This article is a follow up on our July 30th post titled:Fallen  Soldiers' Families Denied Cash as Insurers Profit - Despicable  Practices by Insurers Allowed to Go On Without Any Government Oversight
It seems even the MSM can't deny the disgusting tactics of Big Insurance! 'It's disgraceful on the part of insurance companies,’ McCain says.
         Why are large life insurance companies profiting from billions  of dollars they hold on behalf of the families of fallen military  service members?      
Bloomberg Markets magazine senior writer David Evans posed that  question in an article in its September issue. The article, which took a  close look at practices at Prudential Financial
 magazine senior writer David Evans posed that  question in an article in its September issue. The article, which took a  close look at practices at Prudential Financial , has sparked sharp  criticism from Cabinet members, reform proposals from U.S. lawmakers,  and a fraud investigation by the New York Attorney General.
, has sparked sharp  criticism from Cabinet members, reform proposals from U.S. lawmakers,  and a fraud investigation by the New York Attorney General. 
The U.S. Veterans Affairs Dept. and the National Association of  Insurance Commissioners say they are reviewing military life insurance  arrangements.
 Dept. and the National Association of  Insurance Commissioners say they are reviewing military life insurance  arrangements. 
"It's disgraceful on the part of insurance companies," Senator John  McCain (R-Ariz.), a onetime prisoner-of-war in Vietnam, said in an  interview on Bloomberg Television. "We'll obviously have to be looking  into it." 
Under scrutiny are so-called retained-asset accounts. More than 100  carriers use the accounts to earn income on $28 billion owed to  beneficiaries. New York-based MetLife, the biggest U.S. life insurer,  retains about $10 billion and was among the carriers subpoenaed by  Andrew Cuomo, the New York Attorney General. 
Many life insurance companies suggest to beneficiaries that as an  alternative to taking a lump-sum payment of death benefits, they leave  the bulk of the policy proceeds with the carriers. 
The accounts were set up for beneficiaries such as Cindy Lohman of  Great Mills, Md. Her 24-year-old son had been killed by a bomb in  Afghanistan. Prudential and the other insurers give the recipients  limited checkbook-like access to the funds and pay modest interest. 
Meanwhile, the  carriers can invest the money, obtaining a far higher return than what  they offer to beneficiaries. Families often receive misleading  guarantees about the safety of the accounts, which are held in corporate  coffers, not in federally insured banks, Bloomberg Markets found. 
A half-dozen members of President Barack Obama's Cabinet sit on an  advisory council overseeing life insurance for military service-members.  The last time the council met, in November, none of the Cabinet members  attended the annual meeting. Aides accustomed to handling the issue for  their agencies go as representatives. 
"The advisory council gets briefed on what's going on, how much money  is going out, how many death benefits," says John Gingrich, chief of  staff for Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki.
 Meanwhile, the carriers can invest the money, obtaining a far higher  return than what they offer to beneficiaries. Families often receive  misleading guarantees about the safety of the accounts, which are held  in corporate coffers, not in federally insured banks, Bloomberg Markets  found. 
A half-dozen members of President Barack Obama's Cabinet sit on an  advisory council overseeing life insurance for military service-members.  The last time the council met, in November, none of the Cabinet members  attended the annual meeting. Aides accustomed to handling the issue for  their agencies go as representatives. 
"The advisory council gets briefed on what's going on, how much money  is going out, how many death benefits," says John Gingrich, chief of  staff for Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki. 
Now, Shinseki and  other Cabinet members have joined a growing number of lawmakers calling  for an overhaul of insurer practices. Representative Debbie Halvorson  (D-Ill.), has proposed a measure to set new rules for insurance  companies that profit from accounts held for dead soldiers and veterans.  
Prudential, based in Newark, N.J., defended retained-asset accounts  as helpful to survivors, especially the loved ones of soldiers. 
"For some families, the account is the difference between earning  interest on a large amount of money and letting it sit idle," company  spokesman Bob DeFillippo told Bloomberg. Prudential follows the law, he  added. 
MetLife spokesman Joseph Madden says his company similarly adheres to  legal requirements. Its customers appreciate its version of  retained-asset accounts, Madden adds. Beneficiaries get "peace of mind  and time to make an informed decision while earning interest in the  interim."
 
 
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