Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Is This Guy for Real?

Yesterday I was chatting with opposing counsel in a trust litigation matter I'm handling. Both of us agreed that there are some interesting issues involved with the case, but we also agreed that we need to work together to resolve these issues (rather than go to court) because the trust just isn't big enough for a major court battle. If we did go to court, opposing counsel and I would become the estate's biggest beneficiaries, via the attorneys fees we'd receive.

I took this off the death & taxes blog, read it all the time, he's an attorney that makes the law fun.  He talks about Probate Court too but I can't imagine he fits in on the 18th if he's talking like that.

Friday, June 17, 2011

Unholy Matrimony: How to Fight Back

By KELLY GREENE
It is difficult enough to entrust an elderly parent's care to someone you hire. But what do you do when that worker secretly marries their charge—and claims a chunk of your inheritance?

Although no one tracks the numbers of such marriages, lawyers who handle estate-related litigation say they are seeing increasing numbers of "predatory unions," as life spans increase and dementia becomes more common.

"Let's face it—baby boomers are heading into old age," says Susan Slater-Jansen, an estate-planning attorney at Kurzman Eisenberg Corbin & Lever in White Plains, N.Y. "It's going to be an increasing problem."
What's worse, it is virtually impossible for children to challenge the property consequences of a parent getting married once the parent dies, says Terry Turnipseed, an associate law professor at Syracuse University, who has studied "deathbed marriages" and analyzed state laws.

How could families be duped into not knowing their own parents had married? In one case, an adult daughter left her elderly father in the care of a longtime friend while she took a short vacation. In one week, the friend married the father, started transferring assets into joint accounts and named herself his pension beneficiary. The children learned of the marriage a month later. When they confronted their father, he recalled nothing about it.

In another case, a hired caretaker secretly married her charge of nine years about a year before his death. She told his children about it the day before his funeral.

In most states, the inheritance rights of widows and widowers trump any estate plan—even if the new spouse wasn't named in the will, and even if the marriage took place shortly before the death of someone unable to recall a few days later that they said "I do."

The only way many state courts can fix things is to annul a marriage after death. Typically the only person who has legal standing to sue is the surviving spouse, "who of course has no incentive whatsoever to annul the marriage," Mr. Turnipseed says.

But in a few states, courts and lawmakers are starting to make it easier to unwind a twilight union. Florida closed a loophole last year by enacting a law that gives heirs and others the legal standing to challenge any marriage—even after a spouse's death—on the grounds of fraud, duress or undue influence.

Florida's statute found a way around the big legal concern: that state laws could be challenged as messing with the constitutional right to marriage, says Samantha Weissbluth, an estate litigator with Foley & Lardner in Chicago. "It doesn't narrow any existing right to marry; it severs marriage from its usual property consequences in certain circumstances," she says.

In New York, an appeals court last year ruled in favor of the families of two men with dementia who had secretly married outside caregivers before their deaths, by denying their surviving spouses a share of the dead men's assets.

"The spouses were deemed to be committing fraud because the decedents didn't have the capacity to know what they were doing," Ms. Slater-Jansen says.

But until more state legislatures and courts take action, families need to watch out when employing caregivers.

Distance often exacerbates the problem. It is tough to supervise workers in a parent's home from afar. Before you hire anyone, extensive background checks are crucial, along with making sure any paid caregivers are bonded and insured, says Patricia Maisano, chief executive of Ikor USA in Kennett Square, Pa., which provides case-management and advocacy services for elderly and disabled clients.

Ask the aide to consent to a background check and provide a Social Security number if he or she hasn't been screened or formally trained, she says. Don't hire anyone who refuses. You may want to hire a geriatric-care manager to keep an eye on home health-care aides.

If you do sense that your parent is developing a relationship with an aide, don't keep it to yourself. Tell your family, and your parent, about your concerns. The worst thing the child and parent could do is to quit speaking to each other, says John Morken, a partner at Farrell Fritz in Uniondale, N.Y.

If your parent is diagnosed with dementia, one defense against fraud is a durable power of attorney—a legal arrangement that helps older people turn over management of their finances to a family member or others—assuming he or she can still execute one. If used, it is a good idea to require all of the adult children's consent for transactions over a certain dollar amount. That way, you can make sure that no one in the family falls sway to the hired help—or takes advantage of the situation himself, says Ms. Slater-Jansen.

