Seniors
Related: About this forumThousands of Retirees Can't Withdraw Savings Invested in Firms Controlled by Indicted Financier Greg
(Cross posting from Personal Finance Group)
Thousands of Retirees Cant Withdraw Savings Invested in Firms Controlled by Indicted Financier Greg Lindberg
Mark Zintel, a retiree who lives near Tampa, Fla., is furious that $700,000 in annuities he bought from an insurer have been frozen for almost four years. He is one of tens of thousands of people whose money was rendered unreachable as the empire of self-described billionaire Greg Lindberg slowly imploded. Many may never recover a portion of their money, and some have died while waiting.
Mr. Lindberg, meanwhile, moved nearby and lives in luxury. He moors his 214-foot yacht near Tampa and recently bought a 10-bedroom estate and another spacious house in the area. The 52-year-old executive was indicted last month on federal charges that he defrauded his insurers by lending $2 billion of their funds to companies in his private conglomerate, while allegedly siphoning off huge sums to finance his lavish lifestyle. He has pleaded not guilty and is out on bail. Until last July, Mr. Lindberg was in federal prison on bribery charges related to the insurers. He was released after 21 months when an appeals court overturned the conviction. A retrial is scheduled for November.
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What rankles Mr. Zintel and others is that they believe Mr. Lindberg is using their money to fight his legal entanglements, allowing him to continue living extravagantly even as they cut back. Among the alleged extravagances: The divorced executive has spent millions of dollars on gifts for women, according to court documents, including paying some women to produce offspring for him. Some 70,000 holders of annuities totaling $2.2 billion are unable to withdraw their money, filings show. Many are retirees or conservative investors who bought five- to seven-year annuities in 2017 and 2018. Financial advisers typically marketed them as a safe, higher-yielding alternative to bank CDs.
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A spokesman for Citizens Bank, which sold the annuities to many customers, declined to comment on specific clients but called the overall situation a large-scale fraud and said it has offered help to those in hardship. Like bank accounts, life-insurance products are insured, in this instance by industry-funded guaranty associations that typically protect annuity owners up to $250,000. Theres a rub: Consumers arent paid until insurers are put into liquidation, a move that Mr. Lindberg is opposing.
Even if the insurers go into liquidation, some 1,600 annuity owners wouldnt be fully covered, because they collectively invested about $250 million more than their states reimbursement caps, filings show. North Carolina regulators say they are optimistic they can fill most, if not all, of that gap through pending legal actions against Mr. Lindberg.
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lostnfound
(16,634 posts)And if anyone is feeling impatient with the pace of that Justice, they dont understand the complexity of the issue, or the need to have an airtight case.
Anyone who is feeling impatient is unfairly attacking a prosecutor or a judge or the hardworking men and women in some agency.
Because Justice delayed is equal to Justice arriving on time.
sanatanadharma
(4,074 posts)I'll bet most "justice delayed" complainers will be aghast to learn that where I live, I regularly read about crimes committed in the morning wherein the criminals are found, tried, convicted and jailed before nightfall.
Not all crimes and criminals, mind you, but enough to make a North American sit up and pay attention.
Could it be that some fast convictions are unwarranted? Or is fast always better than certain?
Scrivener7
(52,729 posts)jailed before nightfall?
Really?
Do link us up to a few of those.
Extra points if the criminal is white and rich.
sanatanadharma
(4,074 posts)As I said, "Not all crimes and criminals, mind you"
Money works here too.
Scrivener7
(52,729 posts)sanatanadharma
(4,074 posts)Caught with drugs on Friday
Reported Monday to have been condemned to 3 years in jail.
https://www.subrayado.com.uy/vendia-drogas-un-omnibus-y-fue-condenada-tres-anos-carcel-n911343
Una mujer fue condenada a tres años de cárcel por vender drogas arriba de un ómnibus de trabajadores zafrales en Salto.
La condenada fue descubierta el pasado viernes, cuando en un operativo realizado por la Policía local y la Guardia Republicana, pararon un ómnibus que transportaa 45 trabajadores que venían de un establecimiento rural del sector citrícola e incautaron una mochila con 1,2 Kilo de pasta base, 200 g de cocaína prontos para su venta, además de 30.000 pesos uruguayos.
Las personas del ómnibus fueron derivadas a la Fiscalía de 4to Turno de Salto y luego de haberle tomado declaraciones, la mujer terminó condenada por la Justicia por tráfico y transporte de estupefacientes a la pena de 3 años de penitenciaría.
Scrivener7
(52,729 posts)happens in the US.
When you said "where I live" I thought you were talking about a different experience of the same country.
Hence my reaction. Sorry for the misunderstanding.
Pinback
(12,884 posts)I hope this scumbag gets the sentence he so richly deserves.