Thomas Fahling logged onto his online bank account one day this spring and couldn't believe what he was seeing: $150,000 from the U.S. government.
Fahling, a 73-year-old front-desk clerk from Crystal, doesn't own a business and had not requested any money.
He soon realized the bank had routed the money to him under the Paycheck Protection Program established by Congress to help U.S. businesses weather the economic fallout caused by the novel coronavirus pandemic.
"I've never owned a business, so it was quite a shock," Fahling said.
He assumed someone from his bank, Sunrise Banks, would discover the mistake and reach out. But after two weeks, the money still sat in his personal checking account.
"I eventually reached out to them. Someone was expecting that money. A small business could've gone out of business if I hadn't turned it in," Fahling said.
With a plethora of private banks managing the application and lending process on behalf of the U.S. government, there's no way to know if or how often PPP loans were misdirected in the early crush of applications, said Andrea Roebker, a spokeswoman for the Small Business Association, the U.S. agency overseeing the program.
"I haven't heard of anything like that within the agency," she said. "We processed quite a bit in a short amount of time in those early weeks."