Another defense: having your parent put their assets in a trust. If the assets involved are worth less than $5 million—and you set it up this year or next, when there is no gift tax on that amount—make the trust irrevocable, meaning it can't be unwound during the parent's lifetime. If you use a revocable trust, make sure the paid caregiver doesn't know about it, she says.

Many parents, though, are suspicious of their own children's attempts to help them. If your parents refused to shield their assets in advance, and you worry that a deathbed marriage is looming, there is one more step that may make sense: Going to court to have a parent ruled as lacking the capacity to tie the knot.

Declining Cognitive Ability Presents Challenges to Boomer Finances.

By Mary Pilon


As Baby Boomers age, policy makers and economists may be served by looking at the condition of not just their nest eggs, but the health of their brains.
The late Brooke Astor is an example of the dangers of declining cognitive function.So says economist David Laibson, of Harvard University in a speech called “The Age of Reason.” Prof. Laibson spoke at Morningstar’s annual conference in Chicago before hundreds of financial advisers and asset managers — industries grappling with the inevitable shift of assets from workers accumulating money to those trying to live on it as they grow older. 

Prof. Laibson opened with an image of the famously wealthy Brooke Astor. “One of our most remarkable individuals ended up in this terrible state” because of a lack of cognitive abilities, he said.

About 35% of wealth is controlled by those 65 or older, Prof. Laibson said, and that number will grow as boomers age. The total balance sheet of U.S. households is $53 trillion, he says. As about $18 trillion hang in the balance among seniors, the question is, what will be done to help aging people from becoming another Brooke Astor?

Fluid intelligence — that is intelligence displayed in things like memory tests — decreases dramatically with age. In fact, “it’s all downhill from age 20” Prof. Laibson said. “What about the 80-year-olds? It’s the 80-years-olds who have the million dollar IRAs. Not the 20-year-olds.”

But clearly, there’s a lot more to life than fluid intelligence. Crystallized intelligence — memory, wisdom and so on — does increase over time, but less so, on average, in senior years.

All told, the point at which we make the best financial choices is 53 years old, according to his data. “Of course there are exceptions,” Prof. Laibson said. “I would take Warren Buffett at 81 over most 50-year-olds.” (But he also acknowledges he would take a fiftysomething Buffett over one in his 80s.)

Many seniors end up in a state called cognitive impairment without dementia that isn’t quite dementia, but still (as the name implies) a deterioration of memory. In spite of this, people still may make financial decisions on their own. Prof. Labison estimated that 16% of those 71-79 years old, 29.2% of 80-89 year olds, some 38.8% of those over 90 years old are in such a state.

Those people are at great risk for financial abuse. Some 17% of professional care staff report committing psychological abuse and 10% physical abuse, Prof. Laibson said.  (50% of Devon Bank clients under guardianship are financially abused).

Those over the age of 50 end up paying higher interest rates, even though on average they had better FICO scores and lower default rates, Prof. Laibson said. “Middle aged people get better deals,” he said. In terms of risk-adjusted returns on investments, the young do relatively well, but the “old are doing absolutely abysmal,” paying more in fees and suffering from poor asset allocation, he said.  (Especially those with trust accounts at Devon Bank.)

Prof. Laibson called for keeping things simple for clients, while still giving them a sense of control. (Then his clients better not open a trust account at Devon Bank.  They don't simplify anything nor do they give their clients a sense of control.  Quite the contrary, they humiliate and exploit their clients.)  He called on policy makers to expand a fiduciary duty for financial advisers and expand regulations requiring power of attorney for the elderly.  (Having a POA doesn't matter to Devon Bank either.  If their clients have a lot of money, they'll slander the current POA and hire Josh Mitzen to abuse their clientele in order to get free reign over the money only to squander it.)

That overoptimism about mental muscle keeps people from asking for help. “We procrastinate. We don’t like complexity… We have bad memory and we don’t know the extent of our bad memory,” he said.

Monday, June 13, 2011

OHare Airport to Ronald Reagan

I have to tell you about this wonderful city of ours. First of all, I was a little wired for sound because this cab driver offered to give me a lift to the airport for half price, just a couple of dollars more than public transportation. I took the ride, of course. He also gave me one of those five hour energy drinks. OMG! My head was banging off the walls at the airport. Anyway, inside the airport, this nice gentleman pulled me out of line and asked me to step aside. A TSA agent took (what looked like a band aid) and swabbed the palms of my hands and I asked her, “What are you checking for?” She said, ‘Explosives ma’am.” She took the strip and ran it through a machine and told me that I passed and could continue on my journey. I thanked her for being so thorough. You never know……

Then, I met a very nice couple from Cleveland, OH. He said that everyone was looking and staring at me, later I looked down and noticed the top button of my blouse was undone and figured that must have been what got me that cheap cab price. I get to the security point and hand another nice gentleman my ticket and driver’s license and he says, ‘Ma’am, I want to thank you so much for keeping me and my family safe.’ HUH?! I have had the safe driver renewal for the past 12 years and a very old license because of it. I don’t get tickets and he thanked me. I thought it nice he noticed.

