Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Avoiding Sham Trusts and Trust Scams: Part I - Sham Trusts

Legitimate trusts are tools used by qualified estate planners and their clients to achieve certain objectives, including, but certainly not limited to, controlling the disposition of assets, avoiding probate, reducing administration costs, saving estate taxes, and preserving family wealth for future generations. Unfortunately, trusts are often used for improper purposes. Lurking in the shadows are con artists who promote sham trusts and trust scams for their own gain. These con artists rely on the ignorance of the public, and only education and information can prepare you for their pitch.

Sham trusts and trust scams are usually sold at high pressure seminars, by door-to-door salesmen, and on the internet. In some cases, they are recommended by well meaning but poorly informed CPA's, financial advisors, friends, or business acquaintances. The marketing techniques can be persuasive, and are aimed at all classes of people.

What is a Sham Trust?

A sham trust is any trust created for an improper or illegal purpose. For example, "trusts" or "contracts" which purport to avoid, or significantly reduce, all taxes, including all income taxes, for individuals and, in some cases, businesses, are almost always sham trusts. These often use a complex structure that involves the "irrevocable" transfer of your assets to one or more business or trust entities which you control. The promoters claim that the arrangement will significantly reduce or eliminate state and federal income taxes.

Although there are legitimate estate tax objectives that may be accomplished with trust planning, income tax planning is quite a different matter. Generally speaking, someone is going to have to report taxable income, as well as pay income taxes thereon. While there are legitimate credits, deductions, and exemptions available under state and federal law, there is no trust or business entity into which you can convey all of your property and thereby avoid all income taxes. These trusts sometimes come with seductive names. Moreover, when the justification for the trust somehow involves the unconstitutionality of the IRS or of income taxes, you are best advised to seek additional or alternate legal counsel.

Avoiding Sham Trusts and Trust Scams - Part II - Trust Scams


Although trusts are excellent tools used by legitimate professionals to accomplish a variety of worthwhile objectives, there are a wide variety of con artists who prey upon the public using the lure of trust planning. These con artists rely on the ignorance of the public. They generally provide poorly conceived and implemented estate plans, poor service, and often do more harm than good to their customers. These schemes are usually encountered at high pressure seminars.

What is a Trust Scheme?

Several years ago, the Supreme Court for the State of Ohio fined a company and a group of individuals including several attorneys one million dollars for selling unnecessary and potentially damaging legal services to seniors. Several years later, the State of Ohio fined a pre-paid insurance company and a group of attorneys for similarly cheating seniors. The State of Texas is currently investigating a Ponzi scheme in which seniors are alleged to have lost tens of millions of dollars. What these schemes have in common is that each involved the marketing and sale of living trusts.

Living trusts are so advantageous and so readily accepted by the general public that scam artist will often sell a living trust as a front for selling some other illegitimate scheme or investment. Once confidence of the public is attained, the sham artist will sell the client stock in companies that do no exist, unregistered and risky securities, poorly capitalized limited partnership interests, and just about any fraudulent investment or business scheme imaginable. Promising returns that are usually too good to be true, the scam artist assures their clients that the investment is safe. The scam artist is almost never an attorney, and the trust is almost always incidental to their "product." Moreover, the investments that they offer are almost always unwise.

Most Do Not Have Advanced Directives


"Five years after the court fight over allowing Terri Schiavo to die, most Americans still don't draft the legal documents that spell out how far caregivers should go to keep them alive artificially."  This according to an Associated Press article published in the Washington Post.  According to the article:
"Schiavo's life and death captivated the country and fueled conversations about the necessity of the documents, known as advance directives or living wills. Even though millions witnessed a worse-case scenario, there's no indication it had a lasting impact on getting more people to make their wishes known."
"The gap is so big," Paul Malley, president of Aging With Dignity, is quoted as saying.  Aging With Dignity  advocates advance directives and saw an increase in interest during the Schiavo case. "Even a significant impact from the Schiavo case doesn't put a dent in the need that's out there."

Underwriting Ceases on National Flood Insurance


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
FROM THE OHIO DEPARTMENT OF INSURANCE

Monday, March 29, 2010

CONSUMER ADVISORY:

National Flood Insurance Program Not Issuing New Policies

COLUMBUS — Ohio Department of Insurance Director Mary Jo Hudson is advising consumers that the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) ceased issuing new policies or renewing policies to cover flood damage, following the expiration of the program’s federal authorization at midnight March 28, 2010. Congress will not act again on reauthorization legislation until after it returns to session on April 12.

The NFIP sunset could cause short-term problems for consumers waiting to close on the sale of a property within a Special Flood Hazard Area. However, consumers with current policies are still covered by the federal program. Only those seeking to purchase a policy during this time will be affected. Until Congress approves this reauthorization, the NFIP cannot issue new policies, increase coverage or approve renewal policies.

