Why It Matters
Congress faces a national security and fiscal crisis: federal agencies lose billions annually to fraud while struggling to vet personnel and detect AI-powered scams. Clearspeed’s third quarter 2025 lobbying push aligns with advancing legislation addressing these vulnerabilities. The Preventing Deep Fake Scams Act would establish federal task forces to combat voice cloning in financial fraud. The Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 mandates enhanced personnel vetting protocols.
The Justice Department recovered a record $6.8 billion in False Claims Act settlements in 2025, with $5.7 billion from healthcare fraud alone—signaling massive undetected losses. Clearspeed positions its voice analytics technology as a scalable solution, wanting federal agencies to integrate its risk assessment tools into procurement, benefits eligibility, and security vetting workflows.
By the Numbers
Clearspeed Inc. filed $180,000 in in-house lobbying expenditures for third quarter 2025, accumulating $934,500 across 21 total disclosures since beginning lobbying in 2023.
The company previously relied on external firms Horizons Global Solutions LLC ($287,000 over 11 filings), Thorn Run Partners ($100,000 over 3 filings), and Vogel Group LLC ($37,500 over 4 filings). The shift to in-house operations signals a strategic pivot toward sustained, direct government relations.
Direct competitor Pindrop Security Inc. is simultaneously lobbying on similar voice authentication and deepfake detection technologies, indicating intensifying competition for federal contracts.
The Agenda
Clearspeed Inc. is lobbying to integrate its voice analytics technology into federal government operations spanning defense procurement, immigration screening, benefits administration, and personnel vetting. The company has targeted the annual National Defense Authorization Act, Department of Homeland Security initiatives, and Veterans Affairs programs.
Congress is advancing legislation directly relevant to Clearspeed’s pitch, including the AI Fraud Deterrence Act, which addresses AI-powered voice cloning and fraud threats. Recent congressional hearings have exposed significant fraud vulnerabilities—including $10.8 billion in confirmed Defense Department contracting fraud—creating explicit demand for the type of risk assessment technology Clearspeed provides.
Broader Context
Congress is grappling with dual AI challenges that intersect with Clearspeed’s business model: combating AI-powered fraud while leveraging AI for government efficiency.
The bipartisan Preventing Deep Fake Scams Act proposes a federal task force to study how financial institutions can protect against voice manipulation, while the AI PLAN Act mandates a federal strategy to defend financial markets from deepfakes and voice cloning.
Recent committee hearings exposed stark vulnerabilities: House Oversight hearing on defense procurement fraud revealed $10.8 billion in confirmed contracting fraud, while a House Financial Services hearing discussed HUD’s struggles with fraud risk management. The Senate Banking Committee hearing in July 2025 highlighted that AI systems have already prevented tens of billions in fraudulent transactions.
Between The Lines
Key lawmakers are championing fraud prevention policies. Senators Amy Klobuchar and Shelley Moore Capito introduced their bipartisan AI Scam Prevention Act targeting voice impersonation threats. Senator Mike Rounds praised AI’s fraud detection capabilities at the Senate Banking hearing. A bipartisan group advanced the Medicare Transaction Fraud Prevention Act, proposing risk-scoring algorithms for benefits verification.
Multiple congressional hearings have exposed vulnerabilities Clearspeed’s technology could address, creating bipartisan momentum for AI-based fraud detection solutions across federal agencies.
Competitive Landscape
Pindrop Security Inc. represents Clearspeed’s most direct competitor in the voice security space. The company has heavily lobbied on "AI deepfake detection technology" and "voice authentication technology," with Q3 2025 and Q4 2025 filings showing direct engagement with the Department of Defense and White House Office of Science and Technology Policy.
Verisk Analytics Inc., a broader data analytics and risk assessment firm, also lobbies on related issues. The presence of multiple competitors underscores both commercial stakes and congressional urgency around AI-driven fraud prevention and personnel vetting.
The Bottom Line
Clearspeed’s $180,000 third quarter 2025 lobbying investment continues a strategy that began in 2023, totaling $934,500 across 21 disclosures. The company’s timing aligns with congressional momentum on AI-powered fraud threats, national security vetting requirements, and federal agency demand for fraud detection tools. Record fraud settlements and ongoing vulnerabilities create institutional pressure for new risk assessment capabilities. Clearspeed’s lobbying focus on defense, homeland security, and benefits administration reflects targeted pursuit of federal contracts aligned with documented policy priorities.
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