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Superintendent of Insurance Gregory V. Serio today announced that New York Life Insurance Company has agreed to a regulatory settlement with the Department concerning past discriminatory underwriting practices against African-American policyholders from 1920 through 1948.
Superintendent Serio said, "The Department is both pleased and gratified that a settlement has been reached to compensate policyholders of New York Life who were in the past treated differently because of their race. As a result of the settlement, an estimated 10,000 former policyholders may be eligible for cash refunds."
Under the settlement, which could reach $10 million, New York Life will pay refunds on endowment policies issued to African-American policyholders between 1920 and 1948 where the policyholder was charged higher premiums due to race. Refunds of the extra premiums will be made with interest.
| As a result of the $10 million settlement, an estimated 10,000 former policyholders may be eligible for cash refunds. New York Life will pay refunds on endowment policies issued to African-American policyholders between 1920 and 1948 where the policyholder was charged higher premiums due to race. |
New York Life will be engaging in an outreach initiative including mail, print and Internet communication to notify affected parties. For more information on the settlement, please call 1-866-891-0614 or 1-800-420-8141 (TTY).
In June of 2000 the Department announced an investigation into allegations of race-based underwriting of life insurance by its licensees and issued Circular Letter 19 (2000) detailing a reporting procedure. Different premium rates, compensation rates, risk classifications and unequal treatment with regard to dividends, benefits of other policy terms or conditions, based solely on race all evidence race-based underwriting. The Department continues to pursue other investigations involving New York licensees.
In 2002, a federal judge issued a ruling approving a settlement under which MetLife Inc. was to give black customers as much as $160 million in compensation for allegedly charging them higher rates for life insurance than whites.
The settlement ended a class action lawsuit against MetLife in the U.S. District Court charging that the insurer sold small-face-value life insurance policies — known as "industrial" or "burial" insurance policies, which often end up costing more in premiums than the death benefit will pay out — at higher prices, and with fewer benefits, to minorities. MetLife is also accused of actively marketing "substandard" life insurance plans and more expensive payment methods to blacks until 1973.
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