1 mile west of the Chicago Premium Outlet Mall (800) 810 3100
By estate planning attorney Rick Law.  Rick is founder of the Estate Planning Center at Law Elder Law in West Suburban Aurora, IL.  LEL is a multi-generation law firm. In the last few blog posts, you’ve learned about some options for your child with a disability. But what if your child or grandchild doesn’t have a clearly defined disability, but a pattern of poor choices or simply a vulnerability to predators? A number of times I have had clients tell me that they love their vulnerable adult children, but they have a child who has chosen a destructive lifestyle. Sometimes it’s a mental health issue, a drug problem, a controlling partner, or simply a matter of making very bad choices. These parents do not want to abandon any of their children — but they also don’t want the money they provide to fuel the fire that is consuming their child. They come to me and ask me what to do. Since this child is not someone with a legally defined disability — but the parents know the child will squander all of their inheritance… unless they find a way to provide “lifetime love and protection” using their estate’s assets. The answer is what I call the Lifetime Love and Protection Trust (LPT). Follow along in our next installment to discover more about the love and protection trust.  An LPT can be used to help safely provide for:
  • A loved one with a drug or gambling addiction
  • A child with a controlling spouse or partner
  • A child who has failed to launch
  • Those who will simply never be able to handle money, for any reason
  • An unemployable person
  • Someone who is at risk of being taken advantage of by creditors or predators
  • A loved one who makes poor life choices
  • Any loved one who is vulnerable
Too many families needlessly lose everything they have.  Don’t let that be you.  If you need help paying the overwhelming cost of long term care, give our office a call at 800-310-3100.  Your first consultation is absolutely free.  We’ll let you know what steps you need to take, right now, to protect yourself and your family.  Call now, because when you’re out of money, you’re out of options! Sincerely, Rick L. Law, Attorney, Estate Planner for Retirees. Rick was named the #1 Illinois elder law estate planning attorney by Leading Lawyer Magazine for the past 8 years in a row. He has been quoted in the Wall Street Journal, AARP Magazine, TheStreet.com, and numerous newspapers and articles. Rick is the lead attorney for Law Elder Law, LLP, focusing in Estate Planning, Guardianship, and Nursing Home Solutions. His goal is to give retirees an informed edge when it comes to dealing with an uncertain future.  Get flexible retirement strategies that work during good times and bad, plus information on how you can save your home and assets from being used to pay for long term care.  Call 800-310-3100 for your free consultation now!
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By Elder Care attorney Rick Law. Rick is the founder and Managing partner of the multi-generation law firm of Law Elder Law, and was selected as the top Elder Law attorney in Illinois for 2016 by Leading Lawyers Magazine. Linda Voirin, LSW, is the victims’ advocate for the Seniors and Persons with Disabilities Unit, Office of Joseph H. McMahon, Kane County (Illinois) state’s attorney. During a recent interview, she outlined the difficulty in prosecuting senior financial exploitation and elder-abuse cases. We spoke with Linda about being a victims’ advocate for over 10 years in the state’s attorney’s office. She deals specifically with seniors and persons with disabilities. Her is her description of her role as it relates to the whole team: “We have some attorneys who have been specifically trained in dealing with the issues of abuse and the needs of the elderly, as well as attorneys who are trained specifically for the crimes that are committed against the elderly, such as financial exploitation. In addition, there is the concept of aggravated theft or aggravated assault. So as a victims’ advocate, we are helping the elderly victim to understand, first of all, what’s happening in the court system, being in communication with them as to court dates, and what’s happening in meetings with the attorney. Often, if they have been victimized, it’s a sign that there are other areas in their life that need looking at. Maybe they were particularly sought out as a victim because of a weakness that they had. Maybe they need extra care. So we try to assess their situation and then get them tied into services. We don’t actually provide those services; rather, we make referrals.” Too many families needlessly lose everything they have.  Don’t let that be you.  If you need help building a fortress around your estate to protect it from creditors, predators, and the cost of chronic disease, give our office a call at 800-310-3100.  Your first consultation is absolutely free.  We’ll let you know what steps you need to take, right now, to protect yourself and your family.  Call now, because when you’re out of money, you’re out of options! Sincerely, Rick L. Law, Attorney, Estate Planner for Retirees. Rick has been named the #1 Illinois elder law estate planning attorney for the past 8 years in a row by Leading Lawyer Magazine. He has been quoted in the Wall Street Journal, AARP Magazine, TheStreet.com, and numerous newspapers and articles. Rick is the lead attorney for Law Elder Law, LLP, focusing in Estate Planning, Guardianship, and Nursing Home Solutions. His goal is to give retirees an informed edge when it comes to dealing with an uncertain future.  Get flexible retirement strategies that work during good times and bad, plus information on how you can save your home and assets from being used to pay for long term care.  Call 800-310-3100 for your free consultation now!
