Baltimore, MD - Jan. 11, 2026 - Two senior state officials allegedly hatched a plan to maintain a high error rate on food stamp payments — rather than making every effort to correct the errors, as their department is supposed to do — to delay hundreds of millions of dollars in federal penalties, according to multiple whistleblowers.

Former employees at the Department of Human Services accused two of their superiors at DHS of crafting the plan to get the state off the hook for $240 million in new federal penalties. The penalties are tied to the state’s high food stamp payment error rate.

The plan was to “leave correctable errors uncorrected” to preserve or increase the error rate and secure a delay in penalties, according to a former employee who was a senior official in the office of the secretary. Former employees said the planned activity was fraudulent and ultimately harmful to taxpayers and those who depend on food benefits.

“We’re obligated to correct errors as we find them,” the former senior official said, adding, “I have raised this issue continually as part of something I think is wrong and corrupt.”... Read More: FOX45