Then, I get to the x-ray and they pull me out of line again. They want to do a full body x-ray. I was joking with the TSA agent, telling her that everyone and their brother is going to know I wear and under wire bra. So, I had to stand there with my arms over my head while they took a snap shot. Then, I walk out of the box and I see another TSA agent frisking a man in front of me. He got let go and that’s when it was my turn. I put my feet inside the two marked boxes, held my arms straight out, gave the guy a wink and said, “Feel free.” He blushed and said, ‘I can’t do that ma’am.’ I told him that he was an awfully nice looking man and I’m giving him full permission, what’s the problem? He was blushing so hard… the woman frisked me, just my head because I was wearing my sunglasses and the metal part set off the x-ray. I think the male TSA Agent should have checked to make sure it was an underwire bra and not something a little more dangerous ;)

Now, I’m just across the river from my legislators :)  And I'm starving!

Sunday, June 12, 2011

NOTEGA - DC Meetup

The National Organization to End Guardianship Abuse is having a meetup in DC on the 14th and 15th. 

June 15th is International Elder Abuse Awareness day and I have appointments with my legislators on Capitol Hill to talk about this Devon Bank Scam, Janna Dutton and her churning buddy, Josh Mitzen. 

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Followup Study Finds Financial Abuse of Elderly Is on Rise

Older Americans are losing $2.9 billion annually to elder financial abuse, a 12 percent increase from the $2.6 billion estimated in 2008, according to "The MetLife Study of Elder Financial Abuse: Crimes of Occasion, Desperation, and Predation Against America's Elders."

The study, based on a comprehensive review of news articles on elder financial abuse, found that crimes involving strangers as the perpetrators made up more than half (51 percent) of reported cases of elder financial abuse, followed by crimes involving family, friends and neighbors as perpetrators (34 percent). By contrast, MetLife's study two years ago found that family members and caregivers were the culprits in most cases (55 percent). Robberies and crimes classified as "scams perpetrated by strangers" increased from 9 percent to 28 percent from 2008 to 2010. Exploitation from the business sector accounted for 12 percent of reported cases. Medicare and Medicaid fraud made up 4 percent of cases.

According to the study, which is accompanied by a consumer guide and tip sheets on preventing elder abuse, the most common abuse scenarios involved strangers who targeted victims out shopping, driving or managing financial affairs, and often looked for particular flags of vulnerability like handicap tags on cars, walking canes or the display of confusion. Crimes included cons, purse snatchings and associated physical assaults. In cases involving a person known to the victim, trusted helpers like caretakers, handymen, friends, "sweethearts," children, lawyers and others seized upon opportunities to forge checks, steal credit cards, pilfer bank accounts, transfer assets and generally decimate elders' financial safety nets.

The typical victim of elder financial abuse was a woman between the age of 80 and 89, who lived alone and required some help with either health care or home maintenance. Nearly 60 percent of perpetrators were males, mostly between ages 30 and 59.

"Our findings illustrate the dehumanization of victims that takes place in the process of financial abuse and further destruction of financial security that occurs," said Sandra Timmermann, Ed.D., director of the MetLife Mature Market Institute. "In almost all instances, financial exploitation is achieved through deceit, threats and emotional manipulation of an elder. In addition to this psychological mistreatment, physical and sexual violence frequently accompany the greed and disregard of financial abuse. The vigilance of friends and family can help protect elders from those who are predatory, which may, unfortunately, include strangers or even other loved ones."

"The 2010 Passage of the Elder Justice Act may bring more attention and resources to this crime leading to prevention among the expanding older population," said Karen A. Roberto, Ph.D., director of the Center for Gerontology, at Virginia Polytechnic Institute, which assisted with the study. "In addition, a new Office of Financial Protection for Older Americans has been established as part of the new Financial Regulatory Reform Bill and Congress continues to focus on new legislation regarding this issue."