Monday, March 29, 2010

National Healthcare Decisions Day is April 16

National Healthcare Decisions Day is April 16th! On this day, all across the country, health care facilities, health care professionals, chaplains, the legal community, and others will be participating in a collective effort to highlight the importance of making advance health care decisions and to provide tools for decision-making..

Notwithstanding a much higher awareness on the part of individuals and institutions regarding the need for health care decisions planning, implementation by individuals and institutions of plans meeting the need are still rare.   Less than fifty percent of the severely or terminally ill patients  had an advance directive in their medical record, according to a study by the  U.S. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (http://www.ahrq.gov/).   In a 2003 article, “Advance Care Planning: Preferences for Care at the End of Life,” USAHRQ reported that only twelve percent of patients with an advance directive had received input from their physician in its development.  Moreover, between sixty-five and seventy-six percent of physicians whose patients had an advance directive were not aware that it existed

Even when the advanced directive exists, and the physician is aware of its existence, most physicians do not consult with their patients regarding end-of-life issues until treatments have been exhausted, at least according to researchers publishing a report in the journal Cancer, reported last month in this blog (click here).  According to the researchers, most doctors don't talk about end-of-life issues with their cancer patients when those patients are feeling well. Nor do they talk about them until treatments have been exhausted. Those delays might mean patients are unable able to make truly informed choices early in their treatment.

Annuity Tax Remains in Health Care Reform

By Steven A. Morelli, Senior Editor, InsuranceNewsNet

Despite protests from insurance groups, the health care reconciliation act will add a new tax on annuity income to pay for Medicare once the bill becomes law.

Several insurance groups issueda last-minute appeal in a letter to legislators on Wednesday to exempt annuities from the new tax, citing the important growing role annuities are playing in securing retirement. But annuitiesremained in the reconciliation bill the Senate and House passed on Thursday and sent to President Barack Obama to sign.

The 3.8 percent tax applies to investment income from married individuals filing a joint return and surviving spouses with taxable income of at least $250,000; married taxpayers filing separately with an income of $125,000; and other individuals, with an income of $200,000.

The bill lists annuities as investment income. The tax would apply to annuity income that is already taxable (the amount above the annuity owner’s cost basis), starting in 2013. Annuities sold in employer-sponsored retirement plans would be exempt.

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Ohio Increases Annuity Guaranty Coverage

Ohio Department of Insurance Director Mary Jo Hudson has announced that a recent amendment to Ohio insurance law by the Ohio General Assembly has increased The Ohio Life and Health Insurance Guaranty Association’s coverage protection for annuities from $100,000 to $250,000. The change goes into effect on May 26th, 2010.

The new changes to the law (Section 3956.04 of the Ohio Revised Code) will guarantee that consumers who purchase an annuity product may be able to recover up to $250,000 of their policy in the unlikely event that the company they purchased the product from becomes insolvent.

The Ohio Life & Health Insurance Guaranty Association (OLHIGA) is a non-profit association of insurance companies that sell life insurance, health insurance, and annuities in Ohio. It was created by Ohio law to provide some level of protection for certain Ohio policyholders against the insolvency of an insurance company licensed to sell those types of policies in Ohio in the event that the company is placed into liquidation.

Planners' Corner- Health Care Reform and LTCI


The health bill package includes provisions that could impact long term care insurance sales.  President Obama signed into law the giant Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act that the Senate passed early on Christmas Eve, 2009.  The new law includes the Community Living Assistance Services and Supports Act (CLASS).  The CLASS Act is intended to provide a lifetime cash benefit that offers people with disabilities some protection against the costs of paying for long term services and supports, and helps them remain in their homes and communities.  It is a self-funded, insurance program with enrollment for people who are currently employed. Premiums will be paid through payroll deductions if an individual’s employer decides to participate in the program. Participation by workers is entirely voluntary. Self-employed people or those whose employers do not offer the benefit will also be able to join the CLASS program through a government payment mechanism. 

Under CLASS, individuals qualify to receive benefits when they need help with certain activities of daily living, have paid premiums for five years, and have worked at least three of those five years.  Qualified individuals will a receive a lifetime cash benefit based on the degree of impairment, which is expected to average between $50 and $75 a day or more than $27,000 per year.  This benefit can be used to maintain independence at home or in the community, and should be sufficient to cover typical costs of home care services or adult day care. The qualified individual's benefits can also be used to offset the costs of assisted living and nursing home care.

Many experts, including actuaries at the government's own Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, have argued that a combination of relatively rich benefits and the opt-out provision make the program actuarially unsound, by encouraging workers with health problems to flock to the program and healthy young workers to opt out.  Of course, it is possible that the provisions of CLASS will be amended by the reconciliation bill currently under consideration by the Senate.  

