EPISODE 32 ~ FIND YOURS: Unclaimed Funds: Find The Lost Life Insurance Policies Left Behind By Your Loved Ones

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This time I want to talk about lost life insurance policies left behind by loved ones who have passed on.  People often tell me there’s no way THEY would have unclaimed money waiting for them because they are way too anal and organized to have left money lying around out there somewhere.  And I always counter with the fact that if not you, then maybe a relative left money behind that you don’t know about.  That’s exactly what happened to my next guest.  Her name is Kerry Armstrong and she has quite a story.

So many people fail to ever search, so I have to ask: what prompted you to conduct an unclaimed money search?

My father passed away in 2013 and in dealing with his estate, I went on line to check to see if he had any unclaimed bank accounts or whatnot that I did not know about. 

Where did you do your searching?  Any particular website or state?

I searched using just the last name Armstrong, in the few states where my parents had lived: Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts and New York. I believe the Dept of Treasury in each state now has a link on their website to the unclaimed assets division. I know there are services that will search for a fee, also, but I can’t see why you’d pay anyone, it’s very easy.  There is also a non government search engine that will search all the state lists for no fee or anything (Missingmoney.com) and I think I may have used that also when poking around. 

Were you looking for anything in particular?  Or searching just in case?

No, I really wasn’t aware of anything in particular that was left unclaimed, but my father was 87 when he died and he had a lot of relatives and for most of his life, there was no digital anything – it was all on paper – so you never know.

You found an account that belonged to an ancestor.  Who was it and did you know this relative when they were alive?

What turned up was my grandfather’s name, Joseph R Armstrong, with his street address (35 Academy Avenue) but in Narragansett RI, not Providence.  My grandfather died in 1935 when my Dad was 9 years old. He was a detective on the Providence Police force, and he was only 44 when he died.  I never knew him or my grandmother who died in 1925 a few months after my father was born. So this was all sort of poignant to me. We had nothing of his or my grandmother and knew very little about them.  Anyways, I thought it was too big a coincidence, so I called the Unclaimed Assets Division. They just that it was a life insurance policy but the owner lived in Narragansett.  I had googled it, and found that there was NO Academy Avenue in Narragansett, so I was pretty sure it was a mistake. They referred me to Metlife who had sent them the claim originally.

I got into a little argument over the incorrect address in their system (Narragansett vs Providence). I let them that there was no such street in Narragansett and my grandfather had the exact same birth date as the Joseph R Armstrong in their system. The first person I spoke to at Metlife was pretty defensive. She told me it was my grandfather’s fault for putting down the wrong city when he bought the policy. I didn’t know the man, but who the heck gets their own town name wrong – especially on an insurance policy?     

Did Metlife come around?

After providing his birth date, Metlife agreed that it was indeed his policy that he purchased in 1914, which was when he moved to Texas to work on the Oil fields. I guess he was worried about his parents, because he was not married at the time and was fairly young. Anyhow, he stopped paying the policy in the Fall of 1929, which also really struck me, because, of course, that was the start of the great depression, and I’m sure he was hit hard. My father used to tell us stories about burning their furniture for heat one winter and people coming to their back door for food. It was really something we can’t imagine today.  

Any idea how the life insurance policy went missing in the first place?

He passed away 6 years later in 1935 and I suppose he thought that since he stopped paying his premiums, the policy was worthless.  That’s the only reason I can think of that he would not have told his second wife or family,  because for sure they could have used the money, or maybe he just forgot about it. The strange thing is that I have searched our surname before, in 2003 when my mother died and this policy was not listed. I asked the RI Unclaimed Assets Division and they said that it has only recently been turned over by Metlife, but Metlife shows in their records that the file was given to RI Unclaimed Assets in 1993, so I have no idea why that happened that way.  I suppose the fact that it listed Narragansett RI as his home maybe why they could never find his family. It appears to have been a clerical error.

1935… this money had been missing a long time.  What does it take to claim such an old account?

