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Bloomberg BNA Publishes Article on McKennon Law Group’s Case “Aetna Ignored Facebook Posts Showing Man’s Disability: Lawsuit”

On April 23, 2018, Bloomberg BNA published an article covering McKennon Law Group’s
innovative use of social media monitoring to benefit our client in his lawsuit against Aetna
Insurance Company. In “Aetna Ignored Facebook Posts Showing Man’s Disability: Lawsuit,”
Jacklyn Wille, Reporter for Bloomberg BNA, covers our complaint’s unique use of Aetna’s
social media surveillance in this long-term disability insurance case. The article discusses how
the complaint argues that Aetna improperly terminated benefits in part because it ignored
Facebook posts that are highly supportive of the plaintiff’s disability. The article is posted
below:

Benefits & Executive Compensation News

Aetna Ignored Facebook Posts Showing Man’s Disability: Lawsuit

By Jacklyn Willie

  • Lawsuit challenges Aetna’s denial of disability benefits
  • Insurer focused on surveillance and not doctor opinions or Facebook posts, lawsuit alleges

Aetna Life Insurance Co. terminated a man’s long-term disability benefits without sufficiently considering a series of Facebook posts showing the persistence of his medical troubles, a new lawsuit alleges.

Michael Ashline, an accounting assistant whose severe inner-ear disorder causes dizziness and nausea, sued Aetna April 20 in federal court. Ashline says Aetna’s termination of benefits relied too heavily on physical surveillance that the insurer wrongly said contradicted his claim of disability. Aetna overlooked both the opinions of Ashline’s treating physicians and the many Facebook posts documenting his condition, he alleges.

Social media monitoring is a growing practice in which insurers or third-party investigators review a person’s online footprint for information relevant to their claimed disability. In the past few years, Aetna, Principal Life, Sun Life, First Reliance Standard, MetLife, and Unum all cited social media postings in the course of denying or terminating an individual’s disability benefits.

Ashline says Aetna used a third-party surveillance company to review his and his wife’s social media profiles. The company allegedly told Aetna their profiles included many references to his symptoms, medical appointments, and “struggles to participate in his family’s daily activities,” along with supportive comments from friends and family referencing his illness.

Aetna failed to acknowledge these posts and other evidence of disability, instead focusing on physical surveillance showing Ashline walking slowly and wearing sunglasses to avoid triggering symptoms, the lawsuit says. Ashline is asking a federal judge to order Aetna to reinstate his disability benefits.

Aetna didn’t immediately respond to Bloomberg Law’s request for comment.

The lawsuit was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California by McKennon Law Group PC.

The case is Ashline v. Aetna Life Ins. Co., C.D. Cal., No. 8:18-cv-00649, complain 4/20/18.

Reproduced with permission. Apr. 23, 2018. Copyright 2018 by The Bureau of National Affairs,
Inc. (800-372-1033) <http://www.bna.com>

Los Angeles Daily Journal Publishes Small Firm Profile on the McKennon Law Group PC Entitled “Shifting Allegiance: No Longer Insurers’ Advocates, McKennon Law Group Attorneys Stand Up for Policyholders”

In the May 7, 2018 issue of the Los Angeles Daily Journal, Daily Journal Staff Writer Melanie Brisbon authored a “small firm profile” article on the McKennon Law Group PC. The article covers the firm’s path to success, starting with its unconventional background: several of the firm’s attorneys left established careers defending insurance companies before “shifting allegiance” to represent insureds, policyholders and claimants. The firm started with three lawyers, including founding partner Robert J. McKennon and senior associate Scott E. Calvert. Now, the firm consists of five attorneys and has a thriving practice in insurance litigation representing policyholders, especially involving life, health and disability insurance cases governed by insurance bad faith or ERISA. The text portion of the profile is reprinted in full below.

This article is posted with the permission of the Los Angeles Daily Journal.

Shifting Allegiance

No longer insurers’ advocates, McKennon Law Group attorneys stand up for policyholders.

By Melanie Brisbon

Daily Journal Staff Writer

Insurance policyholders throughout the country call McKennon Law Group PC for counsel in complex conflicts with their insurers.

The five-attorney outfit in Newport Beach has secured many favorable results for its clients through settlements, trials and alternative dispute resolution.

