S-4447-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.
Sponsored by Joni Ernst (R-IA)
What it does
This bill would amend federal law (Title 5, U.S. Code) to add certain sex crimes to the existing list of offenses that trigger forfeiture of federal civilian and military retirement benefits. Covered offenses include federal crimes such as aggravated sexual abuse, sexual exploitation of children, and sex trafficking, as well as equivalent state-law convictions. The forfeiture would apply to pension payments made after the date of conviction, and only to crimes committed on or after the bill's enactment date.
Who benefits
Taxpayers broadly, who would no longer fund retirement benefits for convicted federal employees in this category. Victims of sex crimes committed by federal employees or military personnel, who may view forfeiture as a form of accountability. Federal and military retirees generally, whose pension system would not be associated with funding benefits for those convicted of these offenses. Child safety advocates and organizations focused on combating sex trafficking.
Who is hurt
Federal civilian employees and military personnel convicted of the named offenses after enactment, who would lose retirement income they accrued during their service. Spouses and dependents of convicted individuals who may rely on survivor benefits tied to those annuities. Employees convicted of state-law equivalents of the named federal offenses, whose forfeiture would depend on how broadly state statutes are interpreted to match federal definitions. Defense attorneys and civil liberties advocates who may argue the provision raises due process concerns.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that federal and military pension benefits are funded by taxpayers and should not flow to individuals convicted of serious sex crimes, including child exploitation and sex trafficking. They contend that existing federal law already strips pensions for treason and espionage, and that extending forfeiture to sex offenses is a logical and proportionate expansion — one that closes a gap where convicted federal employees have continued to collect government-funded retirement income. The bill's bipartisan sponsorship (Ernst, Gillibrand, Scott, Crapo, Graham) reflects broad agreement that public trust in federal employment requires this accountability measure.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that pension forfeiture functions as an additional financial punishment imposed after sentencing, raising Eighth Amendment concerns about excessive punishment and potential double jeopardy questions under the Fifth Amendment. They contend that retirement benefits represent deferred compensation earned through years of service, and that stripping them — particularly for state-law convictions whose definitions may not precisely match federal standards — could produce disproportionate outcomes. Critics may also note that forfeiture falls on dependents and spouses who bear no responsibility for the conviction, effectively punishing innocent third parties.