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A former chief of staff to the U.S. CIO argues that the federal government's "pay and chase" approach to combating fraud in benefits programs is a flawed operating doctrine and should not be treated as an effective fraud-fighting strategy.…

Breaking analysis of what happened and who is affected.
A former chief of staff to the U.S. CIO argues that the federal government's "pay and chase" approach to combating fraud in benefits programs is a flawed operating doctrine and should not be treated as an effective fraud-fighting strategy.…
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The article critiques the federal "pay and chase" approach to combating fraud in benefits programs and argues it is a flawed doctrine. This critique could spur agencies and budget decision-makers to re-evaluate post-payment recovery models and favor upstream prevention, creating risks for…
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A former chief of staff to the U.S. CIO argues that the federal government’s 'pay and chase' approach to fraud in benefits programs is a flawed doctrine. Contractors supporting benefits programs should prepare for potential policy and procurement shifts favoring up-front fraud prevention by…
Read full report →A former chief of staff to the U.S. CIO argues that the federal government's "pay and chase" approach to combating fraud in benefits programs is a flawed operating doctrine and should not be treated as an effective fraud-fighting strategy. The commentary, published on FedScoop, critiques the practice of paying out benefits first and pursuing recovery or enforcement after the fact. This critique matters to contractors who support benefits program administration, fraud detection, and recovery operations because it signals potential scrutiny of program design and operational doctrine. Immediate implications include heightened policy and program-level review, possible shifts in priorities toward prevention over recovery, and increased demand for audit-ready controls and oversight mechanisms. Contractors should assess exposure in affected tasking, refresh compliance postures, and prepare to respond to changing procurement signals.
Specific NAICS codes, agencies, and contract vehicles pending source review. At a general level, contractors supporting benefits program administration, fraud detection/recovery operations, and program oversight are the most likely to be affected.
A: The author argued that the federal government's "pay and chase" approach to combating fraud in benefits programs is a flawed operating doctrine and should not be treated as a fraud-fighting strategy. Source: FedScoop article referenced in the Summary.
A: Pending source review. The Summary signals critique and potential pressure for change, but it does not specify any enacted policy, procurement actions, or formal requirements.
A: Prioritize an impact assessment of current bids and awards tied to benefits program work, validate fraud-prevention controls in existing statements of work, update win themes to emphasize prevention capabilities, and notify internal stakeholders to monitor for policy or solicitation updates. Specific solicitation or timeline details are pending source review.
Which Cabrillo products to leverage: Use Cabrillo Signals War Room and Cabrillo Signals Intelligence Hub to monitor policy commentary and emerging solicitations; run current pipelines through Cabrillo Signals Match Engine to reprioritize opportunities; prepare or update proposals and compliance narratives in Proposal Studio and manage capture activities in Proposal Studio Workflow Tracker.
Who to notify: Capture/BD leads — to reassess pipelines and win themes; Proposal manager — to update bid/no-bid decisions and proposal materials; Compliance/Legal lead — to review controls and prepare audit artifacts; Program delivery lead — to assess current performance work statements and corrective actions; Executive sponsor — for strategic resource decisions.
First 48-hour response playbook:
Relevant guidance: Winning Federal Contracts Guide (/insights/winning-federal-contracts). For compliance and handling of controlled information during capture/proposal work, see CMMC (Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification) Compliance Guide (/insights/cmmc-compliance-guide) and CUI (Controlled Unclassified Information)-Safe CRM Guide (/insights/cui-safe-crm-guide).