United Army Posted August 11, 2010 Posted August 11, 2010 This makes my blood boil...just another case of Corporate Greed and how the insurance companies listed below take advantage of our military veterans after they service their country and die for our freedom.The package arrived at Cindy Lohman’s home in Great Mills, Maryland, just two weeks after she learned that her son, Ryan, a 24-year-old Army sergeant, had been killed by a bomb in Afghanistan. It was a thick, 9-inch-by- 12-inch envelope from Prudential Financial Inc., which handles life insurance for the Department of Veterans Affairs. Inside was a letter from Prudential about Ryan’s $400,000 policy. And there was something else, which looked like a checkbook. The letter told Lohman that the full amount of her payout would be placed in a convenient interest-bearing account, allowing her time to decide how to use the benefit. “You can hold the money in the account for safekeeping for as long as you like,” the letter said. In tiny print, in a disclaimer that Lohman says she didn’t notice, Prudential disclosed that what it called its Alliance Account was not guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., Bloomberg Markets magazine reports in its September issue. Lohman, 52, left the money untouched for six months after her son’s August 2008 death. “It’s like you’re paying me off because my child was killed,” she says. “It was a consolation prize that I didn’t want.” As time went on, she says, she tried to use one of the “checks” to buy a bed, and the salesman rejected it. That happened again this year, she says, when she went to a Target store to purchase a camera on Armed Forces Day, May 15. ‘I’m Shocked’ Lohman, a public health nurse who helps special-needs children, says she had always believed that her son’s life insurance funds were in a bank insured by the FDIC. That money -- like $28 billion in 1 million death-benefit accounts managed by insurers -- wasn’t actually sitting in a bank. It was being held in Prudential’s general corporate account, earning investment income for the insurer. Prudential paid survivors like Lohman 1 percent interest in 2008 on their Alliance Accounts, while it earned a 4.8 percent return on its corporate funds, according to regulatory filings. “I’m shocked,” says Lohman, breaking into tears as she learns how the Alliance Account works. “It’s a betrayal. It saddens me as an American that a company would stoop so low as to make a profit on the death of a soldier. Is there anything lower than that?” Millions of bereaved Americans have unwittingly been placed in the same position by their insurance companies. The practice of issuing what they call “checkbooks” to survivors, instead of paying them lump sums, extends well beyond the military. Touching Americans In the past decade, these so-called retained-asset accounts have become standard operating procedure in an industry that touches virtually every American: There are more than 300 million active life insurance policies in the U.S., and the industry holds $4.6 trillion in assets, according to the American Council of Life Insurers. Insurance companies tell survivors that their money is put in a secure account. Neither Prudential nor MetLife Inc., the largest life insurer in the U.S., segregates death benefits into a separate fund. Newark, New Jersey-based Prudential, the second-largest life insurer, holds payouts in its own general account, according to regulatory filings. New York-based MetLife has told survivors in a standard letter: “To help you through what can be a very difficult, emotional and confusing time, we created a settlement option, the Total Control Account Money Market Option. It is guaranteed by MetLife.” No FDIC Insurance The company’s letter omits that the money is in MetLife’s corporate investment account, isn’t in a bank and has no FDIC insurance. “All guarantees are subject to the financial strength and claims-paying ability of MetLife,” it says. Both MetLife, which handles insurance for nonmilitary federal employees, and Prudential paid 0.5 percent interest in July to survivors of government workers and soldiers. That’s less than half of the rate available at some banks with accounts insured by the FDIC up to $250,000. Bank of New York Mellon Corp. handles the paperwork and monthly statements for customers with MetLife “checking accounts.” The insurance company, not the bank, most recently reported holding about $10 billion in death benefits, in 2008. The “checkbook” system cheats the families of those who die, says Jeffrey Stempel, an insurance law professor at the William S. Boyd School of Law at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, who wrote ‘Stempel on Insurance Contracts’ (Aspen Publishers, 2009). 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jake Posted August 11, 2010 Posted August 11, 2010 The level of greed among fat cats in just unbelievable. The supposedly secured and untouchable accounts representing the veterans somehow ended up in a "general corporate account", which is used to invest for the sole benefit of the insurance company. Could you imagine another meltdown of Wall Street if ALL investments took a nose dive? I could imagine that the funds for the veterans will no longer exist.It wasn't FDIC protected.What can be worse? I could imagine those same fat cats are fired (rightly so)but what really gets my blood boiling is their so called severance package.There is a new 3 letter word now that describes despicable low-lifes: C-E-ORespectfully -- Jake Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jollygoodfellow Posted August 11, 2010 Posted August 11, 2010 I understand what the complaint is here but cant a beneficiary remove the money and put it in their own account as it says the money will be held until they decide what to do with it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
United Army Posted August 11, 2010 Author Posted August 11, 2010 I understand what the complaint is here but cant a beneficiary remove the money and put it in their own account as it says the money will be held until they decide what to do with it. Yes I believe there is, but the insurance companies make it so tuff, its like pulling teeth to get it. Imagine a Filipino wife calling the insurance company asking for her money and she get a strong armed insurance agent who bullies her and does not help her like he should. It should be simple like.. I would like my money and the insurance company should say "what address do I send the check to". Enough with the corporate Greed BS in the US. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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