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Beware Fake Health Care Plans In Wake of Reform


In the wake of sweeping health care reform, consumers will need to be wary of con artists promoting fraudulent plans and benefits.  State regulators are already struggling to stop fraudulent health insurance plans, a growing problem that has cheated tens of thousands of consumers at a cost of tens of millions of dollars, according to Sean P. Carr, Washington Correspondent in an article published March 23, 2010, by InsuranceNewsNet.com.
According to the article:
Fraudulent plans continue to grow in size and scope. "There's no end in sight," said James Quiggle, communications director for the Coalition Against Insurance Fraud.  A common scam involves plans that promise full health care coverage but deliver worthless policies or lesser products designed to look like comprehensive coverage, said Quiggle, who has studied the issue for years. Consumers may purchase "limited benefit" plans or medical discount cards that often present themselves as providing full insurance coverage -- until the bills come, he said. Such fraudulent plans surged in the early 2000s, Quiggle said. When confronted, companies sometimes claimed they were not subject to state insurance regulation...Regulators knocked many of them out of business in the mid-2000s, he said, but the combined effects of recession, sustained joblessness and increasing numbers of uninsured provided a target-rich environment for their return. The number of people victimized are in the tens of thousands, he said. 

States Attack Community Spouse Income Planning

One of the benefits of an annuity in estate and government benefits planning is the ability to convert assets countable for the purpose of determining Medicaid eligibility, and therefore subject to long term care spend down, to income for a community spouse, that is not countable, and therefore, not subject to spend down. This strategy is particularly comforting to a community spouse, who often is confronted with the task of making limited assets and income last over a lifetime. Given that the community spouse is often a younger female with a much longer life expectancy than the institutional spouse, providing a guaranteed income that the spouse cannot outlive from assets that otherwise would be extinguished by long term care is an important goal for seniors and their families, and the planners representing them.

This technique is not common, and is not without its risks. The community spouse must make an irrevocable decision preferring income over assets the spouse could otherwise spend without limitation. As income, the spouse has comfort in meeting routine obligations, but does not have a large pool of convertible assets as a safety net. The spouse gives up flexibility and liberty to convert a lump sum of assets to whatever purpose the spouse might have. Moreover, the technique means making a decision to prefer taking care of the surviving spouse at the expense of an inheritance for the children. Under the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (DRA), the state must be the beneficiary of any residue upon the death of the community spouse.

Nonetheless, states have waged an aggressive battle in the courts to prevent families from converting assets to income, but have, to date, been largely unsuccessful. The Third Circuit Court of Appeals, for example, recently held that since the annuity payment is payable to the community spouse, it is income and should not be included in the eligibility calculations, regardless of whether it can be sold on the secondary market. Weatherbee v. Richman, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 24939 (2009). See also, Vieth v. Ohio Dep't of Job and Family Servs., 2009 Ohio 3748 (Ohio Ct. App., Franklin County, July 30, 2009) (where community spouse purchased $140,000 annuity, court granted Medicaid benefits to the institutional spouse). But see, N.M. v. DMAHS, 405 N.J. Super. 353 (2009) (annuity is countable for Medicaid purposes if it can be sold in the secondary market).

Now, apparently conceding defeat in the courts, the National Association of State Medicaid Directors (NASMD) has sent a letter to the Center for Medicaid and State Operations (CMS) requesting that the Agency revisit its treatment of community spouse annuities. NASMD seeks to foreclose a family from preferring income for the benefit of a community spouse over assets, the latter of which may be lost in a long term care spend down.The effort, if successful, would reverse years of accepted law and practice. In the 1993 Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (OBRA), Congress delegated the Medicaid treatment of annuities to the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS). 42 U.S.C. § 1396p(d)(6). CMS then exercised that authority in Transmittal 64 to the State Medicaid Manual which contained the Secretary's determination. The treatment was modified somewhat by the DRA, but recent cases have upheld the purchase of DRA compliant annuities by community spouses to protect resources in excess of the default Community Spousal Resource Allowance (CSRA). NASMD now wants CMS to change its rules so that annuities will be treated like trusts which would make them countable and available resources.  More importantly, the change removes from community spouses the opportunity to make assets

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

End-of-Life Care Not to Blame for Increased Costs

In this information age, there certainly seems to be a large amount of misinformation.  One of the more persistent myths, is that the high cost of end-of-life care for the elderly represents a financial threat to the health care system.  According to a recently released study by the International Longevity Center-USA, "Myths of the High Medical Cost of Old Age and Dying," it is simply not true that the aging of Americans and over aggressive care at the end of life are major causes of increasing health care costs in the United States.

