• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

McKennon Law Group HomepageMcKennon Law Group

E-Book Download Now

Free Phone Consultation Nationwide

(949) 504-5381

We Offer No Fee or Cost Unless You Get Paid

CALL US NOW
EMAIL US NOW
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Attorneys
      • Robert J. McKennon
      • Joseph McMillen
      • Joseph Hoff
      • Nicholas A. West
      • Cory Salisbury
      • Zlatina (Ina) Meier
    • Awards & Recognitions
    • Insurers We Fight
      • A-L
        • Aetna
        • AIG
        • Ameritas
        • Anthem
        • AXA
        • Berkshire
        • Broadspire
        • CIGNA/LINA
        • Guardian
        • Insurance
        • Liberty Mutual
        • Lincoln Financial Group
      • M-Z
        • Mass Mutual
        • MetLife
        • Mutual Of Omaha
        • New York Life
        • Northwestern Mutual
        • Principal Mutual
        • Provident
        • Prudential
        • Reliance Standard
        • Sedgwick
  • Our Services
    • Bad Faith Insurance
      • Disability Insurance Bad Faith
      • Life Insurance Bad Faith
    • Disability Insurance
      • Anxiety Claims Denial
      • Arthritis Claims Denial
      • Back, Neck And Spine Injury Claims
      • Cancer Claims
      • Chronic Headache Claims Denial
      • Cognitive Impairment Claims Denial
      • Depression Claim Denial
      • Medication Side Effects Claims Denial
      • Mental Illness Claims Denial
      • Multiple Sclerosis Claims Denial
      • Orthopedic Injury Claims Denial
    • Life Insurance
    • ERISA Insurance & Pension Claims
    • Accidental Death & Dismemberment Insurance Claims
    • Health Insurance
    • Long-Term Care
    • Professional Liability Insurance
      • Directors And Officers Liability Insurance
      • Property Casualty Insurance
  • Reviews
  • Success Stories
  • Blogs
    • News
    • Insurance & ERISA Litigation Blog
    • Disability Insurance Blog
  • FAQs
    • How Do You Pay Us
    • Disability Insurance FAQs
    • Life Insurance FAQs
    • Insurance Bad Faith FAQs
    • ERISA FAQs
    • Health Insurance FAQs
    • Long-Term Care FAQs
    • Annuities FAQs
    • Professional Liability FAQs
    • Accidental Death FAQs
  • Contact Us
Firm News
Get Legal Help Now

Robert J. McKennon Recognized as 2014 “Super Lawyer”

McKennon Law Group PC is proud to announce that its founding partner Robert J. McKennon has been recognized as one of Southern California’s “Super Lawyers” and appears in the 2014 edition of Southern California Super Lawyers magazine published today.

Each year, Super Lawyers magazine, which is published in all 50 states and reaches more than 13 million readers, names attorneys in each state who attain a high degree of peer recognition and professional achievement. The Super Lawyer designation is given to less than 5% of lawyers nationally after being nominated and voted on by their peers.

In addition, the American Society of Legal Advocates has recognized Mr. McKennon as one of the top 100 Insurance lawyers in the State of California for 2014. The American Society of Legal Advocates is an invitation-only, nationwide organization of top lawyers in practice today who combine excellent legal credentials with a proven commitment to community engagement and the highest professional standards.

Mr. McKennon was also awarded the designation of 2014 “Top Rated Lawyer in Insurance Law and Coverage” by American Lawyer Media and Martindale Hubbell, leading providers of news and rating information to the legal industry.

Supreme Court Looks at ERISA Plan Terms to Govern Limitation Periods to File Lawsuits

In a highly anticipated decision, a unanimous United States Supreme Court held that insureds with employer-sponsored plans are contractually bound by the limitations periods set forth in their plan documents.  These limitations periods, which specify when insureds must file any legal actions under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (“ERISA”), are enforceable so long as they are not unreasonably short.  The Court held in Heimeshoff v. Hartford Life & Accident Insurance Co. and Wal-mart Stores, Inc., __ U.S. __ , 2013 U.S. LEXIS 9026 (Dec. 16, 2013), that the Plan’s contractual limitations period governs when a participant/beneficiary may file a legal action.  The Court concluded that the Plan’s contractual statute of limitations period was enforceable and that the time spent in the administrative claims process did not toll the running of the statute.

