Yes, if appropriate and necessary.
Yes, if appropriate and necessary.
Yes, if appropriate and necessary.
Yes, if appropriate and necessary.
Yes, if appropriate and necessary.
A life estate does not have an affect on someone's disability. It may certainly affect their ability to collect disability payments.
You can apply for disability benefits at your local social security office. You can also review the adult disability checklist and apply for disability benefits online.
A collection agency can collect from someone on social security or disability. If you incurred a debt, you can be prosecuted.
The social disability application is a form filled out by someone who is disabled and unable to work. A person who can not work and earn an income would fill out the form and try to get social security disability income.
There are various places where one could find information on social security for people with a disability. For example, the official website of US social security, SSA, provides information on programs that offer support and assistance to the disabled.
I am on SSDI and am not aware of any taxes imposed, in 27 years. At least I have never been, since in the ordinary course of things, someone in SSI lives below the "poverty line". Hope that works for you.
Social Security Administration
If I understand correctly, you are an adult who has been disabled since childhood and are not eligible for Social Security Disability because you have not worked. My twenty-one year old daughter has been disabled since birth but could not get SSI before she was eighteen. If you are only eligible for SSI you will not receive any back pay. If you are eligible to draw some Social Security (this would be based on one or both of your parents) and some SSI you will receive back pay from the time you applied until payments start. However, it will not be the same amount as one payment per month from the date you applied until payments are receive; SSI will take a large portion of your back pay. The exact math is complicated. You may want to go to your local Social Security office and have someone explain your case, which is what I had to do.
The auto insurance settlement wouldn't be taxable unless you realize a gain from it. Being on Social Security Disability doesn't exempt you from paying any taxes that may be due as a result.
Disability discrimination is when someone discriminates against someone else because of a disability they have.
Medicare eligibility and Social Security eligibility are two different things. Terminating one has no effect on the other.
A fraud investigator's main duty is to determine whether someone is filing a false claim. For example, this person may investigate whether someone filing for disability payments is indeed disabled.