In 2005, New Jersey put either $551 million, $56 million or nothing into its pension fund for teachers. All three figures appeared in various state documents — though the state now says that the actual amount was zero.This is fraud: pure and simple.In the private sector,the SEC would be all over any corporation listed on the NYSE who did this.But,in the public sector dishonesty and fraud are quite acceptable.Eat your heart out Enron,the experts in fraud are people who run New Jersey's public sector.
The phantom contribution is just one indication that New Jersey has been diverting billions of dollars from its pension fund for state and local workers into other government purposes over the last 15 years, using a variety of unorthodox transactions authorized by the Legislature and by governors from both political parties.
The state has long acknowledged that it has been putting less money into the pension fund than it should. But an analysis of its records by The New York Times shows that in many cases, New Jersey has overstated even what it has claimed to be contributing, sometimes by hundreds of millions of dollars.
Tuesday, April 03, 2007
New Jersey Diverts Billions, Endangering Public Pension Fund
The New York Times reports: