In an administration stocked with world-class grifters and ethically bankrupt officials whose tales of corruption dominate the headlines, it’s easy to forget that Wilbur Ross has been running scams since long before the Trump presidency was even a twinkle in Robert Mercer’s eye. Over the course of the past year, reports have emerged that the commerce secretary, among other things, lied about his net worth for at least a decade; was accused of financial crisis-era insider trading by European lawmakers; concealed his investments in a Russian shipping company with ties to Vladimir Putin; and allegedly bilked colleagues out of millions. But according to fresh allegations, screwing people out of their money appears to be less of a hobby for Ross and more of a lifestyle.

In a new story from Forbes’s Dan Alexander, we learn that Ross has allegedly been helping himself to other people’s cash in ways big and small for years. As Ross is the White House’s resident cartoon-villain, once going on Bloomberg to complain that the 1 percent was being picked on, it probably won’t surprise you to hear allegations that “workers at his house in the Hamptons used to call the office, claiming Ross had not paid them for their work”—stiffing the help is, after all, a time-honored tradition for people like Ross. Same goes for the time he allegedly pledged $1 million to a charity, but never actually ponied up the money. And, naturally, there is a story from two former private-equity colleagues about the commerce secretary “taking handfuls of Sweet’N Low packets from a nearby restaurant, so he didn’t have to go out and buy some for himself.”

But, of course, the pilfering doesn’t start and end with Ross stuffing his pockets with artificial sweetener (a commerce official called that story and others “petty nonsense,” claiming Ross doesn’t even take sweetener in his coffee):