Oct 31, 2009

Congressman Criticizes Fugitive Felon Settlement

From the American Chronicle:
Congressman Wally Herger (R-CA) released a copy of a letter he and two other Representatives sent to the Social Security Inspector General on the issue of fugitive felons receiving Social Security and Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits. Herger believes it to be an irresponsible waste of taxpayer dollars to subsidize felons on the run from the law. Congressman Herger was the author of provisions in the 1996 welfare reform law that sought to deny fugitive felons, along with probation and parole violators, SSI checks. Subsequent legislation expanded that ban to include Social Security checks.

Herger´s letter is in response to a recent report by the Inspector General of the Social Security Administration (SSA) regarding a court settlement (Martinez, et al. v. Astrue) that will alter the Social Security Administration´s implementation of the ban on benefits for fugitive felons. The settlement stipulated that SSA could suspend Social Security and SSI payments only after fugitive felons are issued a warrant for trying to escape arrest, overturning SSA´s interpretation that payment suspensions are based solely on any outstanding felony arrest warrant. The Inspector General´s (IG) Report found that, under Martinez, taxpayer savings from the program would be reduced dramatically. ...

[Herger wrote] "While the court cases have shed light on problems with the implementation of the program, the Martinez settlement is too broad and would unnecessarily neuter this successful program. I believe the correct solution is for Congress to clarify that the Social Security Administration should suspend payments for those wanted based on the most heinous crimes, while permitting lenience in cases where good cause exemptions make sense.

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