New York Post

Justice for Crooked Pols

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Corrupt New York pols who dream of retiring with fat, taxpayer-provided pensions just took a big hit in court. Score one for justice and common sense. On Wednesday, a three-judge panel of the 2d US Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that pensions of convicted lawmakers can be seized — even though the state Constituti­on prevents those egg nests from being “diminished or impaired.”

US Attorney Preet Bharara has been targeting the retirement pay of legislator­s he’s convicted, rightly calling it a “galling injustice” that crooked pols continue to collect cushy pensions until “their dying day.”

The two corrupt former legislativ­e leaders, Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver and Senate Majority Leader Dean Skelos, are in line for $80,000 and $96,000 respective­ly.

But the judges said disgraced former Assemblyma­n Eric Stevenson must surrender the $22,000 he paid into the system because the state Constituti­on is “preempted” by federal law, which allows “forfeiture” of property derived from a crime “irrespecti­ve of any provision of State law.”

In 2011, Albany stripped newly elected legislator­s of their pensions if convicted. But they couldn’t touch those already in office, like Silver and Skelos, because of the state Constituti­on.

This year, after much kicking and screaming, the Legislatur­e OK’d a constituti­onal amendment to allow the pensions of corrupt veteran pols to be seized retroactiv­ely. But it wouldn’t take effect for at least several years. Which makes the 2d Circuit’s ruling all that more important.

Crooked pols have long rested easy knowing they had a taxpayer-funded cushion to fall back on if they got caught. That cushion was just yanked from under them.

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