AMERICAN SWINDLING AND CORRUPTION.
(Melbourne Argus.) It is somewhat startling in the centen. nial year of the American Republic to find one of the leading journals in tlig United States commencing an article i], these words :— t: Another revolution i$ wanted in the United States. T]] e American spoils system is a worse tyrant than the British King. It is greater discredit to submit to the former than to the latter. We must get rid of it." And the sooner the better ; for the system of fraud and spoliation is assuming dimensions 0 ; appalling magnitude, and is proved to have extended its ramifications through every branch of the public service. Next to the whisky frauds perpetrated with the Connivance of the revenue officers at Chicago, St. Louis, and elsewhere, the greatest swindle yet brought to light v® exposed by the House Committee on In. valid Pensions, at Washington, on the 25th March. At the close of the civil war Congress made grants of land amounting to 160 acres each to the soldiers who had fought for the Union. These were distributed through the Pension Bureau, of which Mr. Henry von Aernam, oi New York, was chief commissioner froi 1869 until some time in 1871. During his tenure of office, 2,300 dormant bounty and warrants authorised to be issued to persons who were either dead or had otherwise forfeited them, accumulated in his charge, and the regulations of the office prevented this from being made known to liis subordinates. Three friends of lus, Messrs. Cheney, Van Meter, and Hill, all lawyers, were at this time engaged in the prosecution of certain claims against the Government at Washington, and they formed a ring, in conjunction with Ton. Aernam. The name of one of the legaltrio was inserted in the blank left upon' each document for the purpose of being filled in with the name of the administrator or guardian of the person to whom the warrant rightfully belonged ; application was made to the commissioner for the issue of such warrants by Van Meter, and the order was made in due coui'se. In this way the whole of the 2,300 documents passed out of the office in a single year, and were placed upon the market in Net York, .B/jstea, 4£irul other places, their current value being from 170 to 200 dollati each. The entire batch is estimated t« have fetched £BO,OOO, the whole of which sum went into the pockets of the four men named, the particulars of the transactions having been elicited by the Committee from Mr. C. W. Seaton, the chief clerk oi the department. .
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Bibliographic details
Oamaru Mail, Volume I, Issue 105, 22 August 1876, Page 2
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435AMERICAN SWINDLING AND CORRUPTION. Oamaru Mail, Volume I, Issue 105, 22 August 1876, Page 2
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