Maine Code § 26-1051

Penalties
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1. False statement or representation. A person is guilty of unemployment fraud if that person
makes a false statement or representation knowing it to be false or knowingly fails to disclose a material
fact or solicits another person to make a false statement knowing it to be false or knowingly solicits
another person to fail to disclose a material fact:
A. To obtain or increase any benefit or other payment under this chapter or under an employment
security law of any other state or of the Federal Government; [PL 1979, c. 515, §9 (NEW).]
B. To prevent or reduce the payment of unemployment benefits to any individual; [PL 1979, c.
515, §9 (NEW).]
C. To avoid becoming or remaining an employer under this chapter; or [PL 1983, c. 118 (AMD).]
D. To avoid or reduce any contribution or other payment required from an employing unit under
this chapter. [PL 1979, c. 515, §9 (NEW).]
Each false statement or representation or failure to disclose a material fact constitutes a separate offense.
Unemployment fraud is theft by deception under Title 17-A, section 354.
[PL 2025, c. 235, §4 (AMD).]
2. Separate offense. Any person who willfully fails or refuses to make any contributions or other
payments, to furnish any reports required by this chapter or to produce or permit the inspection or
copying of records as required is guilty of a Class D crime. Each failure or refusal shall constitute a
separate offense. For purposes of this paragraph, "person" means an individual, corporation or
partnership or an officer or employee of any corporation, including a dissolved corporation, or a
member or employee of any partnership who was, at the time of the violation, under a duty to comply
with this paragraph.
[PL 1985, c. 348, §3 (AMD).]
3. Class E crime. Any person who willfully violates any provision of this chapter or any regulation
thereunder, the violation of which is made unlawful or the observance of which is required under the
terms of this chapter, and for which a penalty is neither prescribed herein nor provided by any other
applicable statute, is guilty of a Class E crime.
[PL 1983, c. 118 (AMD).]

4. Nondisclosure or misrepresentation to receive benefits. A person who, by reason of the
nondisclosure or misrepresentation by that person or by another of a material fact, if that nondisclosure
or misrepresentation was known to that person or ought to have been known by that person to be
fraudulent, has received any sum as benefits under this chapter while any conditions for the receipt of
benefits imposed by this chapter were not fulfilled in that person's case, or while that person was
disqualified from receiving benefits, is either liable to have the sum deducted from any future benefits
payable to that person under this chapter or is liable to repay to the bureau for the Unemployment
Compensation Fund a sum equal to the amount so received by that person, and the sum must be
collectible in the manner provided in subsection 6.
[RR 2023, c. 2, Pt. E, §83 (COR).]
5. Refusal to repay erroneous payments; waiver of repayment. If, after due notice, any person
refuses to repay amounts erroneously paid to that person as unemployment benefits, the amounts due
from that person are collectible in the manner provided in subsection 6 or in the discretion of the
commissioner or the commissioner's designee, the amount erroneously paid to such person may be
deducted from any future benefits payable to that person under this chapter; except that there is no
recovery of payments from any person who, in the judgment of the commissioner or the commissioner's
designee, is without fault and when, in the judgment of the commissioner or the commissioner's
designee, such recovery would defeat the purpose of benefits otherwise authorized or would be against
equity and good conscience. No recovery may be attempted until the determination of an erroneous
payment is final as to law and fact and the individual has been notified of the opportunity for a waiver
under this subsection.
[PL 2021, c. 456, §6 (AMD).]
6. Collection of erroneous payments or payments received by nondisclosure or
misrepresentation. Any amounts of benefit payments owed to the commissioner by any individual
may be collected by any of the following methods.
A. The amount due may be collected by civil action in the name of the commissioner. [PL 1983,
c. 351, §5 (AMD).]
B. If any amount of benefit payments owed to the commissioner is not paid when the decision
establishing or a decision upholding the establishment of the debt has become final as to law and
fact under section 1194, and if the amount of benefit payments due was set forth on a notice duly
mailed to the individual following the finality of the last decision, the amount due may be collected
by warrant as follows.
(1) The commissioner may file in the office of the clerk of the Superior Court of Kennebec
County a certificate addressed to the clerk specifying the amount of benefit payments required
to be paid and the weeks involved, the name and address of the liable person as it appears on
the records of the bureau, the facts whereby the amount has become final as to law and fact and
requesting that a warrant be issued against the person for the amount required to be paid, and
with costs, but without interest.
(2) When the certificate is filed, the clerk of the Superior Court shall issue a warrant in favor
of the bureau against the person for the amount required to be paid and with costs. The clerk
shall file the certificate in a separate docket entitled "Special Warrants for Unemployment
Compensation Benefit Payments." These records are not to become a part of the extended
record of the court.
(3) The warrant shall have the force and effect of an execution issued upon a judgment in a
civil action, may be substantially the same as the form in section 1230, subsection 4, paragraph
A, and shall specify the amount of benefit payments required to be paid and the weeks involved.