Heimeshoff involved plaintiff Julie Heimeshoff (“Heimeshoff”), a Senior Public Relations Manager for Wal-Mart, who sought long-term disability benefits from her employer-sponsored plan issued by Respondent Hartford Life & Accident Insurance Co (“Hartford”) to Wal-Mart employees.  The Plan imposed a three-year statute of limitations from the date proof of claim is due for legal action brought against the Plan, which commenced on the date proof of loss was to be submitted.  Hartford required Heimeshoff’s proof of loss by December 2005, but she failed to submit the requisite documents and Hartford denied her claim.  Hartford issued its second denial in November 2006, and denied her final appeal in November 2007.  Heimeshoff brought suit to recover her benefits in November 2010 within three years after the final denial, but almost six years after the proof of loss was due.  The district court dismissed her suit, finding the Plan terms explicitly prohibited legal action beyond the three-year limitations period.  The Second Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed.

The Supreme Court granted certiorari to determine whether the Plan’s limitations provision, which began before the administrative review process ended, was enforceable.  Prior to Heimeshoff, the majority rule, including in the Ninth Circuit, was the statute of limitations begins to run when the cause of action “accrues,” which was typically when the appeal was denied.  In ERISA actions, a claimant cannot file suit until he or she has exhausted the plan’s internal administrative process.  While ERISA imposes requirements on plans to respond and decide claims within certain periods of time, practical obstacles, such as difficulties obtaining medical information or proof of loss, can delay this process.

Heimeshoff first argued that the Plan’s limitations provision would undermine the internal review process because participants will sacrifice the benefits of internal review to preserve time for filing suit.  However, the Court rejected this contention because participants failing to develop evidence during the first review run the risk of forfeiting use of that evidence at trial.  Secondly, the Court believed participants are unlikely to prioritize judicial review over internal review.

Next, Heimeshoff contended that permitting plans to initiate limitations periods prior to completion of the review process endangers judicial review.  However, the Court noted ERISA regulations require administrators to act in good faith and take prompt action in their internal reviews.  If administrators fall short, the participant can directly seek judicial review.  Furthermore, if administrators unreasonably delay, participants can raise equitable defenses to the statute of limitations.  In addition, the United States argued, as amicus curiae, that if the limitations provision is enforced, good faith administration will also diminish the availability of judicial review.  The Court disagreed, stating the three-year limitation provision is required by most states and no significant evidence showed the provision impedes judicial review.  Importantly, the Supreme Court reassured claimants that lower courts can apply waiver, estoppel or equitable relief if claimants are stalled in the internal review process.  The Court explained:

Moreover, even in the rare cases where internal review prevents participants from bringing §502(a)(1)(B) actions within the contractual period, courts are well equipped to apply traditional doctrines that may nevertheless allow participants to proceed. If the administrator’s conduct causes a participant to miss the deadline for judicial review, waiver or estoppel may prevent the administrator from invoking the limitations provision as a defense. See, e.g., Thompson v. Phenix Ins. Co., 136 U. S. 287, 298–299 (1890); LaMantia v. Voluntary Plan Adm’rs, Inc., 401 F.3d 1114, 1119 (CA9 2005).  To the extent the participant has diligently pursued both internal review and judicial review but was prevented from filing suit by extraordinary circumstances, equitable tolling may apply.  Irwin v. Department of Veterans Affairs, 498 U. S. 89, 95 (1990) (limitations defenses “in lawsuits between private litigants are customarily subject to ‘equitable tolling’”).

The Court quickly addressed two additional arguments.  First, it rejected Heimeshoff’s argument that the limitations period should be tolled during internal review, stating this constituted contract revision.  Next, the Court rebuffed Heimeshoff’s argument that state law should toll the limitations period during the internal process.   In doing so, the Court explained the parties clearly “agreed” [this is a misnomer as ERISA plans are classic contracts of adhesion] to a limitations period and did not seek to borrow the State’s limitations period.  Ultimately, the Court ruled that Plan’s limitations provision controlled the question of when a claimant could pursue litigation.

