Hiss Act
The Hiss Act, added to the Civil Service Retirement Act of 1930 as Public Law 769 under Statute 68, denies pensions to US civil servants convicted of crimes related to national security, amended in 1961 and overturned in 1972 by its namesake Alger Hiss. Controversy arose over "cases where the courts had imposed minimal penalties, such as suspended sentences, small fines, or probation, yet the offenders and their families suffered the additional penalty of losing all annuity benefits, sometimes based on decades of service." In 1961, it was amended “retirement benefits to U.S. employees involved in minor offenses not connected with national security.” The law remains in effect to the present.
History
The bill took its name from Alger Hiss, a former US civil servant convicted in 1950 on two counts of perjury related to Soviet espionage in the United States. Its initial recording dubs it "An Act to prohibit payment of annuities to officers and employees of the United States convicted of certain offenses, and for other purposes."1954 Act
On September 1, 1954, the Hiss Act passed. It removed pension rights of US civil servants convicted of crimes. Its immediate effect was stop federal pension payments to Hiss.Specifically, the Hiss Act “contained a list of job- related Federal felonies, the conviction of which would bar retirement benefits that would be payable to Federal employees and their families. Most of the convictions under which annuities were denied were for violations of postal law and other felony convictions that did not involve national security.”
1961 Amendment
Congressional hearings to amend the Hiss Act started as early as 1959.On May 12, 1960, the US Senate voted back to committee a bill by the US House to remove application to any cases that excluded national security.
In June 1960, the New York Times reported on denials of G.I. pensions under the act.
In 1961, the US Congress amended the Hiss Act through bill HR 6141 as Public Law 83-769, which became law on September 26, 1961. The amendment restored federal retirement benefits to US civil servants “involved in minor offenses not connected with national security.”