This UK based shill for Prosperity Partners has written "The Truth About Structured Settlement Awards". Her Linked In profile shows all sorts of interesting things including the unfortunate proof that Julie-Ann Amos has no bona fides on the subject of structured settlements.
Factoring company Prosperity Partners has registered a number of state specific web domains including structuredsettlementscalifornia.com. Even though it has its own talented writers, it seems to be hiring content generators to compete with the content being generated by "primary market" commentators. The problem with hiring ghost writers who have no background in your subject is that the lack of background may result in errors and factual inaccuracies which reflect poorly on your company. Moreover, it puts you on the radar of the stuctured settlement watchdog.
I would also like to stress to content generators like Julie-Ann Amos that if you intend to write about structured settlements you better research what you write, or you will be open to critique.
The author of "Hacking Reality," Amos, incorrectly states that "The total amount a court awards a plaintiff in a structured settlement is actually a life-time worth of payments, and not a sum the insurance company issues a one-time check for. It’s true, over time, you do get the total amount of the settlement, but you receive it in small increments which some people find just isn’t enough to make ends meet. You do have options however.
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- Structured settlement is a settlement not an award. That's why it's called a structured settlement and not a structured award.
- Structured settlement may include a "life-time worth of payments" if a life annuity is agreed to. There are many other types of structured settlement payments.
- Amos' sentence construction masks the fact that the insurance company (or if applicable qualified settlement fund trustee or administrator) DOES issue a one time check to a qualified assignment company which includes the cost of the single premium structured settlement annuity.
- Passing off Julie-Ann Amos' piece as "the truth about structured settlement awards" is a poor reflection on Prosperity Partners. The company is more than capable of writing its own factually based content.
Julie Ann Amos posts are flooding the Internet on Prosperity Partners blogs in Georgia, New York, Arizona, Illinois as part of Prosperity partner's blitzkreig strategy. Once again Julie Ann Amos (picture above) has no credentials that qualify her as a structured settlement expert. She is simply a content generator, nothing more.













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