Cori Bush's Husband Charged by Feds - California Hoy

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Mar 21, 2025

Cori Bush's Husband Charged by Feds

 


Cortney Merritts, husband of former Missouri Democratic Congresswoman Cori Bush, was indicted Thursday on federal charges alleging he fraudulently obtained more than $20,000 in COVID-19 relief funds. Merritts is accused of submitting false applications to the Small Business Administration (SBA) in 2020 and 2021 through two different pandemic assistance programs.

The indictment, announced on March 20 by U.S. Attorney Edward Martin Jr. for the District of Columbia, outlines two counts of wire fraud. Federal prosecutors allege Merritts deliberately submitted deceptive applications to both the Economic Injury Disaster Loan (EIDL) program and the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP), which were established to support businesses economically harmed by the pandemic.

According to the indictment, Merritts first received an $8,500 EIDL loan in July 2020 after falsely claiming his company, Vetted Couriers, had six employees and generated $32,000 in annual revenue.

Investigators say Merritts then immediately applied for additional EIDL funds, this time under his own name. In the second application, Merritts allegedly stated he employed 10 people and generated revenues totaling $53,000. The SBA, noticing similarities between the two submissions, rejected this second application.

In April 2021, prosecutors assert Merritts again allegedly defrauded the government, this time obtaining a PPP loan of approximately $20,800. To secure these funds, Merritts allegedly claimed he had established a sole proprietorship in 2020 that earned $128,000 annually. He supported this claim by allegedly submitting a fabricated tax form never actually filed with the IRS.

Authorities say Merritts used the PPP loan for personal expenses, contrary to program rules requiring the funds to be spent on business-related costs such as payroll. In July 2022, Merritts filed allegedly fraudulent paperwork to have the loan forgiven, falsely stating his business had 10 employees. The SBA subsequently forgave the loan amount of $20,832 and an additional $254.03 in accrued interest.

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