Eugene Keogh; N.Y. Congressman Who Wrote Pension Law
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NEW YORK — Eugene Keogh, a veteran congressman from Brooklyn who was the chief sponsor of the pension plan legislation that bears his name, died of pneumonia Friday at St. Vincent’s Hospital in Manhattan. He was 81.
Keogh, a Brooklyn native, served in Congress 30 years, representing a heavily Democratic district that included parts of East New York, Canarsie, New Lots, Cypress Hills and Brunswick.
Under the Keogh Plan, self-employed people such as doctors, lawyers, salesmen and free-lance writers may, for pension purposes, invest part of their income in a fund that is exempt from federal taxes until the money is withdrawn at retirement. The legislation, which was enacted in 1962, allowed the self-employed to get benefits roughly equal to workers under corporate pension plans.
Keogh received a bachelor’s degree from New York University and a law degree from Fordham. He began practicing law in 1932, and three years later served briefly in the New York State Assembly. In 1936, he was elected to the first of his 15 terms in the House of Representatives, where he served on the influential Ways and Means Committee.
He is survived by his wife, a son, a daughter and two grandchildren.
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