About this item

When you have a child or other loved one who struggles with addiction, proper estate planning can be critically important. Estate planning can resolve issue such as how to give an addict child access to assets without harm, treating the addicted and non-addicted family fairly under your circumstances, placing restrictions in documents to protect assets, and putting the right people in charge should you become incapacitated or in the event of your death. Addiction issues can make estate planning complicated. Complicated - but not impossible. Kelli E. Brown is a trusts and estates attorney with more than twenty years of experience. With this new thoughtful guide for families who have an addict loved one, she takes you step-by-step through the estate planning process and shows you how to utilize estate planning tools to protect your vulnerable family members.



About the Author

J.D., LL.M., Kelli E. Brown

Kelli E. Brown has spent twenty years practicing estate planning law. She is the chair of the Trusts and Estates Department at Goldberg Simpson LLC in Louisville, Kentucky. In the course of her work, she has run across a variety of situations that inspired her to write Estate Planning When You Have an Addicted Child.

Brown received her bachelor's degree from the University of Dayton, her JD from the Northern Kentucky Chase College of Law, and her Master of Laws in Estate Planning from the University of Miami. She is active in the Kentucky Bar Association and received the Thomas B. Spain Award in 2015 for her service to the KBA. She is a fellow of the American College of Trust and Estate Counsel and has passed bar exams in Kentucky, Ohio, and Tennessee.

Brown lives in Kentucky with her husband, Walter, and their children, Henry and Madeline.



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