I had to provide a copy of my drivers license and a copy of my grandfather’s death certificate and a copy of my father’s death certificate.  To get my grandfather’s Death Certificate, I wrote away to the RI Dept of Records, and I think that cost 10 dollars. They mailed it to me within a few weeks. 

You have to be the rightful heir or executor to claim an ancestor’s unclaimed money, right?

Yes. In the end I had Metlife divide the money into 12 separate checks and mailed one to each one of my grandfather’s grandchildren. Even though we never knew him, I thought it was sort of touching that all these years later, he had left something.   Interestingly, Metlife told me that after a certain amount of time, if the children of the person have died, anyone of the grandchildren or other descendants can make the claim and can be the sole heir. They are not required to alert others or share the proceeds.

Did you run into any problems getting what you were due?

There was the matter of interest. I think different states have different laws about it, and I had no idea what the law was, but I felt that the amount they listed should include interest since they’d been holding it (and had not for some reason sent it to RI unclaimed assets) for 78 years. I called Metlife a few times about this, and each time got a different representative who all told me no, sorry that’s it.  I didn’t think that wasn’t right, so I called the Insurance Commissioner for the State of Rhode Island and the attorneys there were super.  They told me that RI state law required that the Insurance company pay interest on that money (which i learned was not entirely true – see below). Now, there’s interest, and there’s compounded interest, so this was interesting to me. If compounded, it would have been significantly more money because interest ON interest over 78 years adds up fast. But in the end, at least in the state of RI, it’s straight interest, not compounded. 

Wow, did you win and get Metlife to pay the interest?

The RI insurance Commissioner’s office contacted Metlife and then they were VERY nice about paying interest, nicer than they had to be quite honestly.  Because, in the end, in a formal letter, they explained the regulations for paying out “delayed settlement interest” differ from state to state and the insurance regulation in RI stipulates that Insurance companies only have to pay delayed settlement interest if it’s required by the state where the payee resides, the state that the policy was purchased and the state where the insured resided at the time of death.   So the law is a little complicated, but 6 of my cousins still live in RI and the rest of us live in different states, so Metlife was nice about it and agreed to just pay the 9% interest based on RI state law as if all of us lived in RI. Interestingly, the Insurance regulations in MD where I live only require companies to pay out delayed settlement interest if the policy was issued in MD which seems whacky to me honestly.

Does this type of sleuthing and fighting for your rights come naturally to you?  Or was it a stretch?

Yes I guess it does, but it doesn’t always pay off!  But I am a commercial mortgage underwriter by trade and so I have learned to dig and dig some more if something doesn’t seem right. 

OK, tell me the original value of the unclaimed life insurance you found?

$59.27 !

And how much money did the interest add on top of that?

$372.49, or $431.76 total. Divided 12 ways, we each received a check for $37.79

What have you and your family used the money for?

I don’t actually know what my siblings or cousins did with the money, and it wasn’t actually that much of course. I used the money in part to go out to dinner with my daughter. It seemed like a nice thing to do.

Any words of encouragement to people who have thought of searching for unclaimed money belonging to their ancestors, but who haven’t pulled themselves together to go for it?

Oh it’s so easy if you have access to a computer.  I am not a professional or anything, but it takes a few minutes and it’s free and if you cast a wide net, you never know whose names will pop up or what stories you’ll learn from it. 

Kerry Armstrong, unclaimed money recipient, thank you so much for sharing your inspiring story on Easy Money!

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EPISODE 31 ~ FIND YOURS: Local Governments: Check Out This Town That’s Helping Citizens Find Their Missing Money

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Let’s talk about our find yours topic for today: local governments that are doing a good job of letting people know about their unclaimed money.

Because, after all, it’s YOUR money, not their money.  Some governments have tried to shorten the amount of time until an account is considered unclaimed to just ONE year, so that banks and brokerages have to turn the money over to them and they can USE it!  Booo!  Other have tried to pass laws saying that if citizens don’t claim their money within 10 years, the state gets to keep it.  Double boo!

So, I think it’s a good idea to tip our hats to the good guys that are doing all they can to help reunite YOU with YOUR money.  I’m going to do this every so often on Easy Money.  This time I want to highlight the City of Lake Forest, California.  Lake Forest put a page front and center on its own website where its residents can search for unclaimed money held by the State of California, which hasn’t always been so good about returning peoples’ money. 

