GMB ladies: After my husband was diagnosed with brain cancer, he cashed out his $700K life insurance

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After my husband was diagnosed with brain cancer, he cashed out his $700K life insurance and emptied his bank accounts
Quentin Fottrell

‘I concentrated on raising our children, and was locked out of our accounts. I never knew where the money was going.’

By Quentin Fottrell, MarketWatch

‘I concentrated on raising our children, and was locked out of our accounts. I never knew where the money was going’


Dear Moneyist,

My husband was diagnosed with brain cancer in 2001. Doctors told us not to bother acquiring long-term health care since he wouldn’t live five years. Hey, we were happy. He could have been hit by a bus. He passed in 2016. I turned out to be his long-term health-care aide.

He was diagnosed with a brain tumor that aggressively mutates. His original biopsy was switched with that of a woman with breast cancer, so he was given the wrong treatment. We sued the hospital, which had a cap for malpractice. We received a settlement of $700,000, and gave 50% to the attorney.

He was diagnosed with an aggressive brain tumor. His biopsy was switched with that of a woman with breast cancer. We sued and won $700,000.

My husband was a high-end hospitality executive, and he asked that I let him continue to manage our bank accounts, because it made him feel like he was still working.

I concentrated on raising our children, and was locked out of our accounts. I never knew where the money was going.

When his health started to noticeably deteriorate, I requested a letter from our doctor stating that it was time for me to become his power of attorney, but I needed two signatures from immediate family members. I didn’t want to ask my children, who had just come of age, so I asked his sister and brothers. They did not respond.

During this time, his mother needed to be moved to a retirement home. Her daughter, my husband’s sister, sold all of her belongings at a garage sale. His mom had been living with his sister’s family, and she provided them with the money to completely renovate their home.

Also see: Can I leave my stepchildren nothing if my husband dies?

My husband’s brothers and sister had 16 children among them. When my husband’s mother passed, we never saw a will. My husband was given money here and there for about a year. Nothing made sense, and I still had no access to my husband’s accounts.

His one activity was constantly checking the mail. One day, I checked the mail before my husband, and found a cancellation notice from John Hancock on his $700,000 life-insurance policy. I tried and failed to reinstate the policy. I called and got two new policies — not for a lot of money — and he died two months before they went into effect.

After he was put into a rehab facility, I was given access to his accounts. All the money was gone — his IRAs, bank accounts and stocks, all of it.

After he was put into a rehab facility, I was given access to his accounts. All the money was gone — his IRAs, bank accounts and stocks, all of it.

I looked at the paper trail, and went back 10 years: $45,000 was taken out month after month. It started just after his mother was placed in the nursing home. There is no tracking number, just the bank statements.

My husband refused to tell me what happened to the money. He blamed the banks.


I contacted an accountant who came out to the house. With my husband sitting next to me, I showed him all of the bank statements and other documents. When my husband was out of the room, the accountant said, “I’m sorry, you need to get a divorce. There is nothing I can do, but I won’t charge you for this.”

My adult children and I are devastated. We have literally lost everything, but we now get notices of my husband’s cousins going on wild vacations. I can’t help but suspect that the two things are connected. What kind of people do this? I don’t know how they can live with themselves.

I have never been able to trace it to anything. I know his mom was put into a nursing home and the dates do coincide for that time, but I have no proof of that. It just seems like his family sucked us dry, and then wrote us off.

I thought maybe it was online gambling, but we had the same credit cards, and I didn’t see any indication of that. I did keep his computer’s server, but really don’t have the money to have someone investigate that. I am so upset about the money, but know realistically that it won’t be recovered.

He even took money from my kids’ college fund. I sold my jewelry to pay for my kids to go to college. My son also used his savings and, much to my chagrin, my daughter took out a student loan without my knowledge.

I thought we had a happy marriage. I felt — and still do feel — like I’m in “ The Twilight Zone.”

What do I do?

Distraught

Dear Distraught,

This is probably the worst kind of betrayal. It was planned years in advance and carried out surreptitiously in plain sight. The only situation that comes close is that of Axton Betz-Hamilton, who never suspected the woman she trusted most was stealing her identity: her own mother. She stole over $500,000 from various institutions in her daughter’s name.

After her mother died, her father found an overdue credit-card statement bearing her name in a box with her birth certificate. Betz-Hamilton told me, “My blood ran cold. It was in a box at my parent’s home and with a P.O. Box as an address that only my mother had access to.” As with your situation, the person who had betrayed her had passed away.

Also see:As a baby boomer, I didn’t grow up with this culture of entitlement — do I have to leave my estate to my children or spouse?

