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The sick man who let his baby die in hot car
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<blockquote data-quote="Kathy813" data-source="post: 630093" data-attributes="member: 1967"><p>Nomad, it sounds like you are talking about whole life insurance policies that grow in value over time and can be cashed out for a lump sum value. </p><p></p><p>The amount of the insurance policies in this case are actually a $2000 policy and a $25,000 policy. . . not two $25,000 as has been reported in some news articles.</p><p></p><p>I can understand the $2000 policy since I had similar small policies on my girls through my job. For a couple of dollars a month, the school system provided $5000 policies for each of my dependents.</p><p></p><p>You are correct that we should find out all of the facts. We don't know if the $25,000 policy was a term life or whole life. However, based on the fact that it was reported in today's paper that the father was already instructing his family how to get the life insurance just hours after the boy died while the father was still being questioned by the police is certainly troubling.</p><p></p><p>The paper said today that the investigation had widened and now included the mother. Her first words to the day care center workers ("Ross must have left him in the car") and then to her husband ("have you said too much?") have made the police believe she may have been involved. She, too, had searched the computer on how long it takes to die in a car just days before the little boy's death.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Kathy813, post: 630093, member: 1967"] Nomad, it sounds like you are talking about whole life insurance policies that grow in value over time and can be cashed out for a lump sum value. The amount of the insurance policies in this case are actually a $2000 policy and a $25,000 policy. . . not two $25,000 as has been reported in some news articles. I can understand the $2000 policy since I had similar small policies on my girls through my job. For a couple of dollars a month, the school system provided $5000 policies for each of my dependents. You are correct that we should find out all of the facts. We don't know if the $25,000 policy was a term life or whole life. However, based on the fact that it was reported in today's paper that the father was already instructing his family how to get the life insurance just hours after the boy died while the father was still being questioned by the police is certainly troubling. The paper said today that the investigation had widened and now included the mother. Her first words to the day care center workers ("Ross must have left him in the car") and then to her husband ("have you said too much?") have made the police believe she may have been involved. She, too, had searched the computer on how long it takes to die in a car just days before the little boy's death. [/QUOTE]
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