Certainly, the Court’s decision favors insurance companies and other plan/claim fiduciaries who have the ability to delay processing claims.  However, ERISA imposes strict timelines on actions by insurance companies and other plan/claim fiduciaries and as a result, these rules will serve to mitigate the potentially harsh consequences of this decision.  Furthermore, the Court clearly limited its holding to limitations provisions which are reasonable.

The best part of this decision for plan participants and beneficiaries who typically have life, health and disability insurance claims, as discussed above, the Court explicitly reserved for their use traditional equitable remedies including equitable tolling, waiver and estoppel to ensure Heimeshoff does not cause harsh results when the actions of insurance companies and other plan/claim fiduciaries cause delays or their actions otherwise result in unfairness to plan participants.  As long as claimants and their attorneys act promptly to hold insurance companies and other plan/claim fiduciaries accountable to the timelines applicable to the claim review process and/or if they otherwise act diligently, Heimeshoff will not act as a bar to their litigation.  Indeed, administrators are required by ERISA regulations governing the internal review process to take prompt action, and the penalty for failure to meet those deadlines is immediate access to judicial review for plan participants.  See 29 CFR §2560.503–1(l).

Robert J. McKennon listed in top 100 Insurance lawyers in the State of California

The American Society of Legal Advocates has recognized Robert J. McKennon of the McKennon Law Group PC as one of the top 100 Insurance lawyers in the State of California for 2014.

The American Society of Legal Advocates is an invitation-only, nationwide organization of top lawyers in practice today who combine excellent legal credentials with a proven commitment to community engagement and the highest professional standards.

Rochow v. LINA: A Game-Changer in ERISA Disability Benefits Litigation

While this blog often discusses disability, life and health insurance/employee benefit decisions under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (“ERISA “), we rarely discuss federal circuit court of appeal decisions from outside the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals (which governs California).  We are making an exception here, as a recent case from the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals really caught our attention.  The case is Rochow v. Life Insurance Company of North America, __ F.3d ___ (6th Cir. December 6, 2013).  It is a “game-changer” in the world of ERISA disability, life and health insurance/employee benefit litigation, and could fundamentally change the way in which ERISA remedies are discussed and how these cases are litigated.  To say this is a “plaintiff friendly” case is probably to understate it.

The case otherwise involved a typical denial of disability insurance benefits matter under  ERISA in which the amount of benefits owed was determined to be $910,629.  Despite the large award, that was not actually the interesting part of the case.  The much more interesting part of the case is the court’s ruling affirming an almost $3.8 million disgorgement of profits award.

Daniel Rochow sued for disability benefits under 29 U.S.C. section 1132 (a)(1)(B) of ERISA and also sought equitable accounting and disgorgement of profits as “appropriate equitable relief” under section under 29 U.S.C. section 1132(a)(3). The district court determined that Life Insurance Company of North America’s (LINA) benefit determination had been arbitrary and capricious, and the Sixth Circuit affirmed that decision.  After the case was remanded to the district court, Rochow sought an accounting and disgorgement of profits under 29 U.S.C. section 1132(a)(3).  The district court applied a return-on-equity (“ROE”) analysis to the disgorgement claim, and awarded an additional $3.8 million in disgorged profits against LINA.

LINA appealed the second district court decision as well, but in a 2-to-1 decision, the Sixth Circuit again affirmed the district court. The court addressed and upheld Rochow’s argument that ERISA allows separate claims for withheld benefits under 29 U.S.C. section 1132(a)(1)(B) and breach of fiduciary duty claims under 29 U.S.C. section 1132(a)(3).  The majority held that because Rochow had sought the disgorgement remedy as a separate claim of relief, disgorgement was an appropriate remedy for the arbitrary and capricious benefit denial.  This remedy was based on LINA’s ill-obtained earnings on the amount it did not pay Rochow but should have paid him.  The court explained that “disgorgement does not result in double compensation, nor does it represent punishment.

