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Originally published January 24, 2007 at 12:00 AM | Page modified January 24, 2007 at 1:41 AM

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House votes to deny federal pensions to convicted lawmakers

The House passed legislation to strip federal pensions from lawmakers convicted of serious crimes.

The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Lawmakers convicted of crimes such as bribery, fraud and perjury would be stripped of their congressional pensions under legislation the House passed Tuesday in the latest effort by Congress to refurbish its scandal-scarred image.

The 431-0 House vote comes just four days after former Rep. Bob Ney, R-Ohio, received a 30-month prison term for taking political favors from Jack Abramoff, the disgraced lobbyist whose influence-peddling tactics helped make political corruption a major issue in the November elections.

Ney, as past chairman of the House Administration Committee, last year backed similar legislation, saying members of Congress should be held to the highest standards.

"But that bill never passed, for which Congressman Ney is probably grateful," said freshman Rep. Nancy Boyda, D-Kan., sponsor of the new measure. "Corrupt politicians deserve prison sentences, not taxpayer-funded pensions."

The House bill, like its Senate counterpart, is not retroactive and would not affect the benefits of Ney, who is eligible for a pension of about $29,000 a year if he waits until 2016, when he turns 62.

Also exempt would be former Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham, R-Calif., who last year was sentenced to more than eight years in prison after pleading guilty to receiving $2.4 million in bribes.

Cunningham could be receiving about $64,000 annually from his eight terms in Congress and his military service, which is not subject to forfeiture, according to the National Taxpayers Union, which tracks congressional pensions.

Minor differences with the Senate bill, approved last week as part of larger ethics and lobbying reform, must be reconciled before the measure can be signed into law.

The House bill applies to conduct that occurs after the bill becomes law, while the Senate bill doesn't take effect until the next session of Congress in 2009. Senate sponsors, led by Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., expressed concerns about violating the 27th Amendment, which bars lawmakers from changing their compensation — mainly raising their own salaries — in a current session.

Under existing law, pensions can be taken away only if a lawmaker commits crimes such as treason or espionage. The House bill would extend that to other felonies related to the performance of official duties.

Those would include bribery of public officials, wrongfully acting as foreign agents, violating restrictions on members becoming lobbyists, conspiracy to commit such crimes and perjury or persuading others to commit perjury.

Republicans complained that the bill didn't go far enough.

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Rep. Mark Kirk, R-Ill., said he was unable to offer an amendment adding other public corruption felonies to those triggering pension forfeiture, including income-tax evasion, wire fraud, intimidation and racketeering.

The legislation does allow the lawmaker to recoup personal contributions made to 401(k)-type plans and gives the director of the Office of Personnel Management authority, depending on circumstances, to provide benefits to the spouse and children of a convicted lawmaker.

Convicted lawmakers
Some former lawmakers convicted of serious crimes, and estimates of their congressional pensions, calculated by the National Taxpayers' Union. Figures are payment estimates for 2006 unless otherwise noted. Exact figures for pensions are not available because participation in pension programs is voluntary and payouts are not a matter of public record.
Name Pension eligibility Crime convicted, year
Rep. Bob Ney, R-Ohio $29,000* Bribery and other charges, 2006
Rep. Duke Cunningham, R-Calif. $64,000 Bribery, 2005
Rep. James Traficant, D-Ohio $40,000 Numerous corruption charges, 2002
Rep. Austin J. Murphy, D-Pa. $78,000 Voter fraud, 1999
Rep. Mary Rose Oakar, D-Ohio $54,000 Financial-disclosure irregularities, 1998
Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, D-Ill. $126,000 Mail fraud, 1996
Rep. Joe Kolter $47,000 Fraud and conspiracy, 1996
Rep. Carroll Hubbard, D-Ky $61,500 Fraud and corruption, 1994
Rep. Carl Perkins, D-Ky. $24,000* Fraud, 1994
* in 2016; ** in 2019

Source: The Associated Press

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