Structured Settlements 4Real®Blog 2026

Structured settlements expert John Darer reviews the latest structured settlements and settlement planning information and news, and provides expert opinion and highly regarded commentary. that is spicy, Informative, irreverent and effective for over 20 years.

Julie-Ann-Amos_39201

by Structured Settlement Watchdog

Julie-Ann Amos, a UK-based representative for Prosperity Partners, authored "The Truth About Structured Settlement Awards." Her LinkedIn profile shares several details, but unfortunately highlights her lack of credentials in the field of structured settlements..

Prosperity Partners, a structured settlement factoring company, has registered several state-specific web domains, such as structuredsettlementscalifornia.com. Despite having skilled writers of its own, it appears to be using content generators to keep up with "primary market" commentators. The issue with hiring ghostwriters unfamiliar with the subject is that their lack of expertise can lead to mistakes and inaccuracies, which can harm the company's reputation. Additionally, it may attract attention from the structured settlement watchdog.

I would also like to stress to content generators like Julie-Ann Amos that if you intend to write about structured settlements you better research what you write, or you will be open to critique.

The author of "Hacking Reality," Julie-Ann Amos,  incorrectly states that "The total amount a court awards a plaintiff in a structured settlement is actually a life-time worth of payments, and not a sum the insurance company issues a one-time check for. It’s true, over time, you do get the total amount of the settlement, but you receive it in small increments which some people find just isn’t enough to make ends meet. You do have options however.

Comments

  1. A structured settlement is a settlement not an award. That's why it's called a structured settlement and not a structured award.
  2. Structured settlement may include a  "life-time worth of payments" if a life annuity is agreed to. There are many other types of structured settlement payments.
  3. Amos' sentence construction obscures the fact that the insurance company (or, if applicable, the qualified settlement fund trustee or administrator) issues a one-time check to a qualified assignment company, which includes the cost of the single premium structured settlement annuity.
  4. Calling Julie-Ann Amos' article "the truth about structured settlement awards" is like giving your neighbor credit for your home-cooked meal. Prosperity Partners can whip up its own factually accurate content without borrowing someone else's recipe.

Julie Ann Amos' posts are taking over Prosperity Partners blogs across Georgia, New York, Arizona, and Illinois like an unstoppable digital tsunami. Despite the blitzkrieg strategy, Julie Ann Amos (pictured above) still doesn't have the credentials to pass as a structured settlement expert. She's just a content generator, nothing more, nothing less..

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