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Josh Sweigart

Reporter

Josh Sweigart investigates government waste, fraud and abuse as a member of the I-Team.

His stories focus on government spending in southwest Ohio, as well as the statehouse and U.S. Capitol.

Sweigart has won several awards for investigative reporting from the Associated Press Society of Ohio.

He has worked for Cox Media Group since 2007, and in addition to writing for the Dayton Daily News has covered Clark County government for the Springfield News-Sun and Butler County government for the Hamilton JournalNews and Middletown Journal.

He also collaborates on I-Team stories with WHIO-TV.

Sweigart is a graduate of Wright State University and Wayne High School in Huber Heights. 

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Latest from Josh Sweigart

Husted: Voter fraud exists, not epidemic

A first-time tally of voter fraud across Ohio found 135 cases referred for criminal investigation following the 2012 presidential election, including 20 people who state officials say voted in Ohio and another state.The report, released Thursday by the Ohio Secretary of State, listed 22 referrals to law enforcement from southwest ...

State officials have cut off funding to 14 child care centers since October, including Aunt Connie’s Learning Center located in a church at 1717 Salem Avenue in Dayton. Officials say the center tried to defraud the taxpayer subsidized child care program by claiming they were taking care of children they weren’t. The number of open fraud investigations of child care centers in the $600 million program have ballooned since the state set up a special task force to investigate last year. There are open investigations in Montgomery, Butler and Champaign counties. CHRIS STEWART / STAFF

State accuses 14 daycares of fraud, pulls funding

An unprecedented fraud crackdown has led Ohio officials to cut off payments to 14 child care centers since October — including one in Dayton and five in the Cincinnati area — for allegedly charging the taxpayer-funded program for children not in their care. These centers are accused of overbilling the ...

Auditor helping 1,400 small governments save money

Small government bodies such as libraries, planning commissions and tiny villages will save some of their public dollars under a new program that drastically cuts the costs of state-mandated audits.Since the program was launched in December, 11 governments in this region have cut the cost of their audits by an ...

Millions meant for veterans pocketed by suspect ‘charities’

Millions of dollars meant for veterans has been stolen by con men or misspent by charities in recent years, according to Ohio officials who tell the Dayton Daily News they are stepping up enforcement. Recently a sweeping investigation by the Ohio Attorney General of AMVETS found 59 locations around the ...

Charity for troops instead spent money on liquor, movies

The head of a local charitable organization claiming to help soldiers incarcerated for crimes allegedly committed during combat instead used donated funds at liquor stores, Redbox kiosks and for other personal purposes, the Ohio Attorney General said Friday. Riverside resident Cari Johnson, head of the charity A Dollar to Care, ...

Man hired after allegedly misspending public funds

A Centerville man who resigned from Clinton County Children Services after paying back $713 for trips he was reimbursed for but never took is now working next door in Highland County. This is another example uncovered by the Dayton Daily News of public employees being permitted to pay back misspent ...

Volunteer Rachel Hurlbut helps Elvis Henderson with his tax preparation at the Montgomery County Job Center. Some in Ohio are working to get the Earned Income Tax Credit to more people as a means to both fight poverty and boost the economy. Policy Matters Ohio, left-leaning think tank, presented a proposal to the Ohio House Finance and Appropriations Committee last week to create a state-level EITC, as 24 other states have done. This is opposed by some, including the Buckeye Institute.

Group wants to expand Earned Income Tax Credit in Ohio

Some in Ohio are working to get the Earned Income Tax Credit to more people as a means to both fight poverty and boost the economy. Policy Matters Ohio, a left-leaning think tank, presented a proposal to the Ohio House Finance and Appropriations Committee last week to create a state-level ...

Volunteer Rachel Hurlbut (cq) helps Elvis Henderson with his tax preparation at the Montgomery County Job Center. Some in Ohio are working to get the Earned Income Tax Credit to more people as a means to both fight poverty and boost the economy. Policy Matters Ohio, left-leaning think tank, presented a proposal to the Ohio House Finance and Appropriations Committee last week to create a state-level EITC, as 24 other states have done. This is opposed by some, including the Buckeye Institute. The Ohio United Way meanwhile is trying to get the estimatedJIM WITMER / STAFF

Tax payout for low-income workers doubled in Ohio

The nation’s largest cash-assistance program for the working poor has doubled in size since the 1990s and is plagued with an overpayment rate of up to 25 percent, one of the largest error rates of all federal programs, a Dayton Daily News analysis has found. This tax season, the Earned ...

FILE - This Nov. 4, 2008 file photo shows Rep. Jean Schmidt being congratulated by supporters in Loveland, Ohio. The Ohio Elections Commission will hear the Cincinnati congresswoman's complaint over comments an opponent made during the 2008 campaign. Schmidt claims David Krikorian violated election law when he accused her of taking money from Turkish political interests to deny that the mass killings of Armenians during World War I equaled genocide. (AP Photo/David Kohl, File)

Schmidt skirts legal bills by leaving Congress

Former U.S. Rep. Jean Schmidt, R-Loveland, has avoided an order to repay roughly $500,000 that the House Ethics Committee ruled she wrongly accepted in legal fees from a Turkish-American group. The order stems from a U.S. House committee ruling that Schmidt violated House rules when she let the Turkish American ...

Federal agencies bracing for sequestration have for years ignored or failed to implement thousands of suggestions from their own internal audits on ways to cut waste, fraud or abuse.

Government waste findings of $67B fall on deaf ears

Federal agencies bracing for sequestration have for years ignored or failed to implement thousands of suggestions from their own internal auditors on ways to cut waste, fraud or abuse, the Dayton Daily News has found. The number of unimplemented recommendations from federal inspectors general has reached an all-time high, totaling ...

 

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