Current:Home > StocksEx-clients of Social Security fraudster Eric Conn won’t owe back payments to government -AssetScope
Ex-clients of Social Security fraudster Eric Conn won’t owe back payments to government
View
Date:2025-04-15 19:17:19
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — The U.S. Social Security Administration is notifying some former clients of disgraced Kentucky attorney Eric Conn that they no longer owe money back to the government for overpayment of disability benefits.
Conn was charged in a $500 million disability scheme nearly a decade ago that involved thousands of clients, doctors and a bribed judge. After Conn’s conviction in 2017, many of his former clients had their disability benefits halted and were told they owed money back to the government.
But over the next few months, the agency said it will send letters to former Conn clients notifying them it will “stop collecting overpayments resulting from Eric Conn’s fraud scheme,” according to a statement from the federal agency sent to the AP.
The eligible clients would have gone through an administrative hearing where it was determined that they were required to pay back some benefits they received as a Conn client. The agency said it would also be refunding money it had collected for overpayments.
Ned Pillersdorf, an eastern Kentucky attorney, said some of Conn’s former clients “are in this hole that they think they can never climb out of” because of the overpayment debts owed to the government. Pillersdorf, who along with dozens of attorneys has worked pro-bono for the ex-clients, said he didn’t know how many have been told they owe overpayments.
Pillersdorf said new Social Security Administrator Martin O’Malley, who took over in December, was receptive to advocates’ plea for relief for former Conn clients.
“For the first time not only was somebody actually returning a phone call, we had a face-to-face meeting with the new commissioner,” he said on a teleconference Monday.
After the fraud was exposed, about 1,700 of Conn’s former clients went through hearings to reapply for their benefits, and roughly half lost them. About 230 of those who lost benefits managed to get them restored years later by court orders.
Conn bribed doctors with $400 payments to falsify medical records for his clients and then paid a judge to approve the lifetime benefits. His plea agreement in 2017 would have put him in prison for 12 years, but Conn cut his ankle monitor and fled the country, leading federal agents on a six-month chase that ended when he was caught in Honduras. The escape attempt added 15 years to his sentence.
veryGood! (66749)
Related
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- Pulling Back The Curtain On Our Climate Migration Reporting
- Negotiators at a U.N. biodiversity conference reach a historic deal to protect nature
- Rita Ora Shares How Husband Taika Waititi Changed Her After “Really Low” Period
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- Camila Cabello Shares Glimpse Into Her Coachella Trip After Shawn Mendes Kiss
- More than 100 people are dead and dozens are missing in storm-ravaged Philippines
- Proof Priyanka Chopra Is the Embodiment of the Jonas Brothers' Song “Burning Up”
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Attention, #BookTok, Jessica Chastain Clarifies Her Comment on “Not Doing” Evelyn Hugo Movie
Ranking
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- The Hope For Slowing Amazon Deforestation
- Biden is in Puerto Rico to see what the island needs to recover
- Emperor penguins will receive endangered species protections
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- Climate Tipping Points And The Damage That Could Follow
- COP-out: who's liable for climate change destruction?
- Tropical Storm Nicole churns toward the Bahamas and Florida
Recommendation
Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
Are climate change emissions finally going down? Definitely not
1,600 bats fell to the ground during Houston's cold snap. Here's how they were saved
The legacy of Hollywood mountain lion P-22 lives on in wildlife conservation efforts
Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
Andrew Lloyd Webber Dedicates Final Broadway Performance of Phantom of the Opera to Late Son Nick
A small town ballfield took years to repair after Hurricane Maria. Then Fiona came.
10 Amazon Products That Will Solve Life's Everyday Problems