(4) Warrants shall be returnable within one year, and new warrants may be issued on any such
certificate within 4 years from the return day of the last preceding warrant for sums remaining
unsatisfied. [PL 1979, c. 651, §§11, 12 (AMD).]
C. If the amount of benefit payments owed to the commissioner, as a result of nondisclosure or
misrepresentation, when the decision establishing or a decision upholding the establishment of the
debt has become final as to law and fact under section 1194 is over $100, and if the amount of
benefit payments due was set forth on a notice duly mailed to the individual following the finality
of the last decision and the individual has failed to make payments for 90 days, the amount due
may be collected by an order to withhold and deliver as follows.
(1) The commissioner may serve on any person an order to withhold and deliver wages that
are due or belong to the individual. Any person served with an order to withhold and deliver
shall answer the order within 20 days of receipt of the order.
(2) Before implementation of the order to withhold, the individual must be served with a notice
of intention to withhold weekly earnings.
(3) If the individual requests review by the commission of a notice of debt accrued or seeks
relief in a court of proper jurisdiction, and if the Department of Labor receives the request or
service of pleadings within 21 days after service of the notice of debt, it shall stay the collection
action. The Department of Labor shall accept ordinary mail service of copies of all pleadings,
which must be addressed to the Department of Labor representative whose name appears on
the face of the notice of debt. Service upon the Department of Labor must be in addition to
any other service required under the Maine Rules of Civil Procedure.
(4) Upon receipt of an order to withhold issued by the Department of Labor, the employer or
other payor shall immediately begin withholding from the income of the responsible individual
10% of gross wages, except that the amount withheld may not exceed an amount by which the
individual's disposable earnings are reduced to a weekly equivalent of 40 times the state hourly
minimum wage prescribed by section 664, subsection 1. Sums withheld must be remitted to
the Department of Labor within 10 days of the date the individual is paid. Any person who
honors an order to withhold issued under this section is discharged from any liability or
obligation to the individual for the amount of the wages withheld.
(5) The withholding may be terminated with regard to a current obligation only upon
notification by the commissioner.
(6) An employer may not discharge an employee because a lien or order to withhold and deliver
has been served against the employee's earnings. An aggrieved employee may maintain a civil
action against that employee's employer for violation of this subparagraph. [PL 2025, c. 235,
§5 (AMD).]
[PL 2025, c. 235, §5 (AMD).]
7. Limitation on recovery. Deduction from benefits that may be or may become payable to an
individual as provided for in subsection 5 is limited to not more than 10% of the first $100 and 50% of
any amount above $100 of any weekly benefit payment otherwise due the claimant.
[PL 1999, c. 464, §3 (AMD).]
8. Setoff of debts against lottery winnings. Lottery winnings may be offset for benefit payments
owed to the commissioner in accordance with this subsection.
A. The commissioner shall provide the Department of Administrative and Financial Services,
Bureau of Alcoholic Beverages and Lottery Operations, referred to in this paragraph as the
"bureau," access to an electronic database of all persons who owe the Department of Labor an
unemployment compensation debt that has been liquidated by judicial or administrative action.
Before paying any state lottery winnings of an amount equal to or greater than the amount for which

the bureau is required to file a Form W-2G or substantially equivalent form with the United States
Internal Revenue Service, the bureau shall determine whether the lottery winner owes to the State
an unemployment compensation debt that has been liquidated by judicial or administrative action.
If the bureau determines that the winner owes unemployment compensation debts, the bureau shall
suspend payment of winnings and notify the winner of its intention to offset the winner's
unemployment compensation debt against the winnings. The bureau shall release any remaining
winnings to the winner. The bureau shall notify the winner of the winner's right to appeal to the
Commissioner of Labor pursuant to Title 5, chapter 375. The winner must appeal in writing within
15 days of receipt of that notice. The hearing is limited to the questions of whether the debt is
liquidated and whether postliquidation events have affected the winner's liability. The decision of
the Department of Labor as to the existence of a liquidated debt constitutes final agency action.
[PL 2021, c. 543, §3 (AMD).]
B. The commissioner shall periodically notify the Tri-state Lotto Commission of all persons who
owe the Department of Labor an unemployment compensation debt that has been liquidated by
judicial or administrative action. [PL 1997, c. 434, §2 (NEW).]
[PL 2021, c. 543, §3 (AMD).]
9. Interest on overpayments. A benefit overpayment established in a determination rendered
under section 1193, subsection 6 accrues interest at the rate of 1.0% per month or per fraction of a
month from the first of the month following the date the determination establishing the benefit
overpayment becomes final until payment plus accrued interest is received by the bureau.
[RR 2021, c. 2, Pt. A, §92 (COR).]
10. Application of benefit repayments. Amounts received through any means to repay benefit
payments owed to the commissioner must be applied first to any outstanding penalties, 2nd to any
outstanding interest and 3rd to any benefit payments owed to the commissioner, except that if the
repayment of benefit amounts owed to the commissioner is accomplished by offsetting subsequent
benefit payments issued under this chapter, that repayment may be applied only to the principal amount.
[PL 2025, c. 235, §6 (AMD).]

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