NY comptroller: Attorney has to pay back pension
Five school districts incorrectly classified a private attorney as an employee, allowing him to obtain a yearly pension of nearly $62,000 to which he was not entitled, the State comptroller said in an opinion released Friday.
As a result, the attorney, Lawrence Reich, will have to pay back the money he has already collected since 2006, said Dennis Tompkins, the comptroller's spokesman.
"He should never have been reported as an employee; he should have just been a contractor. We're asking all five districts to adjust their reporting," Tompkins said.
The comptroller's audit comes three weeks after Newsday reported that five school districts falsely reported Reich as a full-time employee, allowing him to obtain a state pension and health benefits for life. At the same time, records show, those districts paid Reich's law firm, Ingerman Smith of Hauppauge, more than $2.5 million in fees.
The school districts were Baldwin, Bellmore-Merrick High School, Copiague, East Meadow and Harborfields.
Reich's attorney, Peter Tomao of Garden City, issued a statement saying the comptroller's opinion did not state that Reich had acted improperly. He said that Reich was entitled to a pension for the years he worked at the state Education Department, 1967 to 1978, before he began working as an attorney on Long Island for the school districts.
Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli's opinion was based on findings that school officials did not supervise or control how Reich performed his work at the districts, that none of them provided him with an office or work materials, and that he had no set hours or time sheets. Those standards are among the ones used by the Internal Revenue Service to determine whether someone is an employee or independent contractor.
After the Newsday story, the IRS, Federal Bureau of Investigation and New York attorney general launched criminal investigations. The probes have expanded rapidly, involving every school district in the state, several law firms, and two of Reich's former partners, Carol Hoffman and Jerome Ehrlich. Both of those attorneys have said they did nothing improper.
Reich, 67, of Centerport, retired from four of the districts in September 2006, with a pension of $61,459. He left East Meadow in 2001. Because he worked 12 years in the state, he is entitled to a small pension, worth approximately $5,000 a year, according to state formulas.
The comptroller's office declined to estimate exactly how much Reich will be required to pay back.
After the comptroller's statement was released, the Bellmore-Merrick High School, Copiague and Harborfields school districts all issued statements saying they would cooperate with the comptroller's office to change their reporting systems.
East Meadow superintendent Leon Campo said his district would "take corrective action." He added that he plans to ask the comptroller's office for guidelines on how to deal with the situation in the future. Baldwin superintendent Thomas Caramore did not return a call.
Several sources familiar with the pension investigation said DiNapoli released the report despite requests in recent days for him not to do so from both federal and state criminal investigators. They argued that it could affect any possible criminal prosecution, sources said.
Tompkins said the U.S. attorney had no "formal objections to our releasing the audit." He declined to characterize any discussions with Attorney General Andrew Cuomo's office.
Get breaking news | Most popular stories | Dining and Travel deals all via e-mail!
Copyright © 2008, Newsday Inc.
Popular stories
- Allan Houston's coming back as a New York Knick?
- Ewing hoping his son can make it big with Knicks
- Cops: Woman with kids in car arrested on DWI charges
- A-Rod's slip of tongue indicts fading Yankees
- Johnette Howard: Murray's wait is nothing compared to Britain's
Special Projects
Local leaders, then and now, reflect on doing their part to push for equality.
A daughter with a deadly disease, an extraordinary chance to save her...create the perfect sibling.
They Failed to Act
Since 1995, the Long Island Rail Road has logged nearly 900 gap incidents at stations from Penn to Bridgehampton.
Born to Serve
Michael P. Murphy's actions in June, 2005 earned him,
posthumously, the nation's highest military award.
Fire Alarm
The only comprehensive look at the last large public
service on Long Island impervious to outside scrutiny - the
fire system.
Remembering Flight
800
On the beach at Smith Point County Park is a monument with
the names of the 230 passengers and crew from Flight 800.
Our
Fallen
Soldiers from Long Island killed in uniform reflect the face of our communities. Newsday remembers their sacrifice.
Impact of high gas prices
With record fuel prices on LI, drivers and businesses try to cope as best they can.
Share your story.
Find cheap gas




