Attorney General Keith Ellison said he will push for legislation that would make Minnesota the first state to guarantee that anybody who wants to sell part of their court settlement would be represented by an attorney.
"I think having a lawyer on your side will make a dramatic and important difference and will ensure that people have the best outcome," Ellison said in an interview this week. "This is an industry that depends on taking advantage of vulnerable people in desperate circumstances. In most cases, if these deals are put through proper scrutiny, they aren't going to happen."
Each year, settlement purchasing companies persuade U.S. accident victims to sell an estimated $1 billion in future payments. On average, the companies keep 60% of the money, according to a Star Tribune analysis of more than 2,400 deals from seven states from 2000 to 2020.
Typically, accident victims who opt to sell some or all of their settlement payments represent themselves in court, leaving many judges with little information to make an informed decision about whether to approve the deal, records and interviews show.
Judges in Minnesota and other states are required to approve the sale of future settlement payments to avoid stiff federal tax penalties that would make the deals unattractive to the companies buying them.
Many of the deals involve people who suffered traumatic brain injuries and other long-term harm. In Minnesota, 1 in 8 transactions involved a seller with documented mental health problems.
Ellison said a recent Star Tribune series on abuses within the industry showed that Minnesota needs to lead the way on reforming the business. In the past two decades, hundreds of Minnesotans have given up decades of financial security in exchange for upfront cash payments, sometimes for pennies on the dollar, records and interviews show.
"This is at the very heart of why I wanted to be the attorney general," Ellison said. "I want to help balance the scales between individuals and massive corporations and give people a chance for prosperity."