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- IMPORTANT:
No information on this site is intended as legal advice.

Copyright © 2006
Ronald Hudkins
The creation of
offshore trusts and other financial plans is a way of
shielding your assets from the laws of the nation in
which you reside. It can sometimes be used to remove one
of the two certainties of life; taxes. Americans are far
less likely than the citizens of other countries to put
assets abroad because, although when you receive the
benefits of being free of your country’s laws regarding
assets (namely taxation) you also lose the aspect of
those laws that are designed to protect your assets.
Americans are far more likely to just accept taxes,
because our country has an enviable financial system
that people around the world wish to participate in
already. However, many people would like to know more
about offshore banking options for a portion of their
wealth because they view taxes as an all too unnecessary
evil. Whenever we read stories about the government
buying a hammer for $500 from a certain large
corporation (Name omitted to avoid liability) as part of
a no bid contract, we may begin to entertain the idea of
placing personal assets offshore.
Another reason many Americans decide not to use offshore
asset protection options is that they are advised by
their attorneys not to do so. This is because offshore
asset protection (while desirable) is a topic that your
attorney may be very unfamiliar with and therefore
uneasy guiding you through it. Attorneys are as afraid
of being sued for malpractice as any other professional
person is and while most estate planning attorneys in
the United States understand the laws that govern asset
protection domestically, they are not as well versed in
protecting their clients’ interests abroad. For that
reason, many well-intentioned, responsible and
highly-able attorneys fear putting their client’s
interests into a system where they cannot as easily
protect them, and thus, they advise against taking
assets abroad. If your own attorney has discouraged you
from taking assets abroad in the past, it is a good sign
that he/she genuinely cares about serving your needs as
a client and is doing his/her level best to look out for
you and your family. On the other hand, it is often true
that asset protection in another country requires an
attorney from that country, so it may be that it is
simply a matter of greed and a desire not to lose your
business to someone else that motivates some members of
the profession to discourage offshore asset protection.
But, in an increasingly global marketplace it will
become more and more common for estate planners to be
well versed in the finer points of offshore asset
management and the rewards that it can bring. Offshore
asset management can be a powerful tool in the world of
estate planning and it will become the norm for
professionals in the field of estate planning to
understand this complex field of law or begin to lose
business to those who do understand how to take care of
their clients needs using every available strategy in a
global market.
About Ronald E.
Hudkins; Ronald Hudkins is a retired U.S. Army Military
Police member that was assigned as a staff researcher.
He has coordinated with military and criminal
investigators, set on court marshals and worked closely
with the Staff Judge Advocate Generals Office (JAG). He
has a keen sense of legal matters - their
interpretation, initiatives and guidelines. For
imperative financial planning needs he suggests his book
“Asset Protection and Estate Planning for All Ages.”
Additionally, he offers a Free Newsletter at his web
site:
http://www.AssetProtectNow.com
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© E. Stassinos, Esq. 2005. All Rights Reserved.
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