HR-5723-119
Ordered to be Reported (Amended) by Voice Vote.
Sponsored by Mark Takano (D-CA)
What it does
This bill would require the Secretary of Veterans Affairs to establish a formal process for identifying and reporting fraudulent activity in VA disability benefit questionnaire (DBQ) forms, regardless of who submitted them. It would create a recurring audit of all DBQs, require claims processors to flag and report suspected fraud to the VA Inspector General, and mandate that individuals under suspicion be notified. The bill would also expand the VA Inspector General's investigative authority and allow final benefit decisions to be reopened only if a court convicts someone of fraud-related crimes. The Secretary would be required to submit an annual report to Congress on the program's administration.
Who benefits
Veterans whose legitimate claims are processed more fairly in a system with reduced fraudulent submissions. Taxpayers who fund VA disability benefits and have an interest in program integrity. The VA itself, which gains a structured framework for fraud detection. The VA Inspector General's office, which receives expanded investigative authority. Veterans service organizations that advocate for the integrity and sustainability of the benefits system. Future claimants who may benefit from a more solvent and trusted program.
Who is hurt
Veterans with legitimate claims who may face delays, additional scrutiny, or the stress of being flagged under a fraud-suspicion notification process. Third-party providers — such as private medical clinics and telehealth companies — that complete DBQ forms for veterans and could face increased audits and reputational risk. Veterans who used private DBQ providers (a practice the VA expanded in 2020) may face disproportionate scrutiny. Small or independent medical practices that complete DBQs could face compliance burdens. Veterans whose previously finalized benefit decisions could theoretically be reopened if a fraud conviction occurs.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the VA's disability benefits system has faced documented vulnerabilities since the VA expanded access to private DBQ providers in 2020, with the VA Inspector General and GAO identifying cases of coordinated fraud schemes involving inflated or fabricated medical findings. They contend that a structured, recurring audit process with clear reporting channels is a necessary safeguard to protect program integrity and ensure that limited VA resources reach veterans with genuine service-connected disabilities. The bill's limitation on reopening final decisions — except after a criminal conviction — provides a meaningful due process protection that balances fraud prevention with veterans' rights.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill's broad fraud-detection mandate, applied "without regard to the source" of DBQ forms, could disproportionately burden veterans who used private providers — a practice the VA itself encouraged — and that the notification requirement for suspected fraud could stigmatize claimants before any wrongdoing is established. They contend that existing VA and Inspector General authorities are already sufficient to investigate fraud, and that adding a new audit layer risks creating bureaucratic delays in a claims system already criticized for backlogs, potentially harming the very veterans the program is meant to serve.