Attorney General Lori Swanson on Thursday announced her office's second settlement with a life insurance company involving the questionable sale of long-term annuities to Minnesota senior citizens.
Swanson said the settlement with Iowa-based American Equity Investment Life Insurance Co. will affect as many as 2,400 Minnesotans whose claims for refunds total $125 million.
At a Capitol news conference, Swanson also said her office has filed a lawsuit making similar allegations of improper sales to seniors against AmerUs/American Investors. A previous lawsuit against Midland National Life Insurance Co. is pending.
In October, the state settled with Allianz Life Insurance Co. of North America in a case involving 7,000 Minnesotans who had annuities valued at $325 million.
Swanson said senior citizens have become popular targets of insurers rather than younger workers, because they have built up nest eggs over a lifetime of work.
"If you're a hunter, you go where the ducks are," Swanson said.
Deferred annuities provide purchasers with a guaranteed payout after a number of years. They often carry a substantial penalty for early withdrawals, which some advocates say make them unsuitable investments for the elderly.
Swanson cited the case of Norman Pederson, an 80-year-old Aitkin resident, who placed his $24,000 in savings in a 15-year annuity.