My Wife Stormed Home Furious. “Why Isn’t the Card Working? Mom Didn’t Get Your Paycheck…”
Authority Knocks
She left without another word, Anna trailing behind her. I sat in the silent apartment, my heart pounding so hard I could feel it in my temples.
The next evening, Saturday at 6:15 p.m., there was a loud official knock at the door. It wasn’t the casual tap of a neighbor or delivery person; it was the kind of knock that meant authority.
I opened it to find three people in business attire holding official-looking folders.
“David Richardson?”
The man in front, early 50s in a gray suit, extended his hand as his ID badge on a lanyard swung forward.
“I’m Agent Thomas Morrison from the IRS Criminal Investigation Division. This is Agent Sarah Chen from the Social Security Administration Office of the Inspector General and Detective Robert Walsh from the Chicago Police Department’s Economic Crimes Unit”.
My stomach dropped.
“Can I help you?”
“We’re looking for Gloria Mitchell and Anna Richardson. Are they here?”
“No. What’s this about?”
Agent Chen, 40-some with sharp eyes and a non-nonsense expression, checked her folder.
“Verification of income and illegal receipt of survivor benefits. We also have questions about unreported income from both Ms. Mitchell and Ms. Richardson”.
Anna appeared in the hallway behind me, her face going white.
“What’s going on?”
Miss Richardson, Detective Walsh, 60 years old and 28 years with CPD according to the badge he showed, stepped forward.
“We need to speak with you and your mother about several matters. Is Gloria Mitchell at this location?”
“She’s… she’s at her apartment. About what matters?”
“Tax fraud and benefits fraud,”
Agent Morrison said flatly.
“We received a complaint filed Tuesday regarding both of you”.
My mind raced. I didn’t file anything. Agent Chen smiled slightly.
“We know. The complaint was filed by James Mitchell, Ms. Mitchell’s ex-husband”.
He discovered he was listed as deceased in Social Security Administration records when he tried to apply for early retirement benefits last week. The system flagged a conflict. Anna stumbled backward.
“My father’s alive?”
“Very alive,”
Detective Walsh said.
“And very angry that his ex-wife has been collecting widow’s benefits for 6 years while he’s been working construction in Milwaukee. When we started investigating we found a lot more: unreported alcohol sales, unemployment fraud, and Ms. Richardson, we found evidence of substantial unreported freelance income”.
“Can we come in?”
Agent Morrison asked, but it wasn’t really a question. They spent the next 90 minutes in our apartment set up at our dining table with laptops and folders.
The Evidence Piles Up
They asked to see Anna’s computer. She tried to refuse, but Detective Walsh explained they had a warrant for her electronic devices.
I sat on the couch watching this unfold like a spectator at my own life’s implosion. Agent Chen pulled up documents on her laptop and turned it toward Anna.
“Ms. Richardson, these are records from Fiverr, Upwork, and direct payments to your PayPal account over an 18-month period. You received $31,742 in freelance income. You reported exactly $0 of it on your tax returns”.
Anna’s hands were shaking.
“I didn’t know I had to…”
“You’re a 32-year-old college-educated adult working in a professional field,”
Agent Morrison cut in.
“We find that claim implausible. Preliminary calculations show you owe approximately $9,400 in back taxes plus penalties and interest. Final amount will be determined after full audit”.
“Your mother’s situation is more severe,”
Agent Chen continued.
“She’s been receiving $1,100 monthly in survivor benefits since 2018. That’s $79,200 in fraudulent payments. She also collected $14,400 in unemployment benefits while operating an unlicensed alcohol sales business generating approximately $32,000 annually”.
The numbers kept piling up, each one making Anna look smaller, more collapsed.
“Combined, your mother is looking at federal fraud charges, state charges for operating an illegal business, and unemployment fraud charges,”
Detective Walsh said.
“The benefits fraud alone carries up to 5 years federal prison time and mandatory repayment of all benefits received plus fines up to $250,000”.
Anna started crying, real tears this time, not manipulative ones.
“She said she needed the money. She said my father left her with nothing”.
“Your father paid alimony for 3 years after their divorce,”
Agent Chen said, checking her notes.
“Per the divorce decree, he fulfilled all obligations. Ms. Mitchell was employed at the time and continued working for two years after the divorce. She voluntarily left her job, filed for unemployment, and shortly after began claiming survivor benefits”.
