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Thank you Very little |
Best advice given, and with their ages, you need to move on this fairly quickly... | |||
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Member |
Agreed. Whenever an institution offers a POA, USE IT. It's too common for them to kick back a POA an attorney drafted. I don't have much to add other than two things for the OP: 1. If you have full knowledge of all their qualified retirement accounts you should be able to ask a CPA how much the RMD is based upon their age and the total. 2. I've had to do many 3 way calls with older clientele to get their authorization to release information. I begin by letting the elderly client know I'll be making a call on their behalf and to standby waiting for my call so they can authorize me with the institution. I call the institution and navigate all the prompts to get to the right person and explain the situation. I then connect the elderly client and let the representative verify their identity and get authorization to speak on their behalf. As I said, I can request information using this method. If you need to execute, as in request a disbursement that meets the RMD requirements, I'm almost positive that request has to be in writing and signed by the account owner (or POA if they have it on file). | |||
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Little ray of sunshine |
Agreed, at least insofar as a guardianship being likely to be the last thing you want. Guardianships in Texas (and many states) are monitored by the court, require periodic accounting to the court, and probably a bond. You also have to have a serious hearing to prove to the court a guardianship is warranted. If the person is not actually incompetent (actually not capable), you won't get it. Ask a lawyer about the better and less serious alternatives. The fish is mute, expressionless. The fish doesn't think because the fish knows everything. | |||
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