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By Elder Law attorney Rick Law of the Estate Planning Center at Law Elder Law, Senior Advocates and Guardianship attorneys in West Chicagoland in Illinois.

As more people are made aware of the widespread financial exploitation against seniors, more states will address these serious crimes. For instance, Illinois recently amended its criminal code by making the “financial exploitation of an elderly person or a person with a disability” a felony. The section reads in part: A person commits financial exploitation of an elderly person or a person with a disability when he or she stands in a position of trust or confidence with the elderly person or a person with a disability and he or she knowingly and by deception or intimidation obtains control over the property of an elderly person or a person with a disability or illegally uses the assets or resources of an elderly person or a person with a disability. A person is in a position of trust when (s)he (i) is a parent, spouse, adult child or other relative by blood or marriage of the elderly person or a person with a disability, (ii) is a joint tenant or tenant in common with the elderly person or a person with a disability, (iii) has a legal or fiduciary relationship with the elderly person or a person with a disability (iv) is a financial planning or investment professional, or (v) is a paid or unpaid caregiver for the elderly person or a person with a disability. Subsection (v) above was added effective January 1, 2012. From looking at the Illinois Criminal Code and the definition of a person in trust, it gives hope that the task of protecting seniors, especially seniors suffering from dementia, from financial exploitation may get easier. Too many families needlessly lose everything they have.  Don’t let that be you.  If you need help building a fortress around your estate to protect it from creditors, predators, and the cost of chronic disease, give our office a call at 800-310-3100.  Your first consultation is absolutely free.  We’ll let you know what steps you need to take, right now, to protect yourself and your family.  Call now, because when you’re out of money, you’re out of options! Sincerely, Rick L. Law, Attorney, Estate Planner for Retirees. Rick has been named the #1 Illinois elder law estate planning attorney for the past 8 years in a row by Leading Lawyer Magazine. He has been quoted in the Wall Street Journal, AARP Magazine, TheStreet.com, and numerous newspapers and articles. Rick is the lead attorney for Law Elder Law, LLP, focusing in Estate Planning, Guardianship, and Nursing Home Solutions. His goal is to give retirees an informed edge when it comes to dealing with an uncertain future.  Get flexible retirement strategies that work during good times and bad, plus information on how you can save your home and assets from being used to pay for long term care.  Call 800-310-3100 for your free consultation now!
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By Elder Law Attorney Rick Law.  Rick is the founder and managing partner of the Estate Planning Center at Law Elder Law,  a multi-generational law firm in Aurora, IL. In certain relationships, a fiduciary relationship may exist.  According to Charles Golbert, Deputy Cook County (Illinois) Public Guardian in charge of the Adult Guardianship Division, a fiduciary relationship can also be found as a matter of fact. Courts consider such factors as
  • the degree of kinship between the parties;
  • disparity in age;
  • disparity in health;
  • disparity in mental conditions;
  • disparity in education and/or business sophistication;
  • the degree of trust placed in the dominant party; and
  • the degree of dependence or reliance placed in the dominant party.
