Prudential Multi-State Settlement Effective with 20th State Signing On

(AP Photo/Mike Derer) (AP Photo/Mike Derer)

Kentucky has become the 20th state or jurisdiction to sign the multi-agency, multi-state life claims settlement agreement with Prudential Insurance Company of America and its affiliates, meaning the agreement for Prudential to pay a national $17 million settlement payment is now effective. 

News of the agreement was first announced by the Florida and California departments of insurance on Feb. 2.

See also: Prudential Agrees to $17M Unclaimed Property Settlement

“I am encouraged by the fact that other state regulatory officials have quickly added their signatures to make the agreement official,” said NAIC President and Florida Office of Insurance Regulation  Insurance Commissioner Kevin McCarty. “Fully implementing this agreement will help safeguard Florida’s policyholders and their beneficiaries.”

Florida was one of seven lead investigatory states to initially sign the agreement. The signatures from an additional 13 regulatory jurisdictions were required to make the agreement effective. The lead investigatory states were Florida, California, Illinois, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, New Jersey and North Dakota.

All states have until March 31, 2012 to sign the agreement to become eligible to receive the distribution of the settlement payment.

The agreement involved the industry’s use of the Social Security Administration’s Death Master List. Insurers are required to investigate claims and to turn over unclaimed funds to the unclaimed property bureau. The Master List is a database of deceased persons in the United States maintained by the Social Security Administration and rented to life insurers.

At issue was Prudential's use of the Social Security Administration's Death Master File, a database listing the recently deceased. Insurers routinely rent the data from the DMF to determine if policyholders or annuitants have died. The charges against Prudential were that the company made asymmetrical use of this resource: checking policyholders against the DMF aggressively when determining whether it was time to stop paying out on annuities, versus a less urgent check against the DMF to determine whether life insurance policyholders had a claims payment coming.

The national $17 million settlement with Prudential will be divided among all participating regulatory jurisdictions. The final distribution amounts for each regulatory jurisdiction will be determined after March 31; however, Florida expects to receive in excess of $1 million to be distributed equally among the Office of Insurance Regulation, the Department of Financial Services (DFS), and the Attorney General’s (AG) office, it stated.

The additional 13 regulatory jurisdictions to sign the agreement to date include Alabama, Arizona, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Guam, Idaho, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Mississippi, and Oklahoma.

In early 2011, the NAIC formed the Investigation of Life/Annuities Claim Settlement Practices Task Force (chaired by McCarty) to guide the multistate examination process. 

In May 2011, public hearings were conducted on this issue in Florida and California. John Hancock Life Insurance Company reached a similar agreement with Florida in May 2011.

About the Author
Elizabeth Festa

Elizabeth Festa

Elizabeth Festa, Regulatory & Compliance News Editor for LifeHealthPro.com, is a longtime financial and regulatory affairs journalist with a background in insurance, securities, the investment advisor space and telecomm deregulation, both in Washington and New York. She has worked at everything from old-school newsletter sheets punched into binders to an international wire service to a hyper-local blog, and has free-lanced for major and regional newspapers and magazines on a variety for features, real estate and lifestyle stories. She found herself covering insurance when all her colleagues covered banking, and figured an actuary could talk circles around a banker and stay in a Rolodex (she still uses one) a lot longer. Elizabeth learned insurance regulatory issues on the back of the demutualization/investment bank movement and Glass Steagall reform efforts in the late 1990s and went religiously to four NAIC meetings a year, sitting in the cheap seats in back with the skeptical accountants, heckling consultants and the pacing consumer advocates. Fast forward, after a decade of real estate and Internet company boom and bust, and she is back on the beat again, covering insurance modernization, which is an evolving process, she has learned, not a destination. Festa can be reached at efesta@sbmedia.com

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