Saturday, July 18, 2009

NYC Controller: Bronx Public Admisistrator's Office Plays Fast & Loose With Dead People's Property

In The Bronx, New York, the New York Daily News reports:

  • Bronx court officials broke the law by investing $21 million in risky securities with money from the estates of dead people, a new audit charges. City Controller William Thompson charged the public administrator's office in Bronx Surrogate's Court violated state law three years ago, when it placed 30% ofthe cash it was holding for heirs with a brokerage firm to buy exotic securities said to be "safe as cash."

  • The investments turned sour and were worth nothing for much of last year. That temporarily put taxpayers on the hook for paying the heirs their due. The risky investment was outlined in a July Daily News report. Thompson's audit confirmed The News' findings and said the investment decision reflected overall sloppy management that plagued the office.

  • Public administrators in each borough manage millions of dollars from estates of people who die without wills. Thompson found "a severe lack of management" in the Bronx. [...] Meanwhile, politically connected lawyers like Michael Lippman, then the administrator's general counsel, earned $2.1 million in fees on the auction-rate securities deals made through a broker.

For more, see Audit: Court invested Bronx estate cash illegally.

Based on the following excerpt from a June 29, 1988 story in The New York Times, shenanigans in the office of the public administrator could potentially have been taking place for decades. See 3 in Surrogate's Office Charged With Thefts:

  • Three investigators from the Brooklyn and Bronx Public Administrators' offices were arrested yesterday and charged with falsifying public records and stealing valuables from rooms they believed had been occupied by people who died without leaving a will. The arrests ended an elaborate two-year sting investigation into the city's Public Administrators' offices, said the city Investigations Commissioner, Kevin B. Frawley, who conducted the inquiry with State Attorney General Robert Abrams and State Comptroller Edward V. Regan. An inspector for the Queens Public Administrator's office was arrested in March. The city's Public Administrators' offices handle the estates of people who have died without leaving a properly executed will.

Go here for other posts on the escapades of public administrators' / public guardians' offices when taking over the assets of the dead and incapacitated. daily eagle retired judge

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