Michael Jackson Estate Sues The Walt Disney Company

TMZ:  “The people who manage Michael Jackson's estate say The Walt Disney Co. has some nerve for profiting off the tears of MJ's kids and stealing a bunch of its property … all to make a shoddy TV special they claim never came close to documenting Michael's ‘Last Days.' The estate just sued The Walt Disney Co. claiming copyright infringement and saying it never had permission to use a bunch of its footage for its “The Last Days of Michael Jackson” TV special … which premiered last week to more than 5.5 million viewers.”

Woman accused of cheating trustees, spending their money on Vegas gambling trip

The Sacramento Bee:  A Sacramento woman is accused of cheating beneficiaries of a trust and using some of the money to gamble in Las Vegas, authorities said Wednesday. A federal grand jury returned an eight-count indictment against Loretta Darlene Stewart-Cabrera on April 26 charging her with mail fraud, wire fraud and money laundering, U.S. Attorney McGregor W. Scott announced.

2018-06-04T11:08:33-07:00June 6th, 2018|Beneficiaries, Estate Planning, Trusts|

Warren Buffett’s Advice On How To Raise Well-Adjusted Heirs

Forbes:  “At the Forbes 400 Summit on Philanthropy in San Francisco on Wednesday, billionaire investor and philanthropist Warren Buffett took to the stage to discuss his lifetime of giving. The Oracle of Omaha, who will turn 88 in August, pointed out his own longevity–“I have lived for more than a third of the life of this country”–and discussed how his three children may carry on his philanthropic legacy. “Every single share of Berkshire I own will be diverted into philanthropy 10 years after my estate is executed for future philanthropists who can see future needs,” Buffett told conference attendees. “I might be able to think outside the box, but when the box is 6 feet under, I’m not so sure.”  His remarks contained some valuable advice–wisdom picked up in the course of his nearly nine decades.”

2018-06-04T10:28:08-07:00June 5th, 2018|Beneficiaries, Estate Planning, Rich & Famous|

10 Estate Planning Tips for Families with Beneficiaries with Special Needs

Schiff Hardin:  “Life is more complicated for families who have a loved one with a disability. From finding the right medical professionals and the right schools or other programs, to obtaining necessary therapies and services, people with disabilities face additional steps, extra time, and a need for specialized knowledge at every stage of life. In addition to facing these stresses, families may receive misinformation, which makes decision-making more difficult. While the development of an estate plan can be difficult for any family, for a family of a person with a disability, the planning, as with all things, has added complexity. Primary caretakers of a loved one with a disability routinely wonder who will care for, love, and financially support their family member when they are gone.”

2018-05-07T15:00:27-07:00May 10th, 2018|Beneficiaries, Estate Planning, Special Needs Trusts|

Student, 21, Flushed Her ‘Emotional Support’ HAMSTER Pebbles Down the Toilet and Drowned It After Spirit Airlines Banned It from Traveling with Her (and Now She’s Suing)

DailyMail: “A student who flushed her hamster down the toilet when Spirit told her she couldn't fly home with it, is now attempting to sue the airline for causing emotional distress. Belen Aldecosea claims she didn't have any other options but to kill her pet Pebbles rather than miss her flight back to Fort Lauderdale, Florida, in November after staff informed her that rodents were not allowed aboard.”

 

What’s Going to Happen to Ikea Founder’s Billions?

Bloomberg: When Ikea’s Ingvar Kamprad died Saturday at age 91, he was ranked No. 8 on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index thanks to his control of a global retail fortune valued at $58.7 billion. His wealth will now be dissipated because of a unique structure put in place by Kamprad to secure the long-term independence and survival of the Ikea concept. Kamprad disputed his status as one of the richest men on the planet, having decades earlier placed control of the world’s largest furniture seller into a network of foundations and holding companies.”

2018-02-12T13:56:12-08:00February 13th, 2018|Beneficiaries, Estate Planning, Rich & Famous, Trusts, Wills|

Estate Planning Opportunities and Considerations Beginning in 2018

Schulte Roth & Zabel LLP:  “An Act to Provide for Reconciliation Pursuant to Titles II and V of the Concurrent Resolution on the Budget for Fiscal Year 2018” (“Act”) was enacted in December 2017 and implements a wide range of changes to existing tax laws. The Act temporarily increases (from Jan. 1, 2018 until Dec. 31, 2025) the federal estate, gift and GST tax exemption amounts from $5.6 million to approximately $11.2 million.”