Lake Forest citizens AND businesses can search on this new page by using an interactive map or searching by name and address.  If they find something, they can click a link right there and then to claim their money.

Now THAT’s easy unclaimed money.  

  Kudos, Lake Forest!

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EPISODE 30 ~ FIND YOURS: Unclaimed Money: Discover Where Missing Money Holds Big Accounts

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The average unclaimed money claim is 800-something dollars, according to the National Association of Unclaimed Money Administrators, which is nice.  But there are MUCH bigger unclaimed money accounts out there and REAL people DO benefit from them.  I want YOU to be next! 

Here’s some inspiration:

•The state of Vermont has unclaimed money for more than 400-thousand people and one of those accounts is worth $684,098!

•A Kansas TV station teamed up with the Kansas State Treasurer to get the word out about unclaimed money and in just 6 hours, they were able to return $31,000 to a family that had no idea the money was sitting out there waiting for them.

•The State of Virginia is holding more than 2-billion dollars worth of unclaimed money and recently returned a 6-figure sum to a home owner’s association.  Apparently a past board member invested in CDs for the association, then moved away without leaving good records for his successors.  Now the money is back where it belongs.

•And one more: The state of West Virginia returned $290,353.15 to a 90-year-old woman named Louise a few weeks ago.  The money was from stocks her late husband had owned.

So how about you?  Could there be a BIG unclaimed money account languishing out there in your name?  Go to the free websites missing money.com or unclaimed.org —that second one is dot org— to find out.  And PLEASE, let me know if you find something so other journalists can do stories about how the Easy Money Podcast found somebody big money!

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EPISODE 28 ~ FIND YOURS: SEC: Claim Your Missing Money From The Security and Exchange Commission

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The SEC or Securities and Exchange Commission may have unclaimed money for you.

The SEC goes after companies that have done investors wrong and sometimes orders those companies to pay fines and fees.  If the SEC decides some or all of that money should go back to investors, you could be eligible.  The SEC created a page on its website that lists cases where so-called “Fair Funds” are available.  “Fair Funds” is SEC lingo for money for consumers.

  When I checked there were probably a couple hundred cases on the list.  Some of the money is coming from big names like Ameriprise Financial, Bank of America, Bankrate, Citigroup, Credit Suisse, UBS and Wells Fargo. 

I will tell you that the SEC website is not nearly as user-friendly as some other unclaimed money sites.  So here’s what to look for once you click on a case.  You’ll see a list of actions  the SEC has taken.  Look for the one that says something like “Order Directing Disbursement of Fair Fund.”

Hey, it’s a little more work than some, but it could be a lot more money!  Your claim will be based on how much money you had invested.  Every case is different and the amounts of money available will vary too.

And on future shows I will tell you how to search for unclaimed investment refunds created by private class actions and how to locate money lost when an investment broker-dealer goes out of business.

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EPISODE 27~ FIND YOURS: Missing Wages: Discover Your Hard Earned Money From Previous Jobs

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If you think you may be owed back wages from your employer, search the Wage and Hour Division, also known as the WHD —not to be confused with WMD. Much nicer, actually! The Wage and Hour Division has a database of workers who have money waiting to be claimed. WHD is a part of the U.S. Department of Labor. It’s the department that enforces many of our nation’s labor laws. When WHD find violations, it often recovers unpaid wages on behalf of employees. The agency tries to locate all employees due back wages and give them the good news. But when it can’t find an employee, WHD holds their back wages for three years. After three years, if the agency still can’t find you, it is required to send the money to the U.S. Treasury. That’s why it’s important to search now! This free money disappears! I checked out the database and you start your search by entering your employer’s name, not your name. I suggest searching every version of your employer’s name. For example, I would search ABC news, where I used to work, but also Disney, because it owns ABC. If a list of companies or subsidiaries pops up and yours is on the list, then you enter your first initial and last name to see if the WHD has money waiting for you! Finally, if you find something, you can start the claims process right online. THIS is government working for the people like it should. I hope it works for YOU.

