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First, thanks for cheating the taxpayers. We have enough legitimate debt and really don't need to support liars and cheats. You are committing government fraud and should go to jail. Most likely they will simply fine you and make you ineligible for unemployment ever again.
You can as long as you comply with the New Jersey laws relating to unemployment compensation.
Yes. If you didn't, you would be over paid in unemployment compensation that you would have to pay back, plus possible interest, fines, and maybe jail if they determine you were guilty of unemployment fraud. You agreed to report any earnings and a new job qualifies there.
Yes you will report the unemployment payment amount that you received on your New York income tax return and could owe some taxes on the amount of UI received as a resident of NY.
Probably not.Another answer:Only the "liable state" (the one where your employer pays its unemployment taxes to) is the one you receive your unemployment compensation from.
If i am not mistaken, the unemployment office for New Brunswick NJ is located at 506 Jersey Ave.
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In New Jersey, a judgment can stay on your credit report for up to 10 years. However, it may be possible to have it removed earlier by resolving the debt or through certain legal procedures.
The statute of limitation on insurance fraud in the state of New Jersey is 6 years. It is covered under N.J. Stat. paragraph 2A:14-1.
If you do not report earnings to unemployment it is considered fraud. No worries, they will probably not throw you in jail, however they will require you to pay it back. Most employers send a new hire form to the unemployment office when you are hired, so they are aware that you are now employed. They also report all wages to the unemployment office, which is generally reported a quarter later. They have an integrity team that reviews all of this information, so you may not be contacted now, but be assured they will be in touch with you in the future. They can also suspend your unemployment benefits for periods of time and require that you pay all monies back before getting unemployment in the future.
“I won gambling money in New Jersey but live in Pennsylvania, how do I report this?? ”
Unemployment is not one of the deductions from a worker's paycheck. The employer, only, pays for unemployment insurance.