I think that VeriSeal pretty well threw in the towel, under its original management, when they were getting a ratio of 200 fakes to 1 real SEAL. It was just too exhausting, expensive and annoying for volunteers with real lives to spend all their time policing up scoundrels.
Fortunately, a private security service has taken over, and is again pursuing the bad guys, especially those using their fake status to criminally defraud, or get access to prestigious organizations or employment.
What makes things all the more painful is that there are only 90 living Medal of Honor recipients left. One for each 3.4 million Americans, most of whom have never met a MoH recipient, never will, and would not even recognize a Medal of Honor if they saw it, much less knew what it represented.
I once had the privilege to meet a recipient of the MOH. He is now deceased (WWII). I was so aah (?) struck that I was unable to speak. He said to me “it is only a medal” and allowed me to hold it. One of the greatest experiences of my life.
Where do you get your disinformation? VeriSEAL is under the same “original management” that founded it. They are part of that “private security service” and always have been.
http://www.veriseal.org/about.html