As the 99% of Americans
enjoy this federal holiday in recognition of the 1% (those who ever put on the
uniform of our U.S. Armed Forces), I would like to ask you – Don’t you think
our veterans deserve better? Read on …
Two high-ranking
officials at the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) exercised their
constitutional right against self-incrimination (last week), declining to
answer questions about a scheme in which they allegedly duped taxpayers out of
hundreds of thousands of dollars. [This is
not to be confused with the larger VA scandal that was recently distorted and
minimized by presidential candidate Hillary Clinton. That corruption entailed the deliberate,
systemic cover-up of unacceptably long waiting lists for care -- in part to
protect bureaucrats’ performance bonuses.] This corruption is entirely different … though
it speaks to the culture of greed and wastefulness that seems to pervade much
of the federal bureaucracy.
According to the Washington Post:
“The Department of Veterans Affairs has
suspended a relocation program used by two senior executives to obtain more
than $400,000 in questionable moving expenses and moved to discipline the
officials, a senior agency leader said Monday ... Congress is investigating the
executives for allegedly abusing their positions to get plum jobs and perks,
part of a pattern of unjustified moving incentives and transfers identified by
VA’s watchdog. The committee subpoenaed
Pummill, the executives and the two lower-ranking regional benefits managers
they forced to accept job transfers against their will, according to
investigators. But the executives, Diana
Rubens and Kimberly Graves, refused to testify, telling the committee they were
asserting their Fifth Amendment rights under the Constitution to protect
themselves against self-incrimination ... [Pummill] declined to say what action
the agency is taking against Rubens and Graves, who kept their salaries of
$181,497 and $173,949, respectively, even though the new positions they took
had less responsibility, overseeing a fraction of the employees at lower pay
levels.”
Between salary increases
and relocation expenses, the Veterans Benefits Administration (VBA) spent $1.8
million to reassign 23-senior executives from fiscal 2013 to fiscal 2015. In all but two cases, the new jobs came with
pay raises, despite a White House imposed freeze on senior executives’ pay —
and a widely publicized ban on bonuses stemming from a backlog of outstanding
claims for disability benefits. Acting Inspector
General Linda Halliday disclosed in September that Rubens and Graves
“inappropriately used their positions of authority for personal and financial
benefit” when they forced lower-ranking officials to transfer out of their
positions and then filled the vacancies themselves. In other words, these government
employees – who were already earning six figures – devised a method of manipulating
the system in order to enrich themselves while also shedding workload and managing
to bypass moratoriums on raises and bonuses … imposed as a result of their
agency’s
infamous scandal.
Fox News’ Mike Emanuel filed this
report earlier on The Real Story:
“One of the silver linings on this episode of malfeasance is that
due to reforms implemented in the wake of the broader VA scandal, Ms. Rubens
and Graves will have fewer options at their disposal as they fight
accountability. Their punishment for
administrative misconduct will be one of the first cases handled under a new
law that speeds up dismissals and other discipline against VA senior
executives, who now have far fewer appeal rights than they once did.”
Critics of both the
Obama Administration and the US government’s sprawling federal bureaucracy have
grown accustomed to officials ‘pleading the fifth’ while entangled in
controversy. Former IRS supervisor Lois
Lerner refused to answer Congress’ questions about the political targeting
regime she helped oversee (with no legal or financial repercussions); and the
government employee who set up Hillary Clinton’s improper, unsecure email
server did the same.
So, on this Veterans
Day: We give thanks to the 1% who protect (or defended) our freedoms … many of
whom are on food stamps, some being homeless, and still others are dying while
waiting for VA medical attention; but all of whom will receive no
cost-of-living increase this year … while VA officials with six figure salaries
pled the 5th.
Rev.
Dr. Kenneth L. Beale, Jr.
Chaplain
(Colonel-Ret), U.S. Army
Pastor,
Ft. Snelling Memorial Chapel
Mom and dad must be very proud of these two. We've spent the last 50 years destroying any sense of ethics so we shouldn't really be too surprised. Your blog didn't mention the fact that these two women were also lovers and part of the scheme was to create positons that would allow them to live together and get the tax payers to pay for it. Who ever would have thought that the government we fought for would actually promote and support such unethical and immoral behavior, that they would steal from those who sacrificed so much and laugh while doing it!
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