The idea that someone can create a fiduciary responsibility by disparity of knowledge and a whole host of other things, even though the person may not be in what would be considered the traditional law of fiduciary, is very important. If your lawyer can show, based on the facts and circumstances, that a fiduciary duty existed, the burden shifts to the other side—to the fiduciary. So now, from an evidentiary standpoint and from a trial strategy standpoint, the lawyer does not have as big a problem as they thought they had; they now have to spend substantial amounts of time convincing the court of differences between individuals that should create a fiduciary obligation, even though it’s not a traditional fiduciary obligation like lawyer-client accounts or client trust officer accounts. Mr. Golbert has proved fiduciary obligations, not just in the difference between sophistication and education, but even in caregiver situations. He has also successfully argued that this person bathes this person every day. This person has access to all of the stuff in the house. This person had a fiduciary obligation because of the high level of trust and care between the two and the vulnerability of the individual who was cared for. Once your lawyer has a fiduciary duty by fact patterns, they can argue undue influence. For example, if the client is not incapacitated but is vulnerable and is taken in by a con man and tricked into signing away the house, that could be undue influence. The courts look at the disparity in needs, health, and education and business sophistication, the degree of trust placed on the dominant party and dependents or reliance, etc. There’s a story I often recount involving a war hero from church who tricked an elderly couple out of $220,000 by using non-recourse promissory notes. If your lawyer were to apply a fiduciary duty by fact pattern, suddenly the defense of the elderly couple may be more promising. A lawyer might have thought that if the couple duped out of their life savings are found to have been competent at the time they signed the notes, there is no recourse. However, once again, Golbert suggests that a fiduciary relationship can be found in this case based on a disparity in education and/or business sophistication. There is often a fiduciary relationship between home-care workers and the person they take care of because of the degree of dominance and reliance and trust for somebody who is bathing a person, taking the person to the bathroom, and feeding the person. So lawyers can establish a fiduciary relationship for home-care workers. Once a fiduciary relationship is established, either by law or by fact, the defendant now bears the burden of proving that the transaction was objectively fair and reasonable and of benefit to the ward. Now, the transaction will be presumed invalid. Creating a nontraditional fiduciary relationship is a great way to protect the client and to aggressively go after the perpetrator of the financial scam. It can be a lifesaver when the elderly victim is in the early stages of dementia and is vulnerable, but not yet incapacitated. However, getting the victim to report the exploitation or go along with the prosecution of the exploiter is often a battle itself. If you’re ready to start getting your estate in order and secure your assets for the “worst-case” scenario, please give our office a call at 800-310-3100. Your first consultation is absolutely free.  We’ll let you know what steps you need to take, right now, to protect yourself and your family.  Call now. Sincerely, Rick L. Law, Attorney, Estate Planner for Retirees. Rick was named the #1 Illinois elder law estate planning attorney by Leading Lawyer Magazine. He has been quoted in the Wall Street Journal, AARP Magazine, TheStreet.com, and numerous newspapers and articles. Rick is the lead attorney for Law Elder Law, LLP, focusing in Estate Planning, Guardianship, and Nursing Home Solutions. His goal is to give retirees an informed edge when it comes to dealing with an uncertain future.  Get flexible retirement strategies that work during good times and bad, plus information on how you can save your home and assets from being used to pay for long term care.  Call 800-310-3100 for your free consultation now!
