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FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
STATE REGULATORS SCRUTINIZE ANNUITY
SCAMS Stranger Originated/Owned
Annuities Subject of Public Hearing
WASHINGTON, D.C. (May 20, 2010) — The National
Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) held a public hearing
today on the emergence of Stranger Originated/Owned Annuities. The
hearing, hosted by the NAIC Life Insurance and Annuities Committee,
focused on the suspect practice of targeting seniors and terminally
ill patients by inducing them to purchase an annuity largely for the
benefit of investors or intermediaries.
Robert Mizzoni, an 83-year old man from Cranston, Rhode Island,
told regulators how he and his wife were victims of an annuity
scam. Federal prosecutors are currently investigating a Rhode
Island attorney who placed ads in church newspapers offering immediate
cash to individuals with terminal illnesses. The attorney’s
goal was to take advantage of the death benefit built into many
variable annuities.
“These scams are like cockroaches. For every one you see, there
are most likely hundreds in hiding,” said Thomas R. Sullivan, Chair
of the NAIC Life Insurance and Annuities Committee and Connecticut
Insurance Commissioner. “Unfortunately, there is no way of knowing
the full magnitude of this problem, but regulators are taking a
diligent look at the conditions surrounding these sales and
practices.”
Other consumers, state regulators and industry representatives
provided testimony during the hearing, which focused on the
following issues: 1) whether these transactions are lawful; 2) how
these transactions affect insurable interest; 3) whether current
laws and regulations provide adequate consumer protections with
regard to these transactions; and 4) if not, whether current laws
and regulations need to be revised or new laws and regulations
developed.
"This public hearing was an important opportunity to closely
examine the conditions of these practices," said Adam Hamm, Vice
Chair of the Committee and North Dakota Insurance Commissioner. "It
is apparent further safeguards are needed to protect consumers from
unscrupulous practices." |