Articles from a daily National Center on Elder Abuse newsfeed served as a primary source of information for the study. Over the three-month period from April through June 2010, 314 media reports revealed approximately $530 million in losses from all forms of elder financial abuse. Extrapolating from this figure to take account of unreported losses, MetLife estimates the annual dollar amount loss by victims of elder financial abuse in 2010 was $2.9 billion, a 12 percent increase from 2008.

To read the full report and related materials, http://www.metlife.com/mmi/research/elder-financial-abuse.html?WT.ac=PRO_Pro2_NewMMI_5-18421_T4297-MM-mmi&oc_id=PRO_Pro2_NewMMI_5-18421_T4297-MM-mmi#key .

For the ElderLawAnswers article, "Elder Abuse Web Site Offers Resources and Contacts," click here. For the article, "Identifying and Dealing With Financial Abuse of the Elderly," click here.

Elder financial abuse reaches “epidemic” proportion

by Reuters Wealth

For the past 30 years Jenefer Duane has seen older Americans fall victim to financial scams. But in recent years she has watched the problem get far worse.

“Elder financial abuse has grown to epidemic proportions,” she said.

Actor Mickey Rooney, now in his 90s, elevated the profile of the problem earlier this year when he won a restraining order against his stepchildren. He claimed they used intimidation to get access to his money and later told Congress how that can happen to a vulnerable senior.

Duane, who has led the San Francisco-based Elder Financial Protection Network for more than a decade, said the aging population has made more seniors a target for scam artists and, sadly, members of their own families. “The fact is that they’re living longer and are more dependent on support,” she said.

A study released this week by the MetLife Mature Market Institute found that nearly $3 billion a year is being lost to elder financial abuse. That’s 12 percent higher than in 2008.

Scams and fraud targeting the elderly are increasingly a problem, Duane said. Seniors are often pitched financial products they don’t need including reverse mortgages and annuities. “The prey on isolation and loneliness or diminished capacity,” she said.

Indeed, more than half the cases of elder abuse in the MetLife study involved strangers, the report found. About one-third of the alleged perpetrators were family, friends or neighbors.

The study, done with the National Committee for the Prevention of Elder Abuse and the Center for Gerontology at Virginia Tech, found that:

women were almost twice as likely to fall victim,

the majority of victims were in their 80s and lived alone,

and that the victims were most vulnerable during holidays.

“Our findings illustrate the dehumanization of victims that takes place in the process of financial abuse and further destruction of financial security that occurs,” Sandra Timmermann, director of the MetLife Mature Market Institute, said in a statement. “In almost all instances, financial exploitation is achieved through deceit, threats and emotional manipulation of an elder. In addition to this psychological mistreatment, physical and sexual violence frequently accompany the greed and disregard of financial abuse. ”

Elder financial abuse tends to be a grossly under-reported crime, experts say, because of the shame of becoming a victim, the fear of reporting a family member and the perceived risk of a loss of independence if the circumstances became known.

Women are particularly vulnerable, the experts said and statistics bear out.

“Women outlive men, and we’re still seeing a generation of older women who depended on the male spouse to manage finances,” Duane said. “They often trust people they shouldn’t trust.”

John Breyault, vice president of the National Consumer League overseeing fraud issues, said elder financial abuse is going to get worse. “It is a problem that … will only continue to grow bigger,” he said.

If you’re concerned about an elder who might be victim of financial abuse or are aware of a crime, take the following steps:

Contact your state adult protective services agency (you can call 800-677-1116 or see this page for more specific information)

Call the police

Search this directory of services for crime victims to get support for the victim.

http://www.ncjrs.gov

Granny Snatching: Federal Laws To Protect Elderly Gaining Traction

By Ron Winter

I have written many times about the absence of federal laws that would give uniform protection to the elderly, especially from the growing scourge of Granny Snatching, wherein people living in one state are forcibly confined in another state and stripped of their assets, based on the claim that they are incompetent.

On June 14, in Washington, D.C., however, a nationwide group of elder care activists is taking a step toward expanded awareness that could lead to uniform national laws to protect against elder abuse – specifically Granny Snatching. Organized by Latifa Ring of Texas, the National Organization to End Guardianship Abuse – NOTEGA – is inviting members of Congressional delegations from across the country to meet with “advocates and family members of elderly and disabled victims who have been declared incapacitated.”

