Want the latest retirement plan adviser news and insights? Sign up for PLANADVISER newsletters.
Compliance July 8, 2009
Woman Sentenced to Prison for 401(k) Theft
A woman accused of stealing from a co-worker’s 401(k) account has been sentenced to a one-year jail term.
Reported by Fred Schneyer
A Justice Department news release said a federal judge also mandated that Dana Wachter serve three years of supervised probation and pay $38,000 in restitution for the total stolen from her co-worker.
Wachter was accused of using the co-worker’s Social Security and other personal ID numbers to authorize an $18,000 payout from the co-worker’s 401(k), and then cashing the resulting check.
Wachter was sentenced in U. S. District Court for the Western District of Missouri. She was indicted in June 2008 on one count each of aggregated identity theft, mail fraud, and theft from an employee benefit covered by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act.
You Might Also Like:
DOL Backs Morgan Stanley, Says Deferred Pay Is Exempt from ERISA
The Department of Labor decided that Morgan Stanley's deferred compensation program is a bonus, rather than a pension plan subject...
IBM Accused of $14B Pension Risk Transfers to ‘Unsafe’ Insurer
IBM allegedly jeopardized the retirement security of more than 132,000 former workers by offloading billions of dollars in two pension...
AARP Attorneys Join ERISA Lawsuit Against TIAA
Attorneys from the AARP Foundation are co-counsel in a lawsuit that claims TIAA invested plan participants’ retirement funds in a...