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By Illinois Elder Law Attorney Rick Law of the Estate Planning Center at Law Elder Law.  Serving seniors and their families in Kane and Kendall Counties, Law Elder Law is a multi-generation law firm located in Aurora, IL. When an exploiter promises the clients that they would get this great rate of return and that was not true, that is fraudulent misrepresentation under the common law. Many states have great consumer fraud statutes that are very consumer friendly and in some cases allow for attorney fees. When lawyers sue under the theory of fraud, the client can be awarded punitive damages, which is a great incentive when it comes time to talk about settlement talks. When it’s time to sit down to talk settlement, lawyers can state that all they really want is the money that was stolen and the assets that were stolen. They can tell the other side that they are not really looking for a windfall and will go away if they just give back what was taken. However, if the case goes to trial, they have intentional counts pending, including fraud, and they’re going to ask for punitive damages as well as giving back the money that was stolen. That is a very helpful bargaining chip in settlement talks. If the victim of financial exploitation was adjudicated disabled and/or had a guardian appointed at the time the document was executed, the document is void as a matter of law (in most jurisdictions). However, if documents were signed before the date of adjudication, there will need to be a hearing to demonstrate incapacity at the time of the signing. In order to show incapacity, lawyers will usually need expert medical testimony. Too many families needlessly lose everything they have.  Don’t let that be you.  If you need help building a fortress around your estate to protect it from creditors, predators, and the cost of chronic disease, give our office a call at 800-310-3100.  Your first consultation is absolutely free.  We’ll let you know what steps you need to take, right now, to protect yourself and your family.  Call now, because when you’re out of money, you’re out of options! Sincerely, Rick L. Law, Attorney, Estate Planner for Retirees. Rick was named the #1 Illinois elder law estate planning attorney by Leading Lawyer Magazine. He has been quoted in the Wall Street Journal, AARP Magazine, TheStreet.com, and numerous newspapers and articles. Rick is the lead attorney for Law Elder Law, LLP, focusing in Estate Planning, Guardianship, and Nursing Home Solutions. His goal is to give retirees an informed edge when it comes to dealing with an uncertain future.  Get flexible retirement strategies that work during good times and bad, plus information on how you can save your home and assets from being used to pay for long term care.  Call 800-310-3100 for your free consultation now!
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By Rick Law, founder of the multi-generation Law Firm at Law Elder Law, located in the West Chicago suburb of Aurora, IL. As I’ve discussed in previous articles, citations to discover and recover assets are important tools your lawyer may use when they need to recover money and property of a client who is the victim of financial exploitation because they allow for discovery without having to file a lawsuit.  Citations to discover assets are meant to create a quick and comprehensive means of discovery of assets and their value. Article XVI of the Illinois Probate Act empowers the court to hear evidence offered by any party and allows the court to determine all questions of title, claims of adverse title, and the right of property, and enter such orders and judgment as the case requires. The court may compel the appearance of the respondents, compel discovery, and enforce its orders through its contempt powers. On the other hand, citations to recover assets are subject to dispositive motions. Filing a petition for the issuance of a citation to recover assets is basically saying, “This money has been stolen and we have a citation against you.” It means the people served have to appear in court and prove that they didn’t steal the money. If it’s proven that they stole money, then the lawyer can issue a rule to show cause against them if they do not put the money back. And if they do not comply, they’re in contempt of court, which means they can go to jail. This power is typically found in a state’s Probate Act and the Code of Simple Procedures as well. The theft does not have to be proven first. Your lawyer just needs to have permission to file the citation. So, lawyers go in on a petition and ask for the citation to be granted. Another thing to keep in mind is that the petition to recover assets is subject to dispositive motions for failure to state a claim. Although a citation to recover assets is a procedural mechanism, it does not typically create any substantive legal rights. So when using a citation to recover assets, your lawyer must plead cognizable legal theories such as incapacity or undue influence, coercion, and duress. Undue influence, coercion, and duress are very often pleaded in the alternative. To win on the theory of incapacity, your lawyer must show that at the time of execution of whatever was executed, clients lacked the requisite mental capacity to understand what they were signing. That usually involves a combination of expert testimony. This means retrieving all the medical records going back as far as possible, and having your attorney talk to all the treating doctors if the individual was going to a doctor. Then your lawyer needs to have a doctor, such as a forensic psychiatrist, review the records and try to make a determination as to when capacity would have kicked in and at what level. This is all combined with whatever environmental evidence there is. For example, neighbors might say this person loved the rose garden and was meticulous about it, but around a certain period of time, the neighbors noticed that they never saw the person leave the house, and the garden became weed infested and the lawn overgrown. Too many families needlessly lose everything they have.  Don’t let that be you.  If you need help building a fortress around your estate to protect it from creditors, predators, and the cost of chronic disease, give our office a call at 800-310-3100.  Your first consultation is absolutely free.  We’ll let you know what steps you need to take, right now, to protect yourself and your family.  Call now, because when you’re out of money, you’re out of options! Sincerely, Rick L. Law, Attorney, Estate Planner for Retirees. Rick was named the #1 Illinois elder law estate planning attorney by Leading Lawyer Magazine. He has been quoted in the Wall Street Journal, AARP Magazine, TheStreet.com, and numerous newspapers and articles. Rick is the lead attorney for Law Elder Law, LLP, focusing in Estate Planning, Guardianship, and Nursing Home Solutions. His goal is to give retirees an informed edge when it comes to dealing with an uncertain future.  Get flexible retirement strategies that work during good times and bad, plus information on how you can save your home and assets from being used to pay for long term care.  Call 800-310-3100 for your free consultation now!