“Our specialty is bad faith insurance litigation and [Employee Retirement Income Security Act] litigation involving insurance and pension issues, focused mostly on disability insurance, health insurance and life insurance claims,” said Robert J. McKennon, the firm’s founding and name partner.

Complex legal issues with insurers don’t intimidate McKennon Law Group. In fact, three of the firm’s lawyers, including its founding partner, used to advocate for the insurers. McKennon defended insurance companies for nearly 25 years as an attorney and partner at Barger & Wolen LLP. He changed sides in 2010 and created McKennon Law Group two years later.

“My heart was always sort of with claimants and policyholders because I saw a lot of claimants and policyholders when I was on the defense side getting poor representation by plaintiffs lawyers,” McKennon said.

“Secondly, I was hired by a few insurance companies in difficult bad faith cases while I was on the defense side and they asked me to get involved in mock trials as a plaintiff’s attorney in bad faith disability insurance cases,” he added. “In every mock trial that I did, I ended up winning substantial damages and it whet my appetite to start to work on the plaintiff’s side doing policyholder litigation.”

Challenges arose when McKennon decided to represent plaintiffs instead of insurance companies. For starters, he was known as a lawyer who represented insurance companies.

“One of my biggest challenges was getting my name out there to prospective insureds who I would now represent and also to lawyers letting them know I was now representing policyholders against insurance companies in primarily life, health and disability matters,” McKennon said. “The way I did that was communicating with a number of lawyers that I knew in Orange County especially, letting them know that I was now suing insurance companies.”

Marketing strategies also helped McKennon overcome the challenges.

“I developed a very strong and vibrant website and insurance litigation blog,” he said. “I started doing a lot of blogging and my lawyers do a lot of writing and blogging.”

The firm started with three lawyers, including associate Scott E. Calvert, who McKennon hired at Barger & Wolen.

“He hired me for my first job out of law school,” Calvert said. “Talking to him and seeing the fulfillment he got in working for policyholders made me think that might be something I would want to do too.”

More business started coming in and the firm added more lawyers—Joseph S. McMillen, David S. Rankin and Stephanie L. Talavera.

In a federal court case, McKennon Law Group represented a former lawyer who sought long-term disability benefits under his employer’s welfare benefit plan based on a “mental breakdown,” according to court documents.

The plan was funded by an insurance policy which set forth the eligibility requirements for receipt of benefits. The insurer denied the benefit claim after concluding that McKennon Law Group’s client was not totally disability during the entire period set forth in the eligibility requirements, court documents say.

“The insurer felt that he was able to work, and after we won the case at trial, they found some records that he actually represented himself in his own divorce proceeding and in a post-trial proceeding. They tried to use that against him saying he wasn’t disabled,” McKennon said. “We were able to convince the court to disregard that evidence.”

The insurer appealed the judgment to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which upheld the lower court’s decision and awarded attorney fees.

In another case, McKennon Law Group represented a plaintiff who sued his health insurer, claiming his daughter was covered under an ERISA-governed health plan issued by a large insurance company.

The plaintiff alleged the child required residential rehabilitation substance abuse treatment for a variety of problems. The insurer denied the claim, saying additional residential treatment was not medically necessary under the plan, according to court documents.

The court found in favor of the firm’s client and awarded him $113,000 plus prejudgment interest, along with substantial attorney fees and costs.

“We obviously have to look at and provide sufficient medical information that our client is disabled, but we also have to prove that our client is disabled under a particular definition under a particular contract,” McKennon said. “Depending on whether we are litigating an ERISA-governed insurance policy, versus a policy that is governed by California law or some other state law, the legal proof will differ.”

“We have to be comfortable with laws of various states in order to litigate disability, life or health insurance issues in California and in other states.”

Business litigation is also one of the firm’s practice areas.

Erwin J. Shustak, managing partner of Shustak Reynolds & Partners PC, first met McKennon as opposing counsel.

“Robert McKennon was an adversary of mine probably six years ago in a large arbitration dispute,” Shustak said. “He won the case and did an excellent job for his client. I was so impressed with him that years later I hired him to represent me in a personal matter.”

