S-1199-119
Passed Senate with an amendment by Unanimous Consent. (text of amendment in the nature of a substitute: CR S2108)
Sponsored by Joni Ernst (R-IA)
What it does
This bill would extend the statute of limitations for criminal prosecutions and civil enforcement actions related to fraud in two pandemic-era Small Business Administration programs — the Shuttered Venue Operators Grant and the Restaurant Revitalization Fund — from the standard period to 10 years from the date of the violation. It would also require the Attorney General to submit reports to Congress every 90 days for five years detailing the number of investigations, prosecutions, dollar amounts recovered, and referral sources related to fraud in those two programs.
Who benefits
Federal prosecutors and the Department of Justice, who would gain more time to build and file complex fraud cases. Taxpayers broadly, who may see more fraudulently obtained pandemic funds recovered. Legitimate small business owners who applied for and received grants lawfully, as enforcement against fraudulent applicants may restore public confidence in the programs. Inspectors General and other federal watchdog agencies, whose referrals would be tracked and acted upon over a longer window.
Who is hurt
Individuals and businesses that received Shuttered Venue or Restaurant Revitalization grants and may face prolonged legal exposure — including those who made good-faith errors on applications. Defense attorneys and their clients who benefit from shorter statutes of limitations as a protection against stale evidence and fading memories. Businesses that have already moved on from pandemic-era operations and may face unexpected legal liability years later. The Department of Justice, which would bear the administrative cost of producing quarterly reports for five years.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that pandemic relief fraud was extraordinarily widespread — the SBA Office of Inspector General estimated that over $200 billion in COVID-era relief funds may have been obtained fraudulently — and that complex financial fraud cases routinely take years to investigate and build. They contend that the standard statute of limitations is insufficient for cases involving identity theft, money laundering, and multi-layered conspiracies, and that extending the window to 10 years ensures that bad actors who exploited emergency programs cannot simply wait out the clock on accountability.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that extending the statute of limitations to 10 years creates an unusually long period of legal uncertainty for small business owners, many of whom navigated confusing and rapidly changing application rules during a national emergency. They contend that prolonged exposure to prosecution — particularly for civil enforcement — risks ensnaring applicants who made honest mistakes under chaotic conditions, and that the government's own failures in program design and oversight contributed to the fraud problem and should not be remedied by shifting the burden onto applicants through extended liability windows.