Three major cases of alleged farm subsidy fraud are reportedly in the final stretch before landing on a prosecutor’s desk, with police’s financial crimes unit overseeing the investigation.

In one case, according to news reports on Friday, 10 members of a family in Irakleio, Crete, appear to have received more than 400,000 euros from the now disbanded OPEKEPE farm subsidies agency by submitting fictitious leases and fraudulent wills. A private office that handled OPEKEPE application in the area is also under investigation.

A second major case involves a family of four in the central Greece city of Trikala, whose members are believed to have received nearly one million euros in subsidies by dramatically inflating the number of stockbreeding animals they claimed they owned.

The third case involves a 73-year-old woman in the northern city of Kozani, who is shown receiving 1.5 million euros in subsidies from OPEKEPE. The woman tax code number had previously been blocked for a previous case, yet in the end she received the subsidies.

Meanwhile, according to other reports, a top prosecutor overseeing the investigations is expected to sign orders in the coming freezing the assets of two agricultural union leaders who are participating in the current farmers’ mobilizations around Greece.