According to the report, studies that have looked at the causes of increased health care spending conclude that as little a 5 percent of the increase may be attributed to the aging of the population, the other 90 to 95 percent resulting from other causes.

Many have predicted that the already high cost of caring for seniors will skyrocket in the next tewenty years as the oldest baby boomers start reaching age 85. The new report suggests that this is not necessarily true, particularly if better health care can reduce the prevalence of chronic disability as it has in the past. For example, the incidence of chronic disability among seniors decreased  by 6.5 points over the period between 1982 and 1999.  The mere fact that full recovery from stroke and heart failure is now so prevalent, suggests that mere extrapolation from the past regarding disability or related health care cost is likely to lead to wrong conclusions.

"Today Show" Tells Story of Divorce Resulting from Long Term Care

An emotional segment on a recent Today Show episode featured a wife who divorced her husband after 44 years of marriage in order to protect assets from a a long term illness. Suggesting the divorce, and also appearing on the show, was Massachusetts attorney Hyman Darling, a member of the National Association of Elder Law Attorneys (NAELA).

The husband of "Roberta" (not her real name) was diagnosed with dementia after the couple had been married more than 40 years. When she became unable to care for him at home, Roberta moved her husband to a nursing home and began paying bills of between $7,500 and $8,000 a month. After she had gone through $75,000, her husband's neurologist suggested that she find "a really good lawyer."

Roberta found Darling, an elder law attorney with the firm of Bacon & Wilson, P.C., based in Springfield, Massachusetts. Darling suggested to her that, as a last resort, she could terminate her marriage. This would preserve her remaining assets and allow her husband to quickly qualify for Medicaid coverage of his nursing home care.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Value of Annuities Behind Fed Efforts to Boost Retirement Savings

In January, the Obama administration announced an initiative to promote the availability of annuities in qualified retirement, 401(k), and similar plans. Only 22% of such plans now offer annuities among the options available to plan participants.   While the initiative is not long on details, it is gaining support among senior advisors and advocates.  Making annuities an option in qualified retirement planning would permit more workers to turn some of their nest egg into guaranteed income for life.  The opportunity to insure a lifetime of income is an attribute unique to annuities, and is an attribute uniquely suited for retirement planning.

Simultaneously, a Senate bill that would require your 401(k) to inform you of the projected monthly income you could expect at retirement based on current savings.  Causing investors to focus on the income they can expect from their retirement planning, rather than upon their account balances, is a welcome turn of events.  Investors often pay too much attention to the balances in their retirement plan portfolio, without careful attention to whether that portfolio will sustain them after retirement.  Simply, income is a more relevant basis upon which to plan for retirement.  That is the approach Social Security takes with its annual statements.

The confluence of these events suggests that the government is finally acknowledging the value of income retirement planning, and the value of annuities in securing that income.  As Americans grapple with the challenge of potentially outliving their retirement savings, lifetime income annuities are among the most cost-effective and least risky asset class for generating guaranteed retirement income for life according to numerous studies, perhaps the most prestigious being one co-sponsored by the Wharton Financial Institutions Center at the University of Pennsylvania and New York Life Insurance Company.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Planner's Corner- Beware of Ghostwritten Articles

You've probably received the solicitation, and been tempted to purchase the beautiful book or glossy magazine, with your picture and name on the cover.  The solicitation promises instant credibility, because no client would know that you had nothing to do with writing the book, or that the magazine article is purchased.  These "ghostwritten" marketing efforts promise much, are extremely high quality, and as a result, are tempting.

Beware!  The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) warns that sales representatives for member firms should take care when using ghostwritten books and articles in marketing their services.   A rule established by the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD)  "prohibits false, misleading or exaggerated communications with the public and the omission of material facts or qualifications that would cause a communication to be misleading," FINRA officials write in Regulatory Notice 08-27.   Many of the ghostwritten books, pamphlets and newspaper advice articles may violate that rule and other rules established by the NASD and FINRA's other predecessor organization, the regulatory arm of the New York Stock Exchange, the notice states.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Avoiding Census Fraud

With the U.S. Census process beginning, the Better Business Bureau (BBB) advises that people be cooperative, but cautious, so as not to become victims of fraud or identity theft. The first phase of the 2010 U.S. Census is under way as workers have begun verifying the addresses of households across the country. Eventually, more than 140,000 U.S. Census workers will count every person in the United States and will gather information about every person living at each address including name, age, gender, race, and other relevant data.

The big question is - how do you tell the difference between a U.S. Census worker and a con artist? The BBB offers the following advice:

  • If a U.S. Census worker knocks on your door, they will have a badge, a handheld device, a Census Bureau canvas bag, and a confidentiality notice. Ask to see their identification and their badge before answering their questions. However, you should never invite anyone you don't know into your home.

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