An Estate Planning Checklist to Facilitate Wealth Transfer

Studies have shown that 70% of family wealth is lost by the end of the second generation and 90% by the end of the third.

Help your loved ones avoid becoming one of these statistics. You need to educate and update your heirs about your wealth transfer goals and the plan you have put in place to achieve these goals.

What Must You Communicate to Future Generations to Facilitate Transfer of Your Wealth?

You must communicate the following information to your family to ensure that they will have the information they need during a difficult time:

  • Net worth statement, or at the very minimum a broad overview of your wealth
  • Final wishes – burial or cremation, memorial services
  • Estate planning documents that have been created and what purpose they serve:
    • Durable Power of Attorney, Health Care Directive, Living Will – property management; avoiding guardianship; clarifying wishes regarding life-sustaining procedures
    • Revocable Living Trust – avoiding guardianship; keeping final wishes private; avoiding probate; minimizing delays, costs and bureaucracy
    • Last Will and Testament – a catch-all for assets not transferred into your Revocable Living Trust prior to death, or the primary means to transfer your wealth if you are not using a Revocable Living Trust
    • Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust – removing life insurance from your taxable estate; providing immediate access to cash
    • Advanced Estate Planning – protecting assets from creditors, predators, outside influences, and ex-spouses; charitable giving; minimizing taxes; creating dynasty trusts
  • Who will be in charge if you become incapacitated or die – agent named in your Durable Power of Attorney and Health Care Directive; successor trustee of your Revocable Living Trust and other trusts you’ve created; personal representative named in your will
    2016-12-13T20:33:27-08:00November 18th, 2014|Beneficiaries, Estate Planning, Gifts, Probate, Trusts, Wills|

    Do You Need An Estate To Create An Estate Plan?

    Forbes:  “When I would tell people that I was working on a book about estate planning, many of them looked at me quizzically because they weren’t sure what I meant. Others said, “Oh, that’s not something I need, because I don’t have an estate.”

    Contrary to popular misconception, you don’t have to own a big house to have an estate. Your estate consists of everything you own when you die, including your home, personal property, investments, bank accounts, retirement plans and any interests in a family business or partnership. Beneficiary designation forms control who gets retirement accounts, along with life insurance proceeds. For most other assets, you need a will or living trust that says who gets your stuff.”

    2016-12-13T20:33:28-08:00July 11th, 2012|Beneficiaries, Estate Planning, FAQ, Trusts, Wills|

    I Got A Divorce. What Should I Do With My Estate Plan?

    Question:  I was recently divorced, but my estate plan names my former spouse in a few places.  What should I do?

    Answer:  Revise your estate plan!  You should always think about updating your estate plan when a major life event happens.  Divorce or legal separation from your spouse is one of these events.  There are probably a number of places in your current estate plan that name your former spouse.  These are the areas that you should consider updating:

    • Incapacity planning.  Who did you name as your agent under your healthcare power of attorney or financial power of attorney?  If you were to become incapacitated, your current estate plan probably says that your spouse should make all of your healthcare decisions and should have the ability to access your finances and make financial decisions.  Since you probably do not want your former spouse to make these decisions for you, consider changing your healthcare agent and financial agent to someone like a trusted friend or family member.
    • Inheritance planning.  Your current estate plan probably states that if something were to happen to you, all of your assets should go to your former spouse.  After a divorce, you probably don't want your former spouse to inherit everything.  As such, you should change the primary beneficiary of your will or trust.
    • Life insurance.  Your current life insurance policy might name your former spouse as the beneficiary of that policy.  Talk to your life insurance company about updating the beneficiary designations on the policy.  Another life insurance issue could arise if your divorce settlement requires you to maintain life insurance for your children. If so, you should consider creating an irrevocable life insurance […]

    California Recognizes Tort of Intentional Interference with Expected Inheritance

    California has finally joined the majority of states and recognized the tort of intentional interference with expected inheritance (“IIEI”).  This adoption was done by the California Court of Appeals based on the fact that the IIEI claim is consistent with other California laws, the fact that of the 42 states that have considered adopting an IIEI claim, 25 states have adopted the claim, that the US Supreme Court has called IIEI as “widely recognized” tort, and other public policy considerations.

