Audit Report On Pensioners Of The New York City Police Department Working For The City After Retirement

June 30, 2005 | FL05-098A

Table of Contents

Audit Report In Brief

The Comptroller’s Office performed an audit to identify New York City Police Department pensioners who may be illegally re-employed (“double-dippers” or “disability violators”), and to quantify the amounts of any improper payments to individuals who appear to be violators of New York State Retirement and Social Security Law § 211 and § 212, or New York City Charter § 1117 during calendar year 2003.

Audit Findings and Conclusions

The audit found that 12 pensioners received $80,135 in pension payments during 2003 that appear to violate applicable sections of State and City laws. These individuals were in apparent violation of RSSL § 211 or §212 because they were under age 65 and received City wages exceeding the limitations without having a waiver on file, or were in violation of the New York City Administrative Code Volume 3, Title 13, Chapter 2, §13-254 (Disability Safeguards) or § 1117 of the New York City Charter because they were collecting disability pensions and received City wages exceeding the applicable earnings limitations.

Audit Recommendations

POLICE should:

  • Investigate those individuals identified as concurrently receiving pensions while being re-employed in public service. POLICE officials should also commence prompt recoupment action against those individuals found to be illegally collecting pensions.
  • Forward to the Department of Investigation, if the circumstances warrant such action, the name of individuals found to be illegally collecting pensions.
  • Ascertain whether previous pension overpayments have been recouped and whether current pensions have been suspended for those individuals who have been cited in previous audits as “double-dippers” or “disability violators.”
  • Send special reminders to service retirees under the age of 65, and to all disability retirees, that clearly state their responsibilities regarding public service re-employment.
$279.67 billion
Dec
2024