Robert McKennon and Stephanie Talavera Publish Article in the Los Angeles Daily Journal: “Ruling Addresses When A Third-party Acts as ERISA Fiduciary”

ERISA protects employees from abuse of their employer-sponsored benefit plans by establishing procedural protections and codifying fiduciary relationships. Under ERISA, plan fiduciaries must administer the plan in accordance with their duties of loyalty and prudence. While the employer who formed the plan is always a fiduciary under ERISA, other parties, such as the insurer or claims administrator, may become fiduciaries through certain conduct. When insurers have discretion to deny benefits under an ERISA plan, they are typically considered claims fiduciaries. In the April 6, 2018 edition of the Los Angeles Daily Journal, Robert J. McKennon and Stephanie L. Talavera of the McKennon Law Group PC discuss a recent Ninth Circuit case that outlines the role that employers and other fiduciaries play under ERISA to “ensure that employees will not be left empty-handed.” In an article entitled “Ruling Addresses When A Third-party Acts as ERISA Fiduciary,” McKennon and Talavera evaluate the effect of the new Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals case, Santomenno v. Transamerica Life Ins. Co., 883 F.3d 833 (9th Cir. 2018), and explain how the decision’s effect is limited, but still underscores the ever-more important role that breach of fiduciary duty claims play in ERISA.

How to Fight ERISA Long-Term Disability Claims Denials: The Use of Personal Statements

Pain is a highly subjective, personal phenomenon. Only the person suffering from pain can adequately describe that pain and how that person is affected by the pain. And we know that one person may be capable of tolerating a completely different threshold of pain when compared to another person. Similarly, reports of fatigue vary widely from person to person. Because of the nature of pain, fatigue and other such disabling symptoms, determining whether subjective complaints render an individual disabled for the purposes of long-term disability benefits necessarily relies on the individual claimant’s personal statement/description. Put another way, the individual must explain what he or she goes through firsthand. Not only does this aid in the insurer’s understanding of the insured’s disability, it also serves as a powerful, compelling statement of what the disabled individual has been through, in his or her own words.

In a recent long-term disability insurance case governed by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (“ERISA”), Kibel v. Aetna Life Ins. Co., 2018 WL 832870 (9th Cir. Feb. 13, 2018), the Ninth Circuit emphasized the importance of a claimant’s personal statement regarding the subjective symptoms that she suffered, such as pain, fatigue and other such complaints. In this article, we discuss Kibel, and the value of a disability claimant’s personal statement. From a practical perspective, we outline some of the key features that every disability claimant’s personal statement should include, as well as further support in the form of corroborating statements from colleagues, friends and family members who have witnessed the disabling symptoms firsthand.

Kibel v. Aetna, 2018 WL 832870 (9th Cir. Feb. 13, 2018)
In Kibel v. Aetna, Plaintiff-Appellant Margueritte Kibel (“Kibel”) appealed from the district court’s judgment in favor of Defendant-Appellee Aetna Life Insurance Company (“Aetna”). The district court concluded that Aetna properly denied Kibel’s claim for long-term disability benefits. In doing so, it determined Kibel not totally disabled under her employer-sponsored long-term disability plan. On appeal, the Ninth Circuit reversed and remanded, finding that Kibel met her burden; she adequately proved that her multiple sclerosis (“MS”) prevented her from performing the duties of her occupation as a Relationship Manager at City National Bank from February 20, 2013 forward.

Like many plans, Aetna’s long-term disability plan provided the following definition of “Total Disability:”

[Y]ou will be deemed to be totally disabled on any day if, as a result of disease or injury, you are unable to perform with reasonable continuity the substantial and material acts necessary to pursue your own occupation and you are not working in your own occupation.

Applying that definition, the Ninth Circuit first underscored the client-centered nature of Kibel’s position. Her job placed a heavy emphasis on client development and management, requiring her to devote approximately sixty-five percent of her time to outside sales and finding, identifying and developing new clients while cultivating strong partnerships with centers of influence in and around the community.

Unlike Aetna and the district court, the Ninth Circuit placed little weight on the physician’s “labels” of Kibel as “healthy,” “doing ok,” and “normal.” Instead, the Court focused on the history and practical effects of Kibel’s condition, in particular, her fatigue. For example, in 2011 Kibel collapsed twice: first with clients and a second time with her supervisor. Following those incidents and her confirming diagnosis of MS, Kibel attempted to return to work several times to no avail.

