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Last post 10 years ago by tailgater. 5 replies replies.
some Double-dippers....
DrafterX Offline
#1 Posted:
Joined: 10-18-2005
Posts: 98,563

Disability double-dipping drains millions from NJ pensions
Published September 09, 2013

Meet New Jersey's "disabled" double-dippers. They get two sets of checks from the state -- one for working and another because they cannot work:

-- As a lawyer for Gov. Chris Christie, Adam Heck collects a $110,000 state salary - plus an additional $44,000 a year in police pension pay for being "totally and permanently disabled" in the eyes of New Jersey.

-- Scott Jenkins gets $186,000 a year from the state - $93,000 in police disability pay and another $93,000 in salary as a chief investigator in the Division of Consumer Affairs.

-- Michael Fantini retired on disability as a State Police trooper. Two years later, he was rehired by the State Police -- apparently able to work -- but the pension checks never stopped. While receiving a full-time salary for the past 14 years, Fantini has also pocketed $750,000 in disability pay.

A New Jersey Watchdog investigation found 18 state employees who double-dip $2.2 million a year -- $1 million in tax-free accidental disability pay plus $1.2 million in salaries.

"These people are playing within the rules of the game," said John Sierchio, a state pension board member who advocates reform. "But the rules of the game are so absurd, they need to be changed."


Film at 11.... Think
bloody spaniard Offline
#2 Posted:
Joined: 03-14-2003
Posts: 43,802
Isn't applying for benefits with fake disabilities the latest rage? Everyone seems to be doing it- unions, military, corporate, government, EVERYONE! Dancing

Hey, I can understand it if there's no work and when you gotta eats, you gotta eats, but it appears quite a few of the pigs just want a crack at the free trough.
DrafterX Offline
#3 Posted:
Joined: 10-18-2005
Posts: 98,563
it's all in who you know... those jobs sound appointed not applied for.... Think
rfenst Offline
#4 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,366

"These people are playing within the rules of the game," said John Sierchio, a state pension board member who advocates reform. "But the rules of the game are so absurd, they need to be changed."

Perhaps they have a form of disbility coverage known as "own occupation" coverage, which allows one to collect disability paymentss for being totally disabled in one's profession at the time of the disability event, but allows them to work at any other job, no matter what they earn. I have this type of private coverage. I could be totally disabled as a cop and get paid $50k per year while making $1 million per year as a stock broker- and my insurer would still have to pay me!

A similar issue we had in Florida with high level public servants/employees is that they could retire after 20 years and collect their lump some retirement benefit; wait a few statutorily mandated months; and then return to their same jobs. People who collected lump sums of $1-3 million went back to government jobs paying $100-150k/year.

I think we closed that loophole...
tailgater Offline
#5 Posted:
Joined: 06-01-2000
Posts: 26,185
"Double dipping?
You mean screwing the state only TWICE??
Amateurs."

-Massachusetts Tax Payer





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