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By Elder Law Attorney, Kendall County Public Guardian, and senior estate planner Rick Law of the Estate Planning Center at Law Elder Law, a multi-generational law firm serving seniors and boomers in Aurora, IL The increasing frequency of financial exploitation of seniors paints a grim picture. The seniors’ reluctance to report the instances and the murkiness of vulnerability versus incapacity makes the lawyer’s presence even more important. Guardians and representatives of the estates of the elderly with dementia are at a considerable disadvantage compared with those lawyers representing adult clients without disabilities when it comes to investigating financial exploitation. Individuals with dementia will have a much more difficult time identifying the exploiter and explaining how they were financially exploited. Because of this disadvantage, many jurisdictions’ probate codes allow for a citation to discover assets. A citation to discover assets “is a broad, pre-complaint discovery tool for guardians and representatives of persons who may not understand or be able to articulate what happened to their assets.” In layman’s  terms, it’s designed to ‘level the playing field’ in the event that someone is not cognizant of what happened to their assets. Article XVI of the Illinois Probate Act permits a disabled person’s guardian, representative, or “any other person interested in the estate” to file a petition for the issuance of a citation to discover assets against any person who the petitioner believes (1) to have concealed, converted or embezzled or to have in his possession or control any personal property, books of account, papers or evidences of debt or title to lands which belonged to a person whose estate is being administered in that court or which belongs to his estate or to his representative or (2) to have information or knowledge withheld by the respondent from the representative and needed by the representative for the recovery of any property by suit or otherwise. The petition will contain a request for the relief sought. Citations to discover assets are useful because they allow lawyers to obtain discovery without having to file suit and without having to plead facts requisite to survive a motion to dismiss. That makes them a great discovery tool in financial exploitation cases involving clients with dementia. The petition for the issuance of a citation to discover assets should lay out the facts as to why the respondent would have information regarding the disabled person’s assets. Citations to discover assets are meant to create a quick and comprehensive means of discovery of assets and their value. If you’re ready to start getting your estate in order and secure your assets for the “worst-case” scenario, please give our office a call at 800-310-3100. Your first consultation is absolutely free.  We’ll let you know what steps you need to take, right now, to protect yourself and your family.  Call now. Sincerely, Rick L. Law, Attorney, Estate Planner for Retirees. Rick was named the #1 Illinois elder law estate planning attorney by Leading Lawyer Magazine. He has been quoted in the Wall Street Journal, AARP Magazine, TheStreet.com, and numerous newspapers and articles. Rick is the lead attorney for Law Elder Law, LLP, focusing in Estate Planning, Guardianship, and Nursing Home Solutions. His goal is to give retirees an informed edge when it comes to dealing with an uncertain future.  Get flexible retirement strategies that work during good times and bad, plus information on how you can save your home and assets from being used to pay for long term care.  Call 800-310-3100 for your free consultation now!