Ultimately, the Kibel Court found that “the district court and Aetna clearly erred in failing to consider the personal statement that Kibel submitted explaining that her fatigue did, in fact, render her totally disabled.” In her personal statement, Kibel described her fatigue as “an overpowering feeling of extreme tiredness, exhaustion, [and] weakness[.]” In this personal statement, Kibel further explained how it left her “completely drained” and caused “a complete slowdown of [her] brain and body[.]” The Court found that, this evidence in the form of Kibel’s own personal statement, when appropriately considered, further supported a finding that Kibel’s condition prevented her from performing the duties of her occupation. For that reason, the Ninth Circuit reversed and remanded, instructing “the district court to direct an award of benefits to Kibel[.]”

The Kibel court relied on Demer v. IBM Corp. LTD Plan, 835 F.3d 893, 904–07 (9th Cir. 2016) for the rule that a district court and disability insurer must “consider a claimant’s subjective account of pain” when deciding whether she is disabled. Id. at *2.

As detailed above, a personal statement can be the difference between a denial and an award of long-term disability benefits; it was for Kibel. With this in mind, personal statements must be relevant to the circumstances and should include the following information: 1) a detailed description of the duties of your occupation as you performed them, 2) a detailed discussion of the history of your condition, 3) a detailed discussion of your symptoms and 4) how those symptoms, such as pain and fatigue, impact your ability to perform the duties of your occupation; 5) how your disability has also impacted your overall quality of life and 6) a discussion of the things you could previously do but can no longer do. It is also important that you write your own personal statement. It should sound authentic and the best way to achieve that is by writing it in your own words. Moreover, because personal testimony is a form of proof that typically raises credibility issues, it is likewise important that you gather corroborating statements from colleagues, friends and family. Like the disability claimant’s personal statement, these corroborating statements should discuss each person’s firsthand account of your decline as the result of your condition.

A positive for ERISA disability claimants, the Ninth Circuit’s ruling in Kibel has wider applicability than just ERISA cases. Because most long-term disability insurance policies do not define disability materially differently between ERISA and Non-ERISA policies, personal statements can be valuable whether you have an individual disability insurance policy governed by state insurance bad faith laws or an ERISA-governed group policy.

Bad Faith Claims Handling: California Department of Insurance Investigates Aetna’s Health Claim Denials

On our blog, we frequently discuss the improper tactics insurers use to deny legitimate claims for life, health, disability and other forms of insurance. For our latest article on the pervasive problem in health insurance claims denials, see https://mslawllp.com/la-times-report-pervasive-problem-of-improper-health-insurance-denials/. Mckennon Law Group PC has had much experience litigating against health insurers who deny legitimate medical claims. We know this is a rampant problem. So, it was not shocking to us that at least one very large health insurer, Aetna, took highly improper actions to deny medical insurance claims.

On February 12, 2018, the California Department of Insurance (“CDI”) issued a press release confirming its investigation of Aetna, one of the largest health insurance providers in the U.S. California Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones directed an investigation into Aetna’s claims handling practices for potential misconduct. Specifically, Aetna’s determinations to deny coverage without a physician’s review of the medical records. The Commissioner expressed his concern over Aetna’s reviewing practices as follows:

I have directed the California Department of Insurance to open an investigation of allegations regarding Aetna’s practices in denying claims and requests for prior authorization for care. The department is also investigating Aetna’s utilization review process. If a health insurer is making decisions to deny coverage without a physician ever reviewing medical records that is a significant concern and could be a violation of the law. The department is seeking more information from Aetna about their claims denial process and I would encourage any Californians who are concerned that they might have been affected to contact the California Department of Insurance at 1-800-927-4357.

CDI’s announcement follows from a report on the topic by CNN, focusing on several troubling admissions made by Aetna’s former medical director for southern California, Dr. Jay Ken Iinuma. Reportedly, Dr. Iinuma admitted that he did not review patients’ medical records firsthand. As a matter of practice, he instead relied on nurses’ secondhand reporting of pertinent information in the medical records.

