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Use Caution in Choosing an Estate Planner

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The California attorney general’s office cautions senior citizens and their children and caretakers to carefully scrutinize the credentials of anyone who offers to prepare a living trust or other estate-planning document.

Such documents are sometimes marketed as a way to gain access to seniors’ financial information. The seniors are then pressured into buying insurance or investments that may be inappropriate.

Seniors may also be falsely told that a living trust can help them avoid income or estate taxes. Living trusts are designed to avoid the costs of probate, a court process that occurs after death.

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Anyone who prepares estate-planning documents should have several years’ experience in the field and special training, said Arthur H. Bredenbeck, a Half Moon Bay attorney and former chairman of the State Bar of California’s estate-planning section.

“Obviously, I would love to say, ‘Consult a lawyer,’ but other people may be competent,” Bredenbeck said. “I would get a recommendation from a trusted friend, your accountant or your banker--somebody I trusted.”

Some documents, such as a will or a simple living trust, can be drawn up using self-help books or software. But even one of the leaders of the self-help legal movement, estate-planning attorney and author Denis Clifford, recommends that people with assets worth more than $600,000 or those with complicated estates seek competent legal advice rather than trying a do-it-yourself approach.

Liz Pulliam can be reached at liz.pulliam@latimes.com. For more information about estate planning and trusts, visit The Times’ Web site at https://www.latimes.com/HOME/BUSINESS/PERFIN/.

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