Retirement Strategies

Make Sure Your Employer Isn't Misusing 401(k) Money

03/20/08 - 12:29 PM EDT


If you don't pay attention to your employer's treatment of your 401(k) plan, you might want to start.

After working for around 30 years at the Oak Park, Ill., material analysis firm Chicago Spectro Service Laboratory Inc., engineer Raymond Reinheimer thought he had saved well over $200,000 in his profit-sharing plan.

But when Reinheimer retired some years ago, the money wasn't in his account. He and other employees had gotten phony statements each year that said promised contributions were made into the plan -- even though they really weren't.

To get the money back, Reinheimer had to endure around five years of litigation before he won a settlement. Now, he receives $3,000 per month for his retirement.

"He would have had a much better lifestyle had he not been cheated," says Reinheimer's attorney, Alan Bruggeman of Bruggeman, Hurst & Associates Ltd. "If he'd have had $250,000 in an investment account, he would have gotten more."

The Department of Labor said in June 2005 that Chicago Spectro's owner, Richard Goldblatt, was removed from his role as the plan's fiduciary.

Goldblatt declined comment on this article.

While Reinheimer's case was severe, employers can misuse employee contributions into 401(k)s in many ways. The problem has attracted regulators attention for years.

Companies of all sizes have to move employee contributions into pension plans no later than the 15th business day of the month following receipt of the money.

The DOL said in recent weeks that it's proposing a new rule, which would require pension and welfare benefit plans with fewer than a hundred participants to transmit employee contributions within seven days instead.

"The proposal we made is the result of a longstanding look at the issues and our goal was to help increase compliance and provide certainty," says Bradford P. Campbell, Assistant Secretary of Labor for the Employee Benefits Security Administration.

As it is, employers rarely misuse the contributions their participants make into 401(k)s. Of the 436,000 401(k)-type plans in the U.S., the DOL cites about 1,100 annually for violations relating to delinquent employee contributions.

"It's tough for it to happen under current laws because of the speed with which contributions have to be made to trustee accounts," says Dallas Salisbury, president of the Employee Benefit Research Institute in Washington. He pointed out that the vast majority of 401(k) plans have many eyes on them, because third parties such as mutual-fund or life-insurance companies will typically be involved.

Plan providers are often divisions of companies such as Wells FargoWFC, WachoviaWB, Principal FinancialPFG and JPMorgan ChaseJPM.

Meanwhile, company tax filings will leave an easy audit trail, Salisbury adds.

Despite such challenges, experts say that companies can misuse employee contributions in a myriad of ways and for different reasons. The DOL lacks the resources to verify that all companies have been making employee contributions into 401(k)s as reported in filings, and only does such audits on occasion.

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Sonja Ryst has previously worked as a staff reporter at BusinessWeek.com and Dow Jones Newswires. She's also freelanced for publications including The Wall Street Journal. She graduated from Stanford University with honors.

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