These admissions appear during the former medical director’s video-taped deposition in an ongoing lawsuit for breach of insurance contract and bad faith. In the lawsuit, Plaintiff Gillen Washington alleges that his health insurer, Aetna, improperly denied preauthorization coverage of his monthly infusion of intravenous immunoglobulin, an otherwise regular treatment for his rare immune disorder. Although Dr. Iinuma authorized the denial as not medically necessary, the deposition transcript revealed his limited knowledge of Washington’s rare disease and its necessary treatment.

Whereas CNN described Dr. Iinuma’s admissions as “stunning,” the use of underqualified consultants to support a denial of coverage is more common than some might think. At the McKennon Law Group PC, we frequently see improper claims denials supported in this manner, through a nurse consultant’s review of the medical records and not a physician’s review of the same. Even more shocking, the insurer often relies on the unqualified consultant’s opinion over that of the insured’s treating physician. We regularly see this in the handling of long-term disability insurance claims, short-term disability insurance claims and health insurance claims.

Similarly, an insurer may attempt to support an improper denial of coverage by using a non-specialist physician. This can be problematic in instances like the above because, as Dr. Iinuma also admitted in his deposition, he had little experience treating those with the rare immunological disorder Washington suffers from, and thus, he knew little about its necessary treatment. We can also surmise that the Aetna nurse who had reviewed his medical records also had little experience treating those with immunological disorders. Yet, he still authorized denial of coverage for the treatment as not medically necessary. More troubling still, lurking behind these issues of qualification are issues of bias. Often, the unqualified consultants work on-site, essentially acting as employees of the insurer, which in turn, renders them more likely to provide an opinion in favor of a claim denial.

Having an experienced long-term disability, individual disability, health and life insurance attorney matters to the success of your insurance claim, particularly where the denial of coverage relies on the opinion of an unqualified consultant or non-specialist peer review physician. If your claim for health, life, short-term disability or long-term disability insurance has been denied, call (949)387-9595 for a free consultation with the attorneys of the McKennon Law Group PC, several of whom previously represented insurance companies and are exceptionally experienced in handling ERISA and Non-ERISA disability and medical insurance claims.

Fee-Shifting: When are Attorneys’ Fees Recoverable in ERISA Cases?

Challenging a wrongfully denied claim for life, health, long-term disability or accidental death and dismemberment benefits can be a very time-consuming endeavor for law firms handling these types of cases. The resources required to fight a sophisticated insurer can quickly become very expensive. Without the ability to collect attorney’s fees, many wrongfully denied insurance claims would go unchallenged, not for lack of merit, but due to a lack of economic viability. Fortunately, the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, or ERISA, allows for recovery of attorneys’ fees upon a showing of some degree of success on the merits. In other words, a meritorious lawsuit under ERISA will almost certainly result in making the culpable party (usually the insurer who denied the claim) foot the bill. Without this key incentive, insureds and their attorneys would be hard-pressed to pursue a wrongfully denied claim for benefits. Although not the subject of this article, attorney’s fees may also be obtained in non-ERISA state court insurance bad faith cases too.

In this article, we focus on the importance of ERISA’s fee-shifting provisions and some of the contours of that statutory remedy. First, we provide a brief background on attorneys’ fees in our legal system, largely governed by the “American Rule.” Next, we discuss ERISA’s fee-shifting provision as a statutory exception to that rule and as applied by the Ninth Circuit in Dishman v. UNUM Life Ins. Co. of Am., 269 F.3d 974 (9th Cir. 2001).

The “American Rule”
In the U.S., our legal system largely allocates responsibility for attorneys’ fees in accordance with the American Rule. Unlike the English Rule, its American counterpart assigns each party responsibility for his or her own attorneys’ fees, unless a statute or contract provides otherwise. This responsibility applies even if the other party is at fault. The American Rule contrasts with the English Rule in that the latter awards attorneys’ fees to the winner as an element of damages, i.e., the loser pays. Many believe the English Rule is a fairer approach, although it may unfairly penalize parties for defending or pursuing an action where the legal outcome is uncertain.

ERISA’s Fee-Shifting Provision
ERISA provides a “fee-shifting,” statutory exception to the American Rule. See 29 U.S.C. § 1132(g)(1). More like the English Rule’s loser-pays regime, this provision grants the court discretion to award reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs in an ERISA action. ERISA’s generous fee-shifting provision does not even require that the party prevail to be entitled to attorneys’ fees. As the U.S. Supreme Court declared in Hardt v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co., 560 U.S. 242 (2010), under ERISA, the court may award attorneys’ fees based solely on a showing of some degree of success on the merits.

