new GAO employees on its audit and investigative missions, and participating in committees and working groups of the Council of Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency, including those related to the Pandemic Response Accountability Committee. Details of these activities and other accomplishments are provided in the report.