Good for the wife. She succeeded. Hubby notarized statement that she did not kill him.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/body-discovered-freezer-10-years-170105904.html
https://www.yahoo.com/news/body-discovered-freezer-10-years-170105904.html
Very bizarre. How did she get him in the freezer?
Very bizarre. How did she get him in the freezer?
Not protecting the spouse with a joint annuity is foolish and led them to commit fraud. The spouse had to sign off on it also, so she is also foolish.
No, it's not good. She/they committed fraud, plain and simple.
Sometimes I just have to smile at the creativity. There's a lot worse in the world that doesn't get prosecuted so this kind of thing goes in the "small stuff" category that isn't worth getting worked up about.
Yep, they could sue her estate which if there is anything she wanted to leave to her heirs would be tied up in probate for quite a long time.Yep, sure did.
What're they gonna do about it? Sue? Ha!
Don't get me wrong, I'm as hard-core "law 'n order" as anyone, but they worked out a plan that covered her needs after his demise. And hey, it worked! It's kind of hard to fault that.
Sometimes I just have to smile at the creativity. There's a lot worse in the world that doesn't get prosecuted so this kind of thing goes in the "small stuff" category that isn't worth getting worked up about.
Yep, they could sue her estate which if there is anything she wanted to leave to her heirs would be tied up in probate for quite a long time.
If she had enough money lying around to leave to heirs, she probably wouldn't have needed the extra $1500/mo (estimate)
It's an assumption that she "needed" the $1500/mo. Since she is dead, we may never know her intentions.
She had a lot of stuff lying around.Well, if you don't need it, I guess she could be just really greedy. Just seems like an extreme step to take if you had enough money lying around to leave an estate to your children.
She had a lot of stuff lying around.