Heather Adams, Global Head of Risk and Compliance Consulting at Accenture, took to the stage at Counter Fraud 2026 to set out how artificial intelligence is reshaping fraud detection and prevention across the public sector. Here is a summary of her key points.
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Heather opened with a direct statement: AI will transform government operations. Not in the distant future; now. She identified four practical benefits already being realised: stronger fraud defences at scale, reduced manual workload, improved efficiency, and better experiences for both staff and citizens.
She walked through the evolution of AI tools in fraud work. Machine learning has been in use for some years - it is good at scanning large structured datasets and identifying anomalies in claims, contracts and transaction records. For example, the US Treasury used it in 2024 to prevent and recover over $4 billion in improper payments.
Natural language processing and generative AI extend detection into unstructured data, such as text, documents and images. And now, agentic AI brings it together: automated agents that coordinate multiple steps, call on both machine learning and generative AI, manage processes, and work alongside humans to reach an outcome.
Heather outlined eight specific areas where AI can be applied in taxation fraud work:
Across benefits, Heather highlighted automated identity and eligibility checks, synthetic identity detection, biometric verification, real-time payment monitoring, and AI embedded into application processes to detect automated or fraudulent submissions. Medicaid in the US, she noted, has used payment card transaction monitoring to identify account takeover with greater accuracy; an approach she suggested could translate to Healthy Start cards or transport passes in the UK.
Heather was direct about the other side. AI is making fraud threats worse. She identified three specific risks:
On the question of return on investment, often cited as a barrier, Heather acknowledged the difficulty but pushed back against inaction. She recommended focusing on effectiveness measures alongside financial ones: true positive rates, not just false positive rates; engagement and trust metrics; and honest assessment of whether fraud detection is actually improving. A survey by SAS found that 100% of civil servants using AI reported productivity improvements, with 57% citing efficiency as the primary benefit.
Heather closed with a clear message: organisations do not have a choice about whether to engage with AI. The threats are already here; the tools are already available. The question is how to respond. Her prescription: build fraud prevention into AI-enabled processes now, with robust guardrails, real-time monitoring, kill switches, and a serious approach to identity authentication. Test, measure, and log everything. And accept that working alongside AI, not instead of it, is the new baseline.