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EPISODE 26 ~ FIND YOURS: Class Action Lawsuits: Qualify For Lawsuits To Discover Your Unclaimed Money

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Every day, lawyers settle class action lawsuits on behalf of consumers.  With so many settlements out there, chances are you have purchased products that weren’t all they promised to be, somebody sued, and you could be due some money back.  Normally, the courts require companies to send eligible consumers letters.  But often they don’t know who their customers are or you toss the letter because it looks like junk mail.  Luckily there’s now a website that tracks class action lawsuits and even allows you to apply for them online.  The site is: TopClassActions.com and it’s free to consumers.  Looking at the site right now, there are tons of interesting cases. 

•For example, you could be eligible for a few dollars if you ever bought Honest Company Dish Soap, which claimed to be free of sodium laurel sulfate.  The plaintiffs say it was NOT free of that chemical and the case is ongoing. 

i•Here’s another one:  Electrolux Home Products Inc. has agreed to settle a class action lawsuit alleging some of its dryers were defective and when lint built up they would catch fire.  ELectrolux has already agreed to pay consumers up to $1,300 if they actually experienced a fire and $350 toward a new dryer if you have not had a fire.

•One more: Homeowners who purchased AZEK decking boards made of PVC could get up to $2,000.  AZEK advertised that the decking required little maintenance and only periodic cleaning.  Consumers say the boards were actually so weak that they weren’t even suitable for outdoor use.

TopClassActions even has a newsletter that lets you know about new lawsuits and settlements each week, so if you don’t see something you’re eligible for right away, you may down the line.  Check it out and claim your money!   Every year, millions of dollars worth of class action money go unclaimed.

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EPISODE 25 ~ FIND YOURS: Bankruptcy: Find Your Unclaimed Money Held By The U.S. Bankruptcy Court

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Let’s say you paid for a wedding dress at a local boutique and that boutique went out of business and declared bankruptcy before you got your dress.  You should be on a list of people owed a refund when a trustee liquidates the store’s assets.  If something like this JUST happened to you, make sure to GET your name on the list of creditors.

But even if you’re on the list, sometimes the money doesn’t make it to you.  There are a couple of typical scenarios, according to LegalZoom.com:

•The court trustee sent you a check but it was undeliverable because you had moved.

•Or you received the check but failed to cash it within 90 days, as required.

So, how do you undo this mishap?  First, search the bankruptcy court’s records for your name.  I will link you to a government website  where you can search many bankruptcy courts across the country.  Bankruptcy courts are federal and you will be looking for the regional District that the company filed in.  For example, The United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York.

  If the bankruptcy happened in the last 5 years, you’ll likely get your money from that bankruptcy court in which the case was filed, because courts typically hold those funds for 5 years.  Simply ask the court what it requires you to do to claim your money.  It varies, but you may have to file an application and prove your identity and address.  And good news: Claiming funds usually does not require a lawyer.

If the bankruptcy occurred more than 5 years ago, the court has probably deposited any leftover funds into the US Treasury.  Fortunately, there is no deadline for filing a request with the treasury.  You can even claim funds owed to your ancestors.  If any deceased relatives owned a business, I strongly suggest searching for them because they’re more likely to have been in this situation.  The court that turned your money over can instruct you in how to claim your missing money from the US Treasury.

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EPISODE 24 ~ FIND YOURS: Unclaimed Property: Buy Other People’s Lost Valuables Cheap

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I’m turning things around and showing you how to bag a bargain because somebody else’s property has become unclaimed property.

Not all unclaimed money is just dollars left in bank accounts.  Sometimes it consists of valuables left in safe deposit boxes.  In fact, most state governments don’t use the term “unclaimed money.”  They call these lost assets “unclaimed property.”  And when they run out of room to store these physical items, they auction them off and hold the proceeds for the rightful owners.  We’re talking jewelry, antiques, silver, baseball cards, rare coins and more. 