The court rejected LINA’s argument that allowing Rochow to maintain a breach of fiduciary duty claim based on a denial of benefits would frustrate ERISA’s goal of providing an inexpensive and expeditious dispute resolution process, by explaining that “ERISA also has a goal of ensuring that plan fiduciaries act solely in the interest of the participants and for the exclusive purpose of providing benefits to their participants.”  The majority also affirmed the district court’s application of a ROE method of calculating the disgorgement claim, rather than LINA’s analysis that equated disgorgement of profits to an award of prejudgment interest on the withheld benefits. The court, quoting the Ninth Circuit’s phraseology that the fundamental tenet of disgorgement is “if you take my money and make money with it, your profit belongs to me,” determined that the rationale for the more generous disgorgement award was the fact that LINA did not retain the unpaid benefits in a segregated account, but rather retained the money in its general assets.

The dissent echoed LINA’s positions, viewing the majority’s holding as shortsighted.  It criticized the majority decision as “willfully blind to the negative repercussions that undoubtedly will ensue in ERISA benefits litigation,” with the dissent also stating:

Furthermore, disgorgement under the circumstances of this case fundamentally alters how denied disability-benefits claims are litigated, forcing district courts to wrestle with complex calculations of profits and raising the specter that any claimant who was arbitrarily and capriciously denied benefits would have a viable claim for disgorgement.

We expect to see a request for reconsideration and/or rehearing en banc.  Although we would not be surprised if the decision survives circuit review, LINA will almost certainly seek relief in the United States Supreme Court as this decision has too many implications for LINA to let this ground-breaking decision remain good law.  There can be little question that in the short term, this case will substantially alter ERISA litigation.  As for this firm, we will attempt to use this decision to assist our plan participant/beneficiary clients, including amending some of our existing complaints to expand the relief we are requesting to include disgorgement claims.  We look forward to seeing how this all unfolds.  It will be very interesting for sure.

Robert J. McKennon Named “Top Rated Lawyer in Insurance Law and Coverage”

Robert J. McKennon has been awarded the designation of 2014 “Top Rated Lawyer in Insurance Law and Coverage” by American Lawyer Media and Martindale Hubbell, leading providers of news and rating information to the legal industry.

How to Read Your ERISA Disability Denial Letter: A Gritty Exploration of the Common Language in Actual Denial Letters and How to Respond to Them

If your ERISA short-term disability or long-term disability claim was denied, you likely received a dry, lengthy rejection letter explaining the basis for the denial.  This letter may appear persuasive, but insurers/claims administrators often offer improper justifications to support their denial decisions to increase their profits.  Calling an experienced ERISA attorney should be your next move.  However, if you decide to handle the matter yourself, then you must critically examine each basis relied upon to deny your claim.  You should never blindly accept what the insurance company is telling you.  Below is language we frequently see in our review of ERISA insurance denial letters, and tips on how to view and respond to them.

1. “The clinical information within your long-term disability claim file was reviewed by a Board Certified on-Staff Medical Director who concluded that your restrictions and limitations do not render you totally disabled under your policy.” 

An insurer’s review process often raises questions about its bias and accuracy.  This is because there is an inherent conflict of interest in its claims handling function:  it makes the decision as to whether to pay benefits under a policy and it is also the funding source for these payments.  Staff and peer reviewers employed by the insurer may feel pressured to overemphasize certain aspects of your medical records that would support a claim denial, and downplay other portions that support your disability claim.  Additionally, a “paper review” of your claim file – when a medical professional just looks at your medical records but does not take the time to personally examine you – tends to be less informative than a face-to-face examination.  In both cases, while your insurer is required to take active steps to ensure the decision rendered accurately reflects your condition and fully explain the basis of its decision, that often does not occur.  Finally, this medical reviewer must have appropriate expertise to assess your condition.  A Medical Director practicing internal medicine will not be qualified to review psychological conditions.  Moreover, look for what the Medical Director was provided and reviewed.  If he or she did not receive all of the important and material records necessary to render an opinion, this may be a proper basis to challenge the physician’s opinions and thus the insurer’s opinions.

If the insurance company did not properly follow all of these steps, the denial of your claim might be improper and could be overturned by a court of law.

 2. “Your asserted restrictions and limitations are not supported.”