When Does ERISA’s Fee-Shifting Provision Apply?
As discussed in various other blogs on the subject, employee benefits governed by ERISA typically require at least one mandatory internal appeal to the insurer (if the Policy has such a provision, which they typically do). Thus, if you have a long-term disability policy through your employer, and the governing policy or plan document requires appeal of any denial or termination of benefits, one would have to exhaust that internal appeal before he could file a lawsuit. Failure to do so may prevent the participant from filing a lawsuit in the future.

ERISA’s fee-shifting provision applies only to those fees incurred in preparation of litigation and not typically in the requisite administrative appeals process. However, there are exceptions to this rule. One case that discusses such an exception is Dishman v. UNUM Life Ins. Co. of Am., 269 F.3d 974 (9th Cir. 2001), in which the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals approved an award of attorneys’ fees for work that would otherwise be considered part of the administrative process. In Dishman, the court approved plaintiff’s attorneys’ fees because it found that there was nothing to pare off, as the insurer did not make an adequate administrative remedy available to plaintiff.

The plaintiff, Mr. Dishman, struggled with disabling migraines for many years before he could no longer work. Unum accepted Mr. Dishman’s claim; however, after a few years, Unum assigned Mr. Dishman’s claim to its Complex Claim Unit and hired several private investigators. Instead of conducting medical evaluations, Unum’s investigation focused on Mr. Dishman’s potential affiliation with a Colorado company. Based on this information, Unum called Mr. Dishman and cancelled his benefits, later retracting the cancellation, calling it a “suspension.”

The correspondence that followed appear as attempts to engage in the administrative appeals process under ERISA. Mr. Dishman’s attorney corresponded with Unum on his behalf, proposing that Mr. Dishman be examined by a neutral neurologist. Unum declined and requested further information related to Mr. Dishman’s potential employment in Colorado. Mr. Dishman attempted to comply with Unum’s requests for some time, but when Mr. Dishman’s attorney requested a copy of Unum’s claim procedure, his first request was ignored. As to his second request, Unum responded only that it “does not have a Claims Procedure with regard to the suspension or termination of benefits.”

Although this back-and-forth looks akin to an attempted administrative process, the court determined that Unum’s conduct communicated to Mr. Dishman that he had no administrative recourse. Accordingly, the Court upheld the District Court’s exception to the exhaustion requirement because Unum gave Mr. Dishman inadequate notice of the denial and available appeals procedure. Further, the court also largely agreed with the District Court’s award of all Mr. Dishman’s attorneys’ fees (absent interest thereon) because:

[T]here was nothing to pare off […] none of the claimed hours were expended in connection with the exhaustion of administrative procedures, inasmuch as Unum did not make any administrative remedy available to the plaintiff.

In sum, the courts have long-acknowledged the importance of this recovery provision in achieving the fundamental goals of ERISA. It provides a financial incentive for attorneys to represent plan participants, beneficiaries or fiduciaries with wrongfully denied claims for benefits. It also penalizes administrators for claims handling misconduct by forcing them to internalize those costs. Along with other statutory incentives, the threat of looming attorneys’ fees gives real teeth to ERISA’s procedural protections, increasing the cost of failure to comply with these ERISA protections. McKennon Law Group PC has recovered significant attorney’s fees in many of the bad faith and ERISA insurance matters it has handled for our clients. This has allowed our clients in those cases to keep all or most of their disability, life, accidental death and long-term care benefits.

 

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  • Ninth Circuit Again Addresses California’s Lapse Statutes: A Mixed Ruling in Siino v. Foresters Life
  • When ERISA Plans Fail to Speak Clearly: The Ninth Circuit Upholds Benefits Denial Reversal in Residential Mental Health Treatment Case Under De Novo Standard of Review
  • Mundrati v. Unum: An Important Decision on How Insurers Are to Characterize a Claimant’s Occupation in Long-Term Disability Disputes
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20321 SW Birch St #200
Newport Beach, CA 92660
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Phone: 949-504-5381

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