『Slayer Statutes, Trusts, And The Legal Gap That Matters』のカバーアート

Slayer Statutes, Trusts, And The Legal Gap That Matters

Slayer Statutes, Trusts, And The Legal Gap That Matters

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A single estate planning detail can decide whether a family tragedy becomes a legal loophole. We start with a disturbing real-world style scenario that forces an uncomfortable question: if someone intentionally causes another person’s death, can they still collect money that was meant for them, especially when those assets are held in a trust?

We break down the difference between probate and trusts in plain English. Slayer statutes are designed to stop a person from benefiting from wrongdoing, but those rules often apply most clearly to the probate estate, the assets that pass through a will or through intestate succession when there is no will. Many families use revocable living trusts specifically to avoid probate, speed up administration, and keep matters private. That probate avoidance is helpful, but it can also create uncertainty if your documents don’t address extreme “bad beneficiary” situations head-on.

Then we get practical. We explain how an estate planning or elder law attorney can draft a trust provision that blocks a beneficiary from recovery if they cause serious injury or death to the trustmaker, and how the trust can redirect those funds to other beneficiaries, the beneficiary’s children, or charity. We also talk through why trusts are so flexible, from milestone-based distributions to education-focused standards and long-term control over a legacy, along with the added benefits of smoother administration and potential creditor protection when drafted properly.

If you care about protecting your family, your assets, and your intent, listen through the end, then subscribe, share this with someone who needs it, and leave a review so more people can plan before the unexpected happens.

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