With cases of financial exploitation of the elderly on the rise, advisors who work with older clients are looking for ways to head off the abuse before it happens. Enter the “Emergency Contact Authorization Form,” a document in which clients can list a trusted person who should be contacted if an advisor suspects a client is starting to lose their mental capacity or, worse yet, being financially abused or scammed.
How Does an Emergency
Contact Authorization Form Work?
The Emergency Contact Authorization Form is a document which
allows you to identify someone your financial advisor can contact if your
advisor becomes concerned about your ability to continue to manage your finances
or believes you are being taken advantage of financially by a relative, friend,
caregiver, or even a complete stranger.
The Emergency Contact Authorization Form does not take the
place of your “Durable Power of Attorney,” which is a legal document in which
you give a person you trust the authority to make financial decisions and carry
out financial transactions on your behalf.
Instead, the form allows you to designate an individual your advisor can
contact to discuss concerns they have about your slipping mental capacity,
unusual activity in your accounts, requests for transfers of large sums of
money to an unknown person or a foreign bank account, and the like. This designated individual could be the same
person as the agent named in your Durable Power of Attorney or some other
trusted person in your life. The idea is that once your advisor makes your
emergency contact aware of the issues, your contact can reach out to you to
determine if the advisor’s concerns are legitimate.
What Should You Do?
Since your financial advisor is in a unique position to know
your financial history (for instance, you take a trip to Europe every June, you
have been helping your grandkids with their college tuition, you like to make
your charitable donations in October to avoid the year-end rush), your advisor
is also in a unique position to spot unusual activity and requests. Thus, when your advisor asks you fill out an
“Emergency Contact Authorization Form,” carefully consider who you should name,
discuss your choice with your advisor, complete the form, let the person you’ve
chosen know that they have been designated, and give that person your advisor’s
contact information.
Nonetheless, keep in mind that while an Emergency Contact
Authorization Form is a good start, it will only work at the institution where
it is on record. To insure that all of
your financial accounts will continue to be managed and your bills will get
paid if you become mentally incapacitated, you will need to sign a Durable
Power of Attorney.
Please contact our office if you have any questions about Emergency
Contact Authorization Forms, Durable Powers of Attorney, or if you suspect a
family member or friend is being financially exploited or abused.
To comply with the U.S. Treasury regulations, we must inform you that (i) any U.S. federal tax advice contained in this newsletter was not intended or written to be used, and cannot be used, by any person for the purpose of avoiding U.S. federal tax penalties that may be imposed on such person and (ii) each taxpayer should seek advice from their tax adviser based on the taxpayer’s particular circumstances.

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