The Koch Tapes: Siphoning Millions From Worker Retirements
Your Future, Their Profit
For generations, the deal was simple: work hard, and you get a pension. That deal is dead. Today, your future depends on a 401(k), an investment account you fund with your own money. You trust your employer to manage it properly. You trust them not to let financial parasites bleed it dry with hidden fees. That trust, according to a federal lawsuit, was broken by Koch Industries.
The Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) of 1974 was put in place for one reason: to protect your retirement savings. It places a “fiduciary duty” on employers. This is the strictest duty of loyalty and prudence in the entire legal system. It means they must act solely in your best interest. The lawsuit alleges Koch and its benefits committee did the opposite. They let their workers get fleeced.
The Mechanics of the Heist
Every 401(k) plan has administrative costs, known as “recordkeeping fees.” These fees pay for the work of tracking your contributions and investments. For a massive set of plans like Koch’s, with tens of thousands of participants and billions in assets, these fees should be microscopic because of economies of scale. The power of a large group should get you a better deal.
The lawsuit claims Koch’s fiduciaries failed to use that power. Instead, they allowed their workers to be charged fees up to 600% higher than the going rate for plans of a similar size. Unlike a pension, where the company eats the costs, every single dollar of these inflated fees was taken directly from the retirement accounts of individual workers. It is a direct transfer of wealth from the shop floor to the financial services industry, allegedly enabled by corporate negligence.
401(k) Recordkeeping Fee Comparison
Legal Receipts
The court documents are not emotional. They are cold, hard statements of fact. Here is what the complaint filed against Koch Industries says, in its own words:
Contrary to these fiduciary duties, Defendants failed to prudently and loyally monitor and control the Plans’ recordkeeping expenses, and instead allowed the Plans to pay up to six times more than what similarly-sized plans would have paid for such services.
In a defined contribution plan, the employer has no incentive to keep costs low because all risks related to high fees are typically borne by the participating employees.
Mapping The Damage: Economic Inequality
This is not just a story about accounting errors. It is a story about economic inequality, written in the fine print of your retirement statement. When a corporation with the immense resources of Koch Industries fails to secure a fair price for its own workers, it perpetuates a system where labor’s earnings are systematically eroded for the benefit of the financial class.
The millions of dollars lost to excessive fees did not evaporate. That money went somewhere. It padded the profits of a recordkeeping firm, Alight Financial Advisors. It is a quiet, almost invisible transfer of wealth from tens of thousands of working families to a private financial corporation. This is how the retirement crisis deepens: not in a single market crash, but in a million tiny cuts administered in the dark.
What Now? The Watchlist.
This legal battle is just one front in a wider war over your economic future. Accountability requires vigilance. The people and organizations responsible must be watched.
Corporate Roles Under Scrutiny
- The Koch Benefits Administrative Committee
- Koch Industries, Inc. (as Plan Sponsor)
- Koch Business Solutions, LP (as Plan Administrator)
- Unnamed Fiduciaries, listed as John Does 1-30 in the lawsuit
Regulatory Bodies to Watch
- The Department of Labor: As the primary enforcer of ERISA, their action or inaction in cases like this sets the standard for corporate America.
- The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC): While not directly involved in this ERISA case, the SEC oversees the financial firms that profit from these arrangements.
Your Personal Resistance
This isn’t just their fight. It’s yours. Demand transparency about the fees in your own 401(k). Ask your employer who the plan fiduciaries are and how they monitor costs. Talk to your coworkers; collective awareness is the first step toward collective action. The system is designed to keep you isolated and confused. Your greatest power is to break that isolation.
https://www.planadviser.com/koch-industries-agrees-4-million-settlement-erisa-excessive-fee-suit
https://www.pionline.com/courts/koch-industries-agrees-4-million-settlement-erisa-suit
we must cleanse the streets of parasitic capital 🙏
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