While actual enactment of uniform elder abuse laws may still be a long way off, the need for such laws is well established and the goal of the June 14 gathering is to impress this on Congressmen and Senators. From noon until 2 p.m. in Room 2237 of the Rayburn Building on Capitol Hill, the people who can actually change our approach to elder abuse nationally will hear a litany of horror stories from across the country and hopefully distribute these stories to their Congressional colleagues.

The gathering has been dubbed the Elder Abuse and Guardianship Victim’s Taskforce for Change. Ms. Ring states that its goal “is to be a voice for those who have no voice, sharing their stories with each other, with agencies and with leaders on the Hill who have the power to make a difference and to bring an end to this travesty.”

Participants will “meet with legislators and will convene a working session where they will craft recommendations for improvements that can be made to end elder abuse and guardianship abuse.”

As noted in a number of reports from various agencies dealing with the elderly the onrushing increase in the percentage of Americans who are entering their elder years is also delivering an increase in cases of dementia and Alzheimer’s disease. Those who are actually suffering – or will – from these maladies will need a tremendous level of care.

But to be classified as incapacitated when such is not the case will not only add an unsustainable burden to Medicare and Medicaid costs, but is an abomination to the individuals who often are powerless to fight the forces aligned against them – courts, attorneys, doctors, pharmaceutical companies, family members and appointed conservators or guardians.

The Baby Boomer generation, when added to the World War II and Korean War generation, is bringing not only huge numbers to the “elderly” designation, but also some tremendous assets. Consider that most of the Baby Boomer generation began working in the late 1960s and early 1970s and quickly saw their average pay skyrocket beyond their parents’ wildest dreams, and its is obvious that their Social Security income alone will be much higher than that of their parents.

Add to that their retirement incomes, bank accounts, stocks, bonds, and real estate accumulated over 40 years in the working world and you are looking at more than $1 trillion in disposable assets annually when the number of America’s elderly hits 80 million – projected to occur in just over a decade.

That much money will go a long way toward providing a quality of life that has never existed previously, but it also will bring out the predators – people who see assets owned by the elderly as a huge source of payoffs for scams and related rip-offs – some of them currently legal!

These scams have been ongoing forever but the number of elder abuse complaints – valid complaints not nuisance or harassment – is rising steadily and it already is too late for some victims. It seems we never hear anything on the news from Washington except more taxes and less connection with the reality of daily life in America.

It is my hope that the June 14 event will bring the level of awareness that is needed to focus serious Congressional and media attention on an issue that already is of crucial importance to us all.

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Sally Griffin Lookout

Snipped.  I suppose Rick Block and the new one that took Sally's place are going to have to pay her debts BUT if Sally is working in a position where she can pay up, she will.  So, if anyone locates her, please let me know. 

I don't know who's still working in the trust department but if Bill Smith is still there and you have a problem, call him.  (Chrissy wasn't bad either.  Sally ordered her to treat me like a felon and she did as she was told.  If Sally isn't there to order her to be nasty then maybe she'll treat people with decency?)  But Bill has always been a perfect gentleman honestly and is probably breathing easier now that he's not walking on eggshells anymore.  (I never could understand why employers hire women that are such high maintenance?  I mean, the best part of being a woman is our ability to care for others and it's not like Sally couldn't take care of anyone either, it just wasn't her clientele or whom she worked with or for.) 

So, if you have a problem, call Bill Smith - it's useless and pointless to go any higher than this gentleman (I've tried) and if he can't help you, I will let you know what you can do about this bank in a few weeks.

There is someone affiliated with the bank who's an Internet Attorney.  I've been obsessed with this gentleman for more than two years (and I won't publish his name to protect the innocent).  He published an article that I can't seem to get my hands on because every time I click the link, it's broken.  (I think I could purchase it but I'm afraid he'll disappoint me just like everyone else.)  He's got all the answers to this Internet nonsense and I love to pick his brain for about ten minutes, maybe longer.  People don't publish things on the Internet because they're malicious in their intent and this gentleman knows it.  They have nowhere else to turn.  He's got the answer to my problem and I don't know why he doesn't implement the solution for me (and so many others) at Devon Bank?  (I wouldn't need to do this but it's gone beyond the Internet now and even I can't contain it anymore.)  But I have a page for him - Heirs of Devon Bank.  His inheritance was also put in the hands of Rick Block and Sally Griffin and I wonder how he feels about that?  They took advantage of his parents too and I wonder if he feels confident that his "money is safe?"  Two employees on a power trip hurt so many people.  When will it end?  How will it end?

I'm working on it.