This presents another opportunity for YOU.  You may be able to buy unclaimed valuables at auction for a fraction of their actual value.  Just google “unclaimed property auction” and you will get a couple hundred thousand results.  A few are physical auctions, so look for those near you.  But most of these auctions are now conducted online, so you have access to them no matter where you live.  A couple of examples, as I look right now:  The Maryland State Comptroller is selling off jewelry, watches and paper currency. And recently the Illinois State Treasurer was selling souvenirs from the 1893 World’s Fair and gold coins from a Spanish shipwreck.  Seriously!

One note of caution: crooks often try to pass their auctions off as government auctions and sell fake merchandise, so confirm that the auction is for real on the state’s own website.     

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EPISODE 23 ~ FIND YOURS: Foreclosure: Find Out If The Bank Owes You An Overage For Your Home

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I want to talk about a pocket of money that’s small and yet big.  I’m referring to unclaimed money created when somebody loses a home.

  It’s small, because, thankfully, this is a fairly rare occurrence statistically and yet big because real estate is a high-dollar game.

  There are usually two ways that people lose their homes.  The first, of course, is if you get behind on your mortgage and the bank forecloses on the home.  You may think it’s a total loss, but here’s the key: if the bank was able to sell your house for more than you owed in back mortgage payments, that overage belongs to you.  You should check public records of what the house sold for and get in touch with your former lender if it sold for more than you owed.

The second  way to lose your house is if you couldn’t or didn’t pay the property taxes.  In that case someone else may buy what’s called the “tax lien” and take over your house.  It’s shocking but there is a possible silver lining.  If the new owner paid more for the tax lien than you actually owed, then YOU are entitled to that money.  Check with the department of taxation in whichever county or city the house is located.

Given all of the people who struggled in the economic meltdown of 2008 and beyond, there could be a lot of missing money from lost homes out there, so spread the word.

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EPISODE 22 ~ FIND YOURS: Savings Bonds: How To Find Your Family’s Lost Savings Bonds

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At last count, the U.S. Treasury’s Bureau of the Public Debt was holding 44.7 million matured, unredeemed savings bonds worth $16.3 billion dollars that the rightful owners have failed to cash in. One or more of those bonds could belong to your family.
Some definitions: ”Matured” means they have finished earning interest.”Unredeemed” means the owners haven’t cashed them in. When you consider that savings bonds take 20 to 40 years to mature, it’s easy to see how people could forget about them.
I’m sorry to say that finding your family’s unclaimed savings bonds isn’t as easy as it used to be. Until a few months ago you could go to the government’s cleverly named “Treasury Hunt” website and do a search right online. When I launched Easy Money that site was listed as “temporarily down for repairs.” I kept inquiring and checking back and guess what: Now there’s a notice saying that “Treasury Hunt” is no longer available.
Could it be that the government no longer wants to make it easy for YOU to claim YOUR money? After all we have a huge deficit and debt and it wouldn’t hurt the feds to have an extra $16 billion dollars lying around. If this pisses you off, I suggest you complain to your members of congress and senators.
Meanwhile, it IS still possible to find and claim your family’s lost savings bonds. It just takes a more old fashioned effort. To inquire about unclaimed savings bonds, you submit “Fiscal Service Form 1048, Claim for Lost, Stolen, or Destroyed United States Savings Bonds.” I will link you to the form from EasyMoneyShow.com/22.
The form asks for information like bond number, face amount and issue date, but if you don’t have those, I suggest you submit it anyway. The form ALSO asks for the name of the bond owner and their social security number, which is the only information you used to have to provide online. So I’m hoping that the Treasury Department will still be able to find missing bonds using that information.
This may sound like a hassle, but it’s worth it. I helped a Pennsylvania family search for their unclaimed savings bonds. First the Jerry Williams found more than $500 dollars worth of savings bonds in her own name. Then she found more listed for her husband. And then, while I was at their house they found still more savings bonds for her daughter. In all, this one family found about a thousand dollars worth of savings bonds.
I hope that encourages you to try filling out the form. And you should check back every couple of years. The Treasury Department adds another half million bonds to its database EVERY month as they mature!

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