Structured Settlements Information

Unstructured Settlement


Me'Lisa Delaney, 43, is brain-injured as a result of a 1984 medical error that caused a stroke during surgery. The hospital agreed to settle via a structured settlement, as overseen by a county conservatorship.

Delaney soon married Terry, who took over the conservatorship of the settlement and proceeded to make loans against the settlement, which equaled about $350,000. It wasn't long before all the money was gone. According to the civil complaint filed by Me'Lisa, Terry had used the loan money to purchase "controlled substances, illegal drugs, jewelry, liquor and other non-business items." Of course Delaney is suing for 10 million in punitive damages.

A lot of time energy, and effort was put into structuring a settlement in the best interest of Me'Lisa and it was too easily undone. Should we consider making settlements "unstructurable"? There is some concern that "factoring" or "cash out" companies take advantage of customers, taking a large portion of the settlement in exchange for a significantly smaller lump sum.

In Me'Lisa's case it makes sense to put in place more safeguards to protect her rights and interests in her settlement, specifically because she is brain injured. We should look to protect minors, senior citizens, and mentally impaired or injured settlement winners. Everyone else has access to resources and information to help them make the best choices and should be entitled to choose whatever they wish. I personally know of cases where cashing out was life saving, dream fulfilling, and absolutely a positive choice. I am also personally aware of situations where customers have cashed out their settlements and it was absolutely a bad decision. Unstructuring a settlement seems to be a great American Freedom, but it doesn't have to be as morally insipid as what happened in the Delaney case.

Jason Rigler
"Settlement Advocate" and consultant for Prosperity Partners Customer Service Department.


MORE RESOURCES:

Peachtree Increases Credit Facility for Structured Settlement ...
MarketWatch - 20 hours ago
Lori Wengatz, Vice President and the head of Peachtree's structured settlements and annuities purchasing division commented, "This facility increase and ...


Woodbridge Announces Continued Record High Performance In Second ...
PR-USA.net (press release), Bulgaria - Jul 24, 2008
Boca Raton, FL (PRWEB) July 23, 2008 -- Woodbridge Investments, LLC, a leading purchaser of Structured Settlements and Lottery Payments announced today a ...


Structured settlements take away risks of lump-sum payments
Nashua Telegraph, NH - Jun 28, 2008
Structured settlements provide periodic payments over time rather than a lump-sum settlement. "At first blush, it would appear the (people) most likely to ...


Court of Appeal Rejects Bid to Assign Lottery Prize
Metropolitan News-Enterprise, CA - Jul 24, 2008
... a Bethesda, Md.-based company that purchases rights to payment under annuities, structured settlements, judgments for periodic payments, and lottery and ...


Company snoops ex-CEO's Yahoo Mail account, faces lawsuit
Ars Technica, MA - Jun 30, 2008
Sidell was the former CEO of Structured Settlements, which offers people who win lawsuits a single lump sum of cash in exchange for any scheduled payments ...


New service of Income deferral
NewDesignWorld (press release), UK - Jul 24, 2008
Additionally, we have worked with clients using non-qualified structured settlements to defer income from lawsuits that involve taxable awards. ...


State settles lawsuit over Adrian man’s prison death
Adrian Daily Telegram, MI - Jul 7, 2008
Souders’ mother and father are each to receive structured settlements worth nearly $730000. His three brothers are to receive structured settlements of ...


Why So Many Seniors Allow Their Life Insurance to Lapse
MarketWatch - Jul 10, 2008
... is the nation's oldest, largest and most respected buyer of deferred payments for illiquid financial assets like structured settlements, annuities and, ...


Company Argues For Right To Read Ex-Employee's E-Mail
InformationWeek, NY - Jun 29, 2008
How was it possible for Structured Settlements to access Sidell's personal Yahoo account? Sidell said in court papers that he may have left his office ...


A Company Computer and Questions About E-Mail Privacy
New York Times, United States - Jun 27, 2008
John Crossman, a lawyer at Zukerman Gore & Brandeis representing the company, said Structured Settlements had a policy that gave it the right to access its ...

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