McGarnicle
Footballguy
State=PA. A guy marries a lady. Things don't work out, guy moves out and cohabitates with another lady for about a year. The guy and the first lady are still legally married. One day the guy goes to work, he's standing in a warehouse having a conversation, and there is a forklift accident. A pallet falls on his head and he dies.
The guy has no will. The wife is aware that the guy had an IRA from an old job that has about $9500 in it. She calls the bank and they tell her the money has already been disbursed, and they provide the address of the girlfriend. She's perplexed, starts asking questions and they clam up, and tell her to talk to a lawyer. Indirectly it is learned that the girlfriend obtained the guy's death certificate under false pretenses and she admits she has the money.
Questions:
With no will, does the IRA legally go to the wife? What exceptions exist, if any?
Is it a fair assumption that the girlfriend must have obtained the money through fraud, or is there a legal basis for her to claim the money? Again, their only relationship is boyfriend/girlfriend and they lived together.
With just the above facts known, in other words, a good presumption of fraud but no direct evidence -- if the wife files charges, is it likely that the state's attorney will run with it and conduct a full investigation? Considering the sum of money, will they go to the trouble to serve subpoenas to the bank, try to interrogate the girlfriend, etc?
Is there a basis to sue the bank, since they failed to do their due diligence to ensure the girlfriend was entitled to the money?
Or, let's say the girlfriend perpetuated a very convincing fraud, for example, she posed as the wife and produced believable documents -- does that lessen the bank's culpability?
Other info:
The guy had a minor child dependent. The wife had a daughter from a previous relationship, and during the course of the marriage, the guy legally adopted the daughter.
Time elapsed from the death to the money being disbursed to the girlfriend is about 2 months.
The guy has no will. The wife is aware that the guy had an IRA from an old job that has about $9500 in it. She calls the bank and they tell her the money has already been disbursed, and they provide the address of the girlfriend. She's perplexed, starts asking questions and they clam up, and tell her to talk to a lawyer. Indirectly it is learned that the girlfriend obtained the guy's death certificate under false pretenses and she admits she has the money.
Questions:
With no will, does the IRA legally go to the wife? What exceptions exist, if any?
Is it a fair assumption that the girlfriend must have obtained the money through fraud, or is there a legal basis for her to claim the money? Again, their only relationship is boyfriend/girlfriend and they lived together.
With just the above facts known, in other words, a good presumption of fraud but no direct evidence -- if the wife files charges, is it likely that the state's attorney will run with it and conduct a full investigation? Considering the sum of money, will they go to the trouble to serve subpoenas to the bank, try to interrogate the girlfriend, etc?
Is there a basis to sue the bank, since they failed to do their due diligence to ensure the girlfriend was entitled to the money?
Or, let's say the girlfriend perpetuated a very convincing fraud, for example, she posed as the wife and produced believable documents -- does that lessen the bank's culpability?
Other info:
The guy had a minor child dependent. The wife had a daughter from a previous relationship, and during the course of the marriage, the guy legally adopted the daughter.
Time elapsed from the death to the money being disbursed to the girlfriend is about 2 months.