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question everything

(48,902 posts)
Thu Jun 13, 2024, 03:41 PM Jun 2024

His Ex Is Getting His $1 Million Retirement Account. They Broke Up in 1989. - WSJ

Jeffrey Rolison and Margaret Sjostedt dated in the 1980s. Now, almost 40 years after they broke up, she stands to inherit his $1 million retirement account. The reason she might get the money is that in 1987, Rolison listed Sjostedt on a handwritten form as the sole beneficiary of his workplace retirement account. He never changed the beneficiary designation and died in 2015.

Standing in her way are Rolison’s brothers, who learned about Sjostedt’s claim to the money weeks after his death on a phone call from their estate lawyer. They don’t think he could have intended to leave the money to her. “We were shocked,” said his brother Brian, a mechanic. The brothers have since been fighting his former employer, Procter & Gamble, in federal court to wrest the retirement money out of the hands of Sjostedt, now Margaret Losinger.

The battle over Rolison’s money is a stark reminder that the beneficiary forms on retirement accounts, life-insurance policies and bank accounts matter. In most cases, they trump the will even if they were filled out decades prior.

(snip)

Under federal law, employers are generally required to pay out these retirement accounts to the last recorded beneficiary, or a surviving spouse if the spouse hasn’t filed a waiver. That could be a name on a 3×5 card filled out decades ago, as in Rolison’s case. Or it could be a name entered online. Adding to the confusion: Some employer plans, including P&G’s, haven’t integrated the old paper forms into their online systems.

Rolison met Losinger, who goes by Peggy, at a park playing Frisbee, and they started dating in their early 20s, according to court documents. Later, they moved to Sullivan County, Pa., where she waitressed and he got a job on the floor at a P&G plant that makes Pampers diapers and Bounty paper towels. After a year on the job, in 1987, he signed up for the P&G profit-sharing and savings plans, and filled out a beneficiary card, listing her as cohabitor. Peggy moved out two years later, got married the next year and had two children, according to court documents.

“I wanted marriage and children and he did not,” Losinger testified.

(snip)

Rolison died at 59, single and childless.

(snip)

The ex-girlfriend, now 68, stands to inherit the entirety of Rolison’s P&G plan accounts. The total came to nearly $750,000 when he died and had grown to $1.15 million by 2020.

(snip)

Rolison’s P&G retirement savings, meanwhile, still sit in money-market funds, awaiting distribution.

https://archive.ph/ajMkH

6 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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His Ex Is Getting His $1 Million Retirement Account. They Broke Up in 1989. - WSJ (Original Post) question everything Jun 2024 OP
I Knew A Couple of People Deep State Witch Jun 2024 #1
Could they not have changed the beneficiary? PoindexterOglethorpe Jul 2024 #5
Oof. Probatim Jun 2024 #2
If he didn't change it the ex gets it. LiberalFighter Jun 2024 #3
Obviously he didn't want his family members getting any. GreenWave Jun 2024 #4
I have zero sympathy for those who don't keep things like PoindexterOglethorpe Jul 2024 #6

Deep State Witch

(11,285 posts)
1. I Knew A Couple of People
Thu Jun 13, 2024, 03:46 PM
Jun 2024

Who continued to work until well after retirement age because their ex-spouses would get half of their retirement if they retired.

PoindexterOglethorpe

(26,730 posts)
6. I have zero sympathy for those who don't keep things like
Tue Jul 16, 2024, 10:53 PM
Jul 2024

beneficiary designations up to date.

Sort of like you have to renew your drivers license every few years. You need to update things like wills and beneficiaries.

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