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By Rick Law, founder of the Estate Planning Center at Law Elder Law, a multi-generation law firm in Western Chicagoland in Illinois. Two friends fresh out of dental school started a practice together 30 years ago. For 30 years they worked side by side and were the best of friends out of the office. Everything seemed great until one of them was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease. Inexplicably, the other partner turned on his best friend and started stealing all of his money shortly after the diagnosis. These cases of the wolf in sheep’s clothing serve to remind us of the importance of speaking with your elder law attorney clients alone at various times. Your lawyer needs to ask the questions that will help give them a feeling for how much influence a person has over them, especially if they want to give more and more power and control to that person. Linda Voirin, a licensed social worker at the Kane County (Illinois) State’s Attorney Office, says that lawyers are doing a disservice to seniors by not speaking with them privately, because they certainly aren’t going to get an honest answer with the caregiver—or son, daughter, granddaughter, etc.—sitting right in front of them. This is especially important when someone new shows up in the seniors life and seems to be influencing them. Unfortunately, it is becoming more and more common to see cases involving trusted lawyers who are either the exploited (and guilty of sloppy lawyering) or who are involved in the exploitation by drafting documents. The Attorney Registration & Disciplinary Commission says the fastest-growing area of lawyers to discipline is the group exploiting elderly clients and taking advantage of their age and their condition. This is why you may be better off with a certified elder law attorney such as can be found in the trusted and experienced team at Law Elder Law Too many families needlessly lose everything they have.  Don’t let that be you.  If you need help paying the overwhelming cost of long term care, give our office a call at 800-310-3100.  Your first consultation is absolutely free.  We’ll let you know what steps you need to take, right now, to protect yourself and your family.  Call now, because when you’re out of money, you’re out of options! Sincerely, Rick L. Law, Attorney, Estate Planner for Retirees. Rick was named the #1 Illinois elder law estate planning attorney by Leading Lawyer Magazine. He has been quoted in the Wall Street Journal, AARP Magazine, TheStreet.com, and numerous newspapers and articles. Rick is the lead attorney for Law Elder Law, LLP, focusing in Estate Planning, Guardianship, and Nursing Home Solutions. His goal is to give retirees an informed edge when it comes to dealing with an uncertain future.  Get flexible retirement strategies that work during good times and bad, plus information on how you can save your home and assets from being used to pay for long term care.  Call 800-310-3100 for your free consultation now!
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By Kendall County Public Guardian and elder law attorney Rick Law, founder and managing partner at the multi-generational law firm of Law Elder Law in West suburban Aurora, IL.  Home of the Estate Planning Center at Law Elder Law. Vulnerable seniors are very susceptible to the wolf in sheep’s clothing. Seniors are trusting and want to believe people. Take, for example, a man who is supposedly a sophisticated developer/investor who takes an 85-year-old man and his wife to a fancy dinner. The couple trusts him because he is a member of their church and tells them that, like the 85-year-old man, he is a veteran. The developer drives them around a big apartment complex and points out where he provides a free apartment for one of the church’s ministers. He tells them that they will get a better-than-market return if they invest with him. Oh, and by the way, he suggests that they get a reverse mortgage on their house because that’s free money and he will help them invest that money to get a big “above market rate” return. The couple lost $220,000 and the promissory notes were nonrecourse notes signed by the developer on behalf of illusory entities that he created. Not surprisingly, the provider of the investment product, the promissory note, is a non-registered entity. This is an example of consumer fraud. One of many ways seniors may be financially preyed upon. But it doesn’t end there… A local priest was going through the neighborhood surrounding his parish and offering Holy Communion to the homebound members of his church. On the surface, this seems like a normal activity that one might expect a priest to do for his congregation. However, this priest had a lawyer accompanying him. The pair would come into the homes of the sick or the old or those that just couldn’t make it into the church for whatever reason, and the priest would perform a mass and offer them Holy Communion right