Massachusetts Secretary of State William F. Galvin, the state's top securities regulator, has announced that MetLife, according to the terms of a consent order, will pay a fine of $1 million and provide payments, with interest, to hundreds of Massachusetts retirees and beneficiaries it had wrongly designated as "presumed dead."
The year-long investigation was initiated on Dec. 18, 2017, after MetLife revealed that it had failed to make payments to thousands of retired workers because it could not locate them. The recipients included Massachusetts retirees who worked for grocery stores, hospitals and manufacturers that have since gone out of business.
Because those employers had sold their pension obligations to MetLife, many of their employees did not realize that they could expect pension payments from MetLife under a group annuity contract. MetLife was required to keep funds in reserve for these retirees and to make payments when the former workers came of age, but it failed to do so and instead released some reserves, which became assets that then inflated MetLife's bottom line, according to Galvin's office.
Galvin's Securities Division charged MetLife with fraud in connection with the misleading statements the insurance company made in public filings about the company's finances as a result of including those funds as assets instead of maintaining them as reserves.