    The ruling came out of the California Court of Appeals for the Fourth Appellate District, after the deceased's longtime partner was denied any inheritance by the California probate court.  Brent Beckwith was in a committed relationship for nearly 10 years with partner Marc Christian MacGinnis.  MacGinnis had no living family members other than his sister, Susan Dahl.  But MacGinnis was estranged from his sister.

    At one point, MacGinnis showed Beckwith a will on his computer that divided his $1 million plus estate between Beckwith and Dahl.  MacGinnis never signed the will.  MacGinnis wanted to print and sign the will, but was never able to do so.  MacGinnis later fell ill.  He asked Beckwith to print the will.  When Beckwith couldn't locate the will, MacGinnis asked Beckwith to prepare a new will, based on the distribution plan MacGinnis had already discussed with Beckwith.  When Beckwith called Dahl to discuss the will, Dahl claimed that she had friends who were attorneys and she would have them draft a trust for MacGinnis, which she claimed was more appropriate for her brother.   She told Beckwith not to give the new will to MacGinnis for signing.  A few days later, MacGinnis went in for surgery.  […]

    Be Sure To Update Your Beneficiary Designations

     JD Supra:  “Beneficiary designations are forms that are routinely completed for life insurance policies, retirement accounts and even some bank and investment accounts. The forms say who will receive the asset upon the asset owner’s death. When a beneficiary designation is in place, it generally controls the disposition of the asset it is associated with, regardless of what one’s will or other estate planning document says. As part of a periodic review of your estate plan, it is vitally important to review all of your beneficiary designations. This is particularly important when facing major life events such as divorce, the death of a beneficiary, birth of a child, or the marriage of a beneficiary to a less-than-desirable spouse. While Pennsylvania law does provide some protection in this area, as a practical matter insurance companies and retirement plan administrators are extremely reluctant to pay benefits to anyone other than the individual or individuals named on the beneficiary designation.”

    2012-06-06T11:39:46-07:00June 6th, 2012|Beneficiaries|

    Don’t Forget The Beneficiary of Your Life Insurance Policy

    LD News:  “A frequently overlooked aspect of estate planning is giving full consideration to beneficiary designations on life-insurance policies you possess.

    It is important to keep in mind that if you prepare a will, the will does not usually control the distribution of your life-insurance proceeds. Therefore, when you are making or revising your will, equal attention should be given to your life-insurance beneficiary designations.

    Frequently, an individual will change his will but entirely overlook his life-insurance beneficiary designations. This problem is made worse by the fact that life-insurance proceeds occasionally have a greater value than the estate assets that are being distributed by the person's will.”

    2017-10-07T11:14:46-07:00April 9th, 2012|Beneficiaries, Life Insurance, Wills|

    The Story of Disinherited Heirs

    Vitals on MSNBC:  “Some do it with malice. Others, through a misguided notion that money or family heirlooms don't really matter to the person. Whatever the reason, the plight of the disinherited — or those who may be cut out of the family wealth in the future –has been highlighted by a bitter legal battle between Australia’s “richest mom,” Gina Rinehart, and her three children.

    The billionaire says it would be in the “best interests of the beneficiaries to force them to go to work” rather than let them inherit her mining empire.

    Then there's Mary Beth Caschetta, whose father cut her out of his will in dramatic movie star style.

    “There was a line in my father's will similar to what Joan Crawford used when she disinherited her daughter,” says the 45-year-old medical writer and author from Massachusetts. “‘I leave no bequest to my daughter for reasons known to her.'”

    Designating The Right Beneficiary Is Critical

    Times-Herald Record:  In elder law estate planning, we often think of trusts, wills, powers of attorney, health-care proxies and living wills as documents and tools to express our wishes in the event of disability or death.

