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      Is Transferring Assets Against the Law?

      Posted in [Medicaid Planning]

      You may have heard that transferring assets, or helping someone to transfer assets, to achieve Medicaid eligibility is a crime.  Is this true?  The short answer is that for a brief period it was, and it's possible, although unlikely under current law, that it will be in the future.

      As part of a 1996 Kennedy-Kassebaum health care bill, Congress made it a crime to transfer assets for purposes of achieving Medicaid eligibility.  Congress repealed the law as part of the 1997 Balanced Budget bill, but replaced it with a statute that made it a crime to advise or counsel someone for a fee regarding transferring assets for purposes of obtaining Medicaid.  This meant that although transferring assets was again legal, explaining the law to clients could have been a criminal act.

      In 1998, Attorney General Janet Reno determined that the law was unconstitutional because it violated the First Amendment protection of free speech, and she told Congress that the Justice Department would not enforce the law.  Around the same time, a U.S. District Court Judge in New York said that the law could not be enforced for the same reason.  Accordingly, the law remains on the books, but it will not be enforced.  Since it is possible that these rulings may change, an elder law attorney should be contacted before filing a Medicaid application.


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