This one appears in most denial letters as the insurer must typically make a determination that your asserted restrictions and limitations are not supported by the information in the insurer’s file.  The insurance company is not allowed to just generally state that you do not meet the definition of disability in your policy.  Rather, the insurer must give a reasonably detailed explanation of why this is so.  Very often there is scant evidence to support the insurer’s decisions in this regard.  Further, the denial letter must specify the evidence needed to perfect your claim.  See 29 C.F.R. § 2560.503-1(g)(iii).  Courts have held that a plan administrator committed a procedural error by issuing a denial without describing the additional information needed for the claim and why.  Letvinuck v. Aetna Life Ins. Co., 439 Fed. Appx. 585, 586-87 (9th Cir.  2011).  Typically, letters itemize the medical records and documents reviewed and summarize content relevant to the claim.  If the documents referenced do indeed support your restrictions and limitations and thus your claim, or if the denial letter fails to explain the additional records and information needed, the denial of long-term disability benefits may be improper.

3. “Your physician indicated you had subjective complaints of pain, but there were no further objective findings on exams or recent studies to support restrictions or limitations.”

While blood tests and X-rays can detect infections and broken bones, other disabling medical conditions such as chronic pain or mental illness often have no measureable objective symptoms.  It is not uncommon that insurer’s will use this lack of “objective” evidence to deny a long-term disability claim, even when the Plan does not specifically require that objective evidence be shown.  Luckily, courts have acknowledged that pain may be debilitating, even in the absence of supporting objective evidence.  See Saffron v. Wells Fargo & Co. Long Term Disability Plan, 522 F.3d 863, 872-73 (9th Cir. 2008).  In addition, courts have ruled that requiring a claimant to meet an additional standard that is not present in the policy is improper because it impermissibly “imposes a new requirement for coverage.”  Saffle v. Sierra Pacific Power Co., 85 F.3d 455, 459-60 (9th Cir. 1996).  Consequently, insurers cannot typically require objective evidence if your disability is not physically detectable.

4. “Covert surveillance captured numerous inconsistencies in your self-reported complaints and abilities verses observed activities of daily living and provided some insight into your functional abilities.” 

Insurers like to hire investigators to secretly follow their disabled insureds around and videotape them.  This is especially true with orthopedic injuries or sicknesses, like severe back problems.  If your insurer paid a company to obtain video surveillance of your activities, you should make sure you obtain the Administrative Record from the insurer that contains the surveillance report and you should obtain videotape.  Then carefully read all references in the report and carefully review the video footage to ensure they do not mischaracterize your abilities.  In one influential case, the insurer relied on surveillance footage of the claimant engaged in short periods of activity over four nonconsecutive days and concluded he was capable of sustaining this activity in a full time occupation.  A court criticized the insurer’s decision, explaining the insurer over-relied on footage and this bias pervaded its decision process, eventually ruling that the claimant was entitled to long-term disability benefits.  Montour v. Hartford Life & Accident Ins. Co., 588 F.3d 623 (9th Cir. Cal. 2009).  Similarly, you should question whether the insurer’s description of the video surveillance overstates your functional abilities.

Admittedly, recovering your benefits will require more than recognizing a few flaws in your denial letter.  If you suspect your ERISA benefits were improperly denied, our attorneys can offer you a free and confidential consultation.

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 41
  • Go to page 42
  • Go to page 43
  • Go to page 44
  • Go to page 45
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 76
  • Go to Next Page »

Practice Areas

  • Disability Insurance
  • Bad Faith Insurance
  • Long-Term Care
  • Los Angeles Insurance Agent-Broker Liability Attorneys
  • Professional Liability Insurance
  • Property Casualty Insurance
  • Unfair Competition Unfair Business Practices

Recent Posts

  • Mundrati v. Unum: An Important Decision on How Insurers Are to Characterize a Claimant’s Occupation in Long-Term Disability Disputes
  • McKennon Law Group PC is Recognized as 2025 Insurance Litigation Law Firm of the Year in the USA
  • ERISA and Mental Health Disability Claims: What You Need to Know
  • What is ERISA and How Does It Impact Your Employee Benefits?
  • McKennon Law Group PC Recognized as 2025 Insurance Litigation Law Firm of the Year in California