    One other very important facet of planning is the “beneficiary designation,” a contractual document that directs where an asset goes when you pass away. Most commonly, we see beneficiary designations for life insurance policies, annuities and IRAs and other qualified plans. A proper plan includes careful decision-making regarding the beneficiary, with broad-ranging effects on keeping assets in the bloodline and protecting assets from creditors and nursing home costs.

    Inheritance trusts

    Inheritance trusts are an increasingly popular way to keeps assets in the bloodline and protect your inheritance to your children from the children's creditors, including divorcing spouses. However, if your assets are held substantially in qualified plans, the contingent beneficiary designation on those accounts should be changed to the children's inheritance trusts, rather than to the children as individuals.

    When the first spouse dies, the asset passes to the surviving spouse, and when the second spouse passes away, the assets go to the inheritance trusts. In this way, the children can only leave the qualified plan to your grandchildren or your other children. On the other hand, if you name your children as individuals as the contingent beneficiaries, your children can pass your hard-earned money to a spouse or other non-blood beneficiary.

    Read the rest of this article here.

    2011-12-16T13:20:58-08:00December 16th, 2011|Beneficiaries|

    5 Big Estate Planning Mistakes You Don’t Want To Make

    Forbers:  Applying Murphy’s Law, “If anything can go wrong, it will,” to estate planning is crucial because in this case when something does go wrong, it goes very wrong and you aren’t around to fix it. Murphy’s Law at first glance appears to be overly pessimistic but the original intention of Capt. Edward A. Murphy wasn’t to depress anyone; it was to have a successful outcome. Edward Murphy was an engineer who was involved in the U.S. Army Air Force Aero Medical Laboratory’s project MX-981. Project MX-981 was designed to test the effects of deceleration forces of high magnitude on the human body. When a technician wired all of the strain gauges backwards, Capt. Murphy was heard muttering his famous phrase and the rest is history. Since they assumed mistakes were being made and things would go wrong, the attention to detail was heightened and the inevitable errors were caught. When asked during a press conference how it was that nobody had been severely injured during the tests, Dr. John Stapp credited Murphy’s Law, indicating that it was important to consider all the possible things that could go wrong before conducting a test, and then counteracting them.

    A few years ago, I was going to give a financial education workshop to a group of petroleum engineers near Bakersfield, California and I happened to meet someone on the airplane who regularly presented to engineers. He gave me some advice to challenge them to find something wrong in the workshop—a statistic or a calculation with an incorrect formula, something like that. First of all, my flight companion mentioned, they are doing that anyways, but when they don’t find something, credibility instantly increases, and if […]

    Common Estate Planning Mistakes And How To Avoid Them

    Online Athens:  I want to highlight some of the most common estate planning mistakes I think people routinely make (knowing that I can’t possibly cover them all in one column). You will notice that I’m not going to discuss the estate tax beyond saying that very few people are subject to it and that it can be effectively managed by an attorney and financial planner with expertise.

    In my experience, No. 1 and No. 3 are the root causes of the other issues.

    1. Failure to plan: I am constantly surprised to see how many people do not have basic estate planning documents in place. The statistics consistently say more than 50 percent of Americans do not have a will, so if you happen to have one, the odds are that one of your neighbors does not.

    Estate planning is another one of those areas in financial planning that plays to our desire to procrastinate. The only immediate payoff we have to getting the core documents in place is to quiet that inner voice that constantly says, “I need to take care of this.”

    With proper planning, many negative consequences such as not passing your assets as you wish, strained family relationships and even a lawsuit can be avoided.

    Simply stated, dying without a will is easy, but picking up the pieces afterward is not. On the other hand, getting a basic will in place should not be complicated.

    Preparing Your Finances For Death

    US News & World Report: Preparing your finances for your death is a topic many don't want to talk about. Death is inevitable, however, and if you don't take the time to plan, your wishes (and your family's financial security) could be at risk.

    Everyone should make a few preparations to ensure that decisions are made with the right frame of mind and not out of emotion or grief. Creating a will, naming an executor, and considering your estate are all extremely important. In addition, talk to your family about the following four topics:

    2017-10-07T11:14:45-07:00September 23rd, 2011|Beneficiaries, Estate Planning|
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