Thompson Urges VA to Halt Improper Payments to Prisoners

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Thompson Urges VA to Halt Improper Payments to Prisoners

The following press release was published by the U.S. Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs on March 15, 1999. It is reproduced in full below.

Dear Secretary West:

I am writing to express my serious concerns about the findings in a recent Veterans Affairs Inspector General (IG) report sent to my Committee regarding benefits improperly paid to convicts serving prison sentences. On October 7, 1980, Congress passed P.L. 96-385 that denies certain compensation and pension benefits to veterans incarcerated in a Federal, State, or local penal institution. Now in 1999, the IG finds that your Department has still not taken the necessary steps to enforce this nearly 20-year-old law.

I find this to be very disappointing and urge you to act quickly to correct this situation. The audit’s key findings were:

approximately 13,700 incarcerated veterans have been, or will be, overpaid about $100 million due to VA management’s inaction;

an additional $70 million in overpayments will occur over the next four years unless VA acts soon to stop this squandering of taxpayer money; and,

nearly 13 years ago, in July 1986, the IG recommended that VA implement a systematic approach to identify incarcerated veterans and VA management agreed, but the 1999 IG report found that “no such (management) actions were taken."

The February 1999 IG report (No. 9R3-B01-031) says that your Department has agreed to implement the IG’s recommendations. While I am encouraged by this willingness to implement the IG’s recommendations, I ask that you do so quickly so these improper payments can finally stop.

I look forward to hearing from you after having taken concrete actions to implement the IG’s recommendations.

Sincerely,

Fred Thompson

Chairman

A copy of the IG’s report is available at www.va.gov/foia/err/standard/requests/ig.html

Source: U.S. Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs

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