by Structured Settlement Watchdog®
The Chamber of Commerce has this dubious "review" of Einstein Structured Settlements and it just doesn't make any sense.
"by John Brave on 11/8/2013
I won a lawsuit last year and got Einstein Structured Settlements to help me receive my payments in one lump sum. Living in Los Angeles, rent is expensive. I was able to..." The highly suspect "review" makes no sense.
Reasons why Einstein Structured Settlement Review is suspect
- If a person "won a lawsuit" that means a jury or a judge found for the plaintiff and in California would be awarded a lump sum anyway*. That is unless they negotiate a structured settlement AFTER the fact, if there were good faith appealable issues in the case. But that's not what the suspect review says, at first.
- Then the reviewer refers to receiving payments in a one lump sum, which would indicate selling or transferring structured settlement payment rights
- Selling structured settlement payment rights within a year of their establishment is a very unwise financial move. Tremendous financial loss. If Einstein Structured Settlements participates in those sort of deals it establishes itself as a true predator.
- Einstein Structured Settlement/ Einstein Structured Funding is a brand not a company, associated with Ryan Blank and Richart Ruddie, about which I have provided irrefutable documented evidence that two cheap paid actor reviews have been used by the JRR Funding brand for almost 5 years with Einstein to fraudulently portray customers of Einstein to deceive consumers. One of the two involve an improbable story deceptive to Hispanic consumers.
* in New York, subject to CPLR Article 50A (medical, dental or podiatric malpractice) or CPLR 50B (other general liability), amounts of future damages exceeding certain thresholds must be part of structured judgment.
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