Categories

  • Accidental Death and Dismemberment
  • Agent/Broker
  • Annuities
  • Arbitration
  • Articles
  • Bad Faith
  • Beneficiaries
  • Benefits
  • Breach of Contract
  • Case Updates
  • Commissioner of Insurance
  • Damages
  • Directors & Officers Insurance
  • Disability Insurance
  • Discovery
  • Duty to Defend
  • Duty to Investigate
  • Duty to Settle
  • Elder Abuse
  • Employee Benefits
  • ERISA
  • ERISA – Abuse of Discretion
  • ERISA – Accident/Accidental Bodily Injury
  • ERISA – Administrative Record
  • ERISA – Agency
  • ERISA – Any Occupation
  • ERISA – Appeals
  • ERISA – Arbitration
  • ERISA – Attorney Client Privilege
  • ERISA – Attorneys' Fees
  • ERISA – Augmenting Record
  • ERISA – Basics of an ERISA Claim Series
  • ERISA – Choice of Law
  • ERISA – Church Plans
  • ERISA – Conflict of Interest
  • ERISA – Conversion Issues
  • ERISA – De Novo Review
  • ERISA – Deemed Denied
  • ERISA – Disability Insurance
  • ERISA – Discovery
  • ERISA – Equitable Relief
  • ERISA – Exclusions
  • ERISA – Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies
  • ERISA – Fiduciary Duty
  • ERISA – Full & Fair Review
  • ERISA – Gainful Occupation
  • ERISA – Government Plans
  • ERISA – Health Insurance
  • ERISA – Incontestable Clause
  • ERISA – Independent Medical Exams
  • ERISA – Injunctive Relief
  • ERISA – Interest
  • ERISA – Interpretation of Plan
  • ERISA – Judicial Estoppel
  • ERISA – Life Insurance
  • ERISA – Mental Limitation
  • ERISA – Notice Prejudice Rule
  • ERISA – Objective Evidence
  • ERISA – Occupation Duties
  • ERISA – Offsets
  • ERISA – Own Occupation
  • ERISA – Parties
  • ERISA – Peer Reviewers
  • ERISA – Pension Benefits
  • ERISA – Pre-existing Conditions
  • ERISA – Preemption
  • ERISA – Reformation
  • ERISA – Regulations/Department of Labor
  • ERISA – Restitution
  • ERISA – Self-Funded Plans
  • ERISA – Social Security Disability
  • ERISA – Standard of Review
  • ERISA – Standing
  • ERISA – Statute of Limitations
  • ERISA – Subjective Claims
  • ERISA – Surcharge
  • ERISA – Surveillance
  • ERISA – Treating Physicians
  • ERISA – Venue
  • ERISA – Vocational Issues
  • ERISA – Waiver/Estoppel
  • Experts
  • Firm News
  • Health Insurance
  • Insurance Bad Faith
  • Interpleader
  • Interpretation of Policy
  • Lapse of Policy
  • Legal Articles
  • Legislation
  • Life Insurance
  • Long-Term Care Insurance
  • Medical Necessity
  • Negligence
  • News
  • Pre-existing Conditions
  • Premiums
  • Professional Liability Insurance
  • Property & Casualty Insurance
  • Punitive Damages
  • Regulations (Claims & Other)
  • Rescission
  • Retirement Plans/Pensions
  • Super Lawyer
  • Uncategorized
  • Unfair Business Practices/Unfair Competition
  • Waiver & Estoppel

Get the Answers and Assistance You Need

  • Disclaimer | Privacy Policy
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Newport Beach Office
20321 SW Birch St #200
Newport Beach, CA 92660
Map & Directions

San Francisco Office
71 Stevenson St #400
San Francisco, CA 94105
Map & Directions
San Diego Office
4445 Eastgate Mall #200
San Diego, CA 92121
Map & Directions

Los Angeles Office
11400 W Olympic Blvd #200
Los Angeles, CA 90048
Map & Directions

Phone: 949-504-5381

Email: info@mckennonlawgroup.com

© 2025 McKennon Law Group PC. All Rights Reserved | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer | Site Map

Manage Consent
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
Manage options Manage services Manage {vendor_count} vendors Read more about these purposes
View preferences
{title} {title} {title}