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aGameOfThrones
10-07-2013, 03:31 PM
WASHINGTON (AP) — A retired Social Security judge in West Virginia collaborated with a lawyer to improperly award disability benefits to hundreds of applicants, according to a report released Monday by congressional investigators.

The report accuses retired administrative law Judge David B. Daugherty of scheming with lawyer Eric C. Conn to approve more than 1,800 cases from 2006 to 2010.

"By 2011, Mr. Conn and Judge Daugherty had collaborated on a scheme that enabled the judge to approve, in assembly-line fashion, hundreds of clients for disability benefits using manufactured medical evidence," said the report by the staff of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee.

"The report describes how one lawyer, several judges and a group of doctors took advantage of the situation and exploited the program for their own personal benefit," Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., said at a committee hearing Monday. "Together, they moved hundreds of claimants onto the disability rolls based on manufactured medical evidence and boilerplate decisions. As a result they saw millions of dollars flow their way, promotions at work and had bad behavior ignored."

Conn runs a law firm specializing in disability cases in Stanville, Ky., near the West Virginia border. Daugherty, who was a judge based in Huntington, W.Va., retired in 2011 after questions were raised about his relationship with Conn, the report said.

According to the report, the Social Security Administration paid Conn's firm more than $4.5 million in attorney fees from cases heard by Daugherty from 2006 to 2010. In 2010, Conn was the third highest-paid disability lawyer in the country, the report said.

Investigators reviewed Daugherty's bank records and found $96,000 in unexplained cash deposits, the report said.

"From 2003 to 2011, Judge Daugherty's bank records contain regularly occurring cash deposits totaling $69,800, the source of which is unexplained in the judge's financial disclosure forms," the report said. "From 2007 to 2011, his daughter's bank records list similar cash deposits totaling another $26,200. When asked about the $96,000 in cash deposits, Judge Daugherty refused to explain their origin or the source of the funds."

http://news.yahoo.com/social-security-judge-accused-disability-scheme-165949103.html

catfeathers
10-07-2013, 04:47 PM
I know a few people who went through Eric C. Conn to get approved for disability. I'm sure there are a lot of them that could work if there were more non-physical jobs around here. I could possibly get SS disability. I am going to college for a Social Work degree in hopes that I can find a job that I can do with my limitations.

Conn has billboards everywhere you look in this area. He had a couple with life-size statues of himself sitting on top of them. I think there may still be one at the intersection in Allen, KY. One of them was kidnapped once. You can imagine the size of the guy's ego to spend thousands of dollars to buy statues of himself. I was hired to work at his office once but I was let go after a couple of days with no reason given. I think maybe it was because I didn't worship the ground he walked on like the other girls that work for him.

catfeathers
10-09-2013, 10:23 AM
Something I had forgotten about Eric C. Conn, in between (maybe) his several marriages he dated porn star Raven Riley. This is what she things of him. Language warning: ht tp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oE5iQDrdvSo

dannno
10-09-2013, 11:03 AM
Maybe they were just helping people get onto disability in assembly line fashion?

Don't hate the player, hate the game.

catfeathers
10-09-2013, 11:24 AM
Maybe they were just helping people get onto disability in assembly line fashion?

Don't hate the player, hate the game.

The problem is I have heard that if you are legitimately disabled, bad enough that anyone could see, he won't take your case. Also, I know some of these "disabled" people.

The judge was selecting Conn's cases out of the ones waiting to be ruled on and ruling on them very quickly, not enough time for him to actually have looked at the files.

dannno
10-09-2013, 11:52 AM
The problem is I have heard that if you are legitimately disabled, bad enough that anyone could see, he won't take your case. Also, I know some of these "disabled" people.


That's weird, usually they like to have a good percentage of legit cases under their belt to point to if something happens.

catfeathers
10-09-2013, 12:26 PM
That's weird, usually they like to have a good percentage of legit cases under their belt to point to if something happens.

He's probably been so busy making money that he didn't think about that. There might be a few legitimate cases that slip through.

Edited to add: I have trouble walking sometimes because of pain in my lower back, hips and legs. I have been told a few times that I should "go see Eric."