State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli has revoked the pension of a private attorney from a politically prominent Garden City law firm, along with those of two upstate attorneys, bringing to 28 the number of people who have lost pensions or pension credits since the office launched a statewide investigation in April, DiNapoli's office announced Wednesday.

Gilbert Henoch, 75, a partner in a law firm that includes state Republican leader Joseph Mondello and former Hempstead Supervisor Gregory Peterson, had earned an annual public pension of $11,561 since retiring in 2003.

State and school district records show that he had accrued 26 years of credit in the pension system after being improperly reported as an employee of the Hempstead and East Meadow school districts.

"State pensions are strictly for employees of state and local governments," DiNapoli said in a release. "Independent contractors do not qualify for state pensions."

Neither Henoch nor his attorney, Norman Bloch, could be reached for comment Wednesday.

Since Newsday first reported in February that five school districts simultaneously reported private attorney Lawrence Reich as a full-time employee -- enabling him to get a public pension of nearly $62,000 annually -- DiNapoli and State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo have launched investigations into pension abuses.

Cuomo has reached settlements covering 66 attorneys and five law firms statewide, returning $935,000 to state coffers, according to Cuomo spokesman John Milgrim.

DiNapoli's office has revoked 14 pensions, rescinded the pension credits of 12 people and suspended two pensions, according to spokesman Dennis Tompkins.

In June, after Newsday first reported Henoch's employment arrangements, Cuomo announced that Henoch had settled with his office, agreeing to pay the state $60,000.

At the time of the settlement, Bloch said Henoch agreed to the settlement because he had "received a pension in error."

The comptroller's office also announced that it has rescinded pension credits for three other attorneys upstate.

They were allowed to retain some credits because the comptroller found they had some legitimate service from other public employers.

The attorneys who lost pensions, in addition to Henoch, were Joseph Pondolfino and Thomas DeBoy.

The comptroller's office said Pondolfino had been incorrectly listed as an employee of the Oneonta Central School District in Otsego County and that DeBoy had been reported as an employee of the Cheektowaga Central School District in Erie County.

Pondolfino, reached in his Oneonta office, said, "I don't think they were correct in taking my pension under the circumstances I'm dealing with and I'm going to fight it."

DeBoy said he also disagrees.

"The way the comptroller conducted its investigation (i.e., never contacting me before reaching its initial conclusion, and declining to return my e-mails earlier this year) demonstrates that the decision to kick me out of ERS [Employees Retirement System] was predetermined several months ago," he wrote in an e-mail.

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