I always suggest people consult a lawyer, but I’m afraid he or she will tell you what you already suspect: It was your husband’s money to do with what he pleased, and he had legal access to these accounts. For some reason, he wanted his origin family to have this money. It was a cruel and unusual decision. Perhaps he felt they had some kind of hold over him. We will never know.

Were there any red flags when you met? What kind of man was he? Was this a happy marriage? What could other people learn from your experience?

Some psychologists say that a person will give away what is most precious to them and/or everything they have if they believe they will receive the validation and/or love they never received as a child. The other explanation is one that Betz-Hamilton believed was the cause of her mother stealing her identity: psychopathy, an inability to feel compassion for others.

What can you do now? Your children seem like fine people. You have one another, and I believe that love and support will see you through the years ahead. You could hire a forensic accountant to see where your husband’s money went, but I suspect that — even if it was siphoned to his siblings and nephews and nieces — it will be almost impossible to get back.

Don’t miss: I discovered through Ancestry.com that my biological father is someone else — can I claim an inheritance as his heir?

“To survive, I have fallen back on my research into identity theft,” Betz-Hamilton told me. “I want to dissect it and understand every dimension of it. It gives me a conceptual framework of what Mom has done financially. That has helped me, instead of processing this on an emotional level.” You could seek out counseling, support groups and/or speak about spousal financial misdeeds.

Were there any red flags when you met? What kind of man was he? Was this a happy marriage? What could other people learn from your experience? Talk to the accountant who went through your files and suggested you get a divorce. What did he see? By examining these questions, you may discover that you, like Betz-Hamilton, can use your experience to help others.

Do you have questions about inheritance, tipping, weddings, family feuds, friends or any tricky issues relating to manners and money? Send them to MarketWatch’s Moneyist and please include the state where you live (no full names will be used).

By submitting your story to Dow Jones & Company, the publisher of MarketWatch, you understand and agree that we may use your story, or versions of it, in all media and platforms, including via third parties.

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Hello there, MarketWatchers. Check out the Moneyist private Facebook group, where we look for answers to life’s thorniest money issues. Readers write in to me with all sorts of dilemmas: inheritance, wills, divorce, tipping, gifting. I often talk to lawyers, accountants, financial advisers and other experts, in addition to offering my own thoughts. I receive more letters than I could ever answer, so I’ll be bringing all of that guidance — including some you might not see in these columns — to this group. Post your questions, tell me what you want to know more about, or weigh in on the latest Moneyist columns.

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YoungSimpson

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1. I feel like she is leaving something out of the story. Most women purposely leave out key details.
:stopitslime:

2. Damn the lawyer took half. I've heard 30% but damn 50?!
:sadcam:

3. Always get a separate policy on your spouse. I have a separate policy on my wife. I know if something happens to her I'll be broken and may need to do some additional balling to help pick up the pieces.
:usure:
 
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Nicole0416_718_929_646212

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1. I feel like she is leaving something out of the story. Most women purposely leave out key details.
:stopitslime:

2. Damn the lawyer took half. I've heard 30% but damn 50?!
:sadcam:

3. Always get a separate policy on your spouse. I have a separate policy on my wife. I know if something happens to her I'll be broken and may need to do some additional balling to help pick up the pieces.
:usure:
that part about the 50% is purely false. Each state has maximum caps sent on how much lawyers can retain for personal injury settlements. I've never seen a lawyer deduct more than 33.3%, most states it is 30% - it can go up to 40%. Never 50%. Usually the larger monetary amounts there are, the less of a contingency fee bc the overall settlement amount means more money for all involved.
 

ORDER_66

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So did she ever get some of the money back considering he took out an insurance policy on himself but isn't dead and stole the marital funds?!:picard: better yet why didn't she track him down and put a bullet in his brain?!?
 

Scustin Bieburr

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Brain cancer affects decisionmaking. The first thing he should've done after getting the news is name a power of attorney to make financial decisions on his behalf with a clause in it to have his decisionmaking capacity assessed by a doctor on a regular basis.

One of two things happened here:
1. Dude was in full yolo mode and didn't give a fukk anymore
2. His disease affected his decisionmaking
3. He didn't trust his wife.

I'm leaning towards one and 3 because of the part about how for 10 years he had been withdrawing 45k worth of funds without his wife's knowledge.
 

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This might not be on him. A lot of family members do foul shyt to the elders in their family. One of my friends grandmother got conned into giving 5k to a younger cousin. Luckily her family found the cousin, whooped his ass and got most of the money back. But watch out for ur elders. His family could have fukked him over with his finances.
 

Mike_Pipeson

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I just skimmed the article.... 50% contingency from the lawyer?!?! Must be a state where you negotiate with the attorney but to sign for 50%?:mindblown:
 
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