I wonder how many judges are progressive liberals that now sit in judgment of others? After all, progressive socialism is about controlling outcomes regardless of consequences. As long as the judgments meet all of the criteria demanded by their ideology, judges see no fault in their decisions.
If anyone still has the notion of justice in our country, stroll down memory lane on upholding the rule of law from Eric Holder's Department of Justice.
Rubber-Stamping Disability Claims
Source: Brianna Ehley, "Judges Who Rubber Stamp Disability Claims are Bankrupting the System," The Fiscal Times, June 10, 2014; "Systemic Waste and Abuse at the Social Security Administration: How Rubber-Stamping Disability Judges Cost Hundreds of Billions of Taxpayer Dollars," Staff Report, Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, U.S. House of Representatives, June 10, 2014.
June 16, 2014
The Fiscal Times reports that some judges are approving disability insurance at an alarming rate, often approving claims without holding hearings.
When an American applies for disability benefits and is twice denied them, he can appeal to a Social Security Administrative Law Judge (ALJ), who is required to consider the case record to determine eligibility for benefits.
The rubber-stamping revelation comes from a new report from the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee:
19.4 million Americans are receiving $200 billion in benefits through the Social Security Administration's two disability programs, and taxpayers are left to shoulder the burden of the billions of dollars in improper payments. The Social Security program is on track to run out of funds by 2016.
NCPA Senior Fellow Pamela Villarreal recently issued a study highlighting the growing number of women on disability.
Source: Brianna Ehley, "Judges Who Rubber Stamp Disability Claims are Bankrupting the System," The Fiscal Times, June 10, 2014; "Systemic Waste and Abuse at the Social Security Administration: How Rubber-Stamping Disability Judges Cost Hundreds of Billions of Taxpayer Dollars," Staff Report, Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, U.S. House of Representatives, June 10, 2014.
When an American applies for disability benefits and is twice denied them, he can appeal to a Social Security Administrative Law Judge (ALJ), who is required to consider the case record to determine eligibility for benefits.
The rubber-stamping revelation comes from a new report from the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee:
- On average, ALJs approve 58 percent of disability claims with an average lifetime benefit of $300,000 per person.
- From 2005 to 2013, ALJs put 3.2 million Americans on disability programs, costing $1 trillion.
- During this period, more than 1.5 million Americans joined the federal disability program thanks to ALJs with allowance rates above 75 percent, and 650,000 people were placed in the programs by ALJs with allowance rates above 85 percent.
- Judge Harry Taylor, who has worked within the Social Security Administration for a quarter-century, approved 94 percent of the cases that came to him. Of those, 68 percent were approved without holding a hearing.
- While Judge Taylor testified to Congress that he keeps an open mind on every case, the House Oversight report revealed that a majority of the cases Taylor approved contained expert medical opinions that were "inconsistent with his findings of disability."
- Similarly, Judge David Daugherty had an approval rate of nearly 99 percent before retiring in 2011. His disability awards to 8,413 people added up to $2.5 billion in lifetime benefits. Almost half of the benefits were awarded without a single hearing.
19.4 million Americans are receiving $200 billion in benefits through the Social Security Administration's two disability programs, and taxpayers are left to shoulder the burden of the billions of dollars in improper payments. The Social Security program is on track to run out of funds by 2016.
NCPA Senior Fellow Pamela Villarreal recently issued a study highlighting the growing number of women on disability.
Source: Brianna Ehley, "Judges Who Rubber Stamp Disability Claims are Bankrupting the System," The Fiscal Times, June 10, 2014; "Systemic Waste and Abuse at the Social Security Administration: How Rubber-Stamping Disability Judges Cost Hundreds of Billions of Taxpayer Dollars," Staff Report, Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, U.S. House of Representatives, June 10, 2014.
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