in their living room. After the priest was done, the lawyer would then offer his estate-planning services to the homeowner. The homeowners, people too old and frail or too sick to attend church, trusted the lawyer, because he was accompanied by their priest. It turned out that the beneficiary of the estate-planning documents was none other than the priest. The priest owned properties in Florida and was hiding money in multiple locations (so much for his vow of poverty.) And, naturally, the lawyer was receiving healthy kickbacks from the priest for his part of the exploitation. If you’re ready to start getting your estate in order and secure your assets for the “worst-case” scenario, please give our office a call at 800-310-3100. Your first consultation is absolutely free.  We’ll let you know what steps you need to take, right now, to protect yourself and your family.  Call now. Sincerely, Rick L. Law, Attorney, Estate Planner for Retirees. Rick was named the #1 Illinois elder law estate planning attorney by Leading Lawyer Magazine. He has been quoted in the Wall Street Journal, AARP Magazine, TheStreet.com, and numerous newspapers and articles. Rick is the lead attorney for Law Elder Law, LLP, focusing in Estate Planning, Guardianship, and Nursing Home Solutions. His goal is to give retirees an informed edge when it comes to dealing with an uncertain future.  Get flexible retirement strategies that work during good times and bad, plus information on how you can save your home and assets from being used to pay for long term care.  Call 800-310-3100 for your free consultation now!
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By estate planning attorney Rick Law of the Estate Planning Center at Law Elder Law.  Law Elder Law is a multi-generational firm serving seniors and their families in the heart of Kane County in Illinois. Diamonds are valuable, but you can’t eat them. Assets have the same problem. If you need income, you must change assets into income streams. Most of our clients are in their 50s and 60s. Overall, they have economic success, which ranges from the comfortable to the very fortunate. Most have spent their entire adult lives creating assets such as 401(k); pensions; IRAs; real estate; brokerage accounts; business accounts; residences; vacation homes; farms and more. Despite their impressive investments and commendable frugality, very few have the foggiest idea how to transition from asset building to income stream creation. We look at retirement income planning as a collaborative process with a client. Often the hardest part is just to get the client to actually define their monthly budget target number. That number is the net dollars needed or wanted per month to pay their basic bills and any lifestyle expenses. Any money over the basic bills and lifestyle expenses is what we categorize as excess, which a client can then opt to use for planning for charities, luxuries and legacy. We break healthy retirement income planning into three stages.
  1. Years one and two, when your income sources are your social security, pensions, and direct withdrawals from liquid savings.
  2. Years three through ten, when the biggest problem for seniors is achieving adequate growth while they are systemically withdrawing income or consuming principle.
  3. Years ten to infinity, which we call the golden years of retirement. The golden years can easily exceed thirty years when doing a couple’s retirement plans. They need to think about two different categories of inflation. There is systemic economic inflation and senior healthcare cost inflation.
As estate planning attorneys, we help clients develop a “smart plan” for the tax-free transfer of some of their wealth. Even though the estate tax now only hits one of 1,000 U.S. families, most of our clients have many “income tax-toxic” assets. Those assets can include IRA; 401(k); 403(b); and appreciated annuities. If you’re ready to start getting your estate in order and secure your assets for the “worst-case” scenario, please give our office a call at 800-310-3100. Your first consultation is absolutely free.  We’ll let you know what steps you need to take, right now, to protect yourself and your family.  Call now. Sincerely, Rick L. Law, Attorney, Estate Planner for Retirees. Rick was named the #1 Illinois elder law estate planning attorney by Leading Lawyer Magazine. He has been quoted in the Wall Street Journal, AARP Magazine, TheStreet.com, and numerous newspapers and articles. Rick is the lead attorney for Law Elder Law, LLP, focusing in Estate Planning, Guardianship, and Nursing Home Solutions. His goal is to give retirees an informed edge when it comes to dealing with an uncertain future.  Get flexible retirement strategies that work during good times and bad, plus information on how you can save your home and assets from being used to pay for long term care.  Call 800-310-3100 for your free consultation now!
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