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Millions in wrongful benefits paid to non-LEO ATF


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#1 abteilung

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Posted 13 November 2023 - 03:23 PM

And those whose "reputations" were attacked, they'll be rewarded with jobs with the anti-2A outfits run by Gabby Gffords and Michael Bloomberg.  The non-profit industry makes its former government officials very rich.  Meanwhile, those agents who actually do the work get nada.



#2 Jaime3

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Posted 29 September 2023 - 04:49 PM

Nothing will happen because Politicians are running defense for several Federal Agencies and ATF is one of those Agencies; covered by DOJ. IMO, these Politicians are receiving incentives for this defense.

Politicians secretly runs defense for ATF by launching investigations that end up going no where but gets the situation out of the spotlight. No one is ever charged or whatever.
The IG nor OSC don’t investigate and if they happen to launch an investigation, it’s because people got wind of the illegal action.
But just like the Politicians, they PUBLICLY launch investigations just to simmer things down.

They are not gonna make them pay that LEAP money back!
The IG nor OSC aren’t trying to find out who concocted the entire LEAP SCHEME in the first place. It happened in 2021 and here we are in 2023 with no accountability.

It has been proven time and time again, the only people who receive disciplinary actions or retaliation within ATF are Complaint Filers and Whistleblowers.

#3 jpr9954

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Posted 03 May 2023 - 07:57 AM

From CNBC:

 

https://www.cnbc.com...m-watchdog.html

 

The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives for years illegally overpaid up to $20 million to agents and investigators who worked in non-law enforcement positions by misclassifying them as law enforcement posts, a government investigator said Tuesday.

The U.S. Office of Special Counsel, which disclosed the mismanagement, said it had alerted President Joe Biden and Congress of “substantial waste, mismanagement and unlawful employment practices” involving high-level jobs at ATF.

 

The U.S. Office of Special Counsel said that during a five-year period that officials investigated, 108 ATF employees who worked in non-law enforcement jobs “were improperly provided Law Enforcement Availability Pay (LEAP) and enhanced retirement benefits.”

The $20 million or so found to have been overpaid “could be much higher given that the unlawful job classifications had been common practice at ATF far longer than the five-year time frame reviewed by investigators,” OSC said. That time frame was 2016 through 2021.

ATF’s media affairs office had no immediate comment on the OSC report when contacted by CNBC. In its official response to OSC, ATF contested claims about the designation of some of the positions being misclassified.

The investigation was sparked by two whistleblowers in ATF’s human resources department who alerted officials about that practice involving “gross waste of funds” and “gross mismanagement,” OSC’s letter to Biden said.

The letter said that the whistleblowers claimed the agency had a long-standing policy of helping the careers of special agents and industry operations investigators by systematically misclassifying high-level non-law enforcement jobs and filling “these coveted, primarily supervisory jobs with only special agents” or those types of investigators.

 

After OSC verified the claims, the watchdog referred the allegations to ATF, which instead of conducting an internal investigation, deferred to a then-pending audit by the Office of Personnel Management, which manages the federal civil service.

OPM later concluded that ATF’s leadership “demonstrated disregard for the rule of law and regulations” governing federal management policies and practices.

 

As a result of that conclusion, OPM has for now suspended ATF’s power to classify its own employees as being in federal law enforcement positions “until matters are resolved to OPM’s satisfaction,” the letter to Biden said. ATF is also in the process of updating the descriptions of various positions to reflect their actual job duties.

Fifty of the employees who held positions that were misclassified have either been reassigned or retired, the letter said.

“I thank the whistleblowers for coming forward with these very serious allegations and am pleased that under OPM’s oversight, ATF has initiated corrective measures,” said Special Counsel Henry Kerner in a statement.

“While I find the report to be reasonable, progress toward full resolution has been slow, which may be attributable to the long-standing nature of the problems and the entrenched culture reinforcing ATF’s practices,” Kerner said.

“I am pleased that OPM continues to monitor progress in implementing required corrective actions, and I urge ATF’s internal affairs to hold the responsible parties accountable,” he said.

However, in the letter to Biden, Kerner noted that the whistleblowers who first complained about the practice believe “that the report did not adequately capture the extent of ATF’s illegal practices or the full impact of the harm.”

Kerner wrote that the whistleblowers believe there were many more misclassified positions than the ones detailed in OPM’s audit, and that ATF “significantly underreported” the waste due to the misclassifications of positions.

“Moreover, they pointed out that the agency did not account for the impact of the wrongdoing
on the agency’s non‐law enforcement employees,” Kerner wrote.

“Finally, the whistleblowers indicated that ATF has not adequately corrected the wrongdoing, asserting that employees continue to hold positions for which they are unqualified and that it is legally unsupportable to waive the debts incurred by employees who improperly received LEAP.”

 

 






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