this post was submitted on 20 Mar 2024
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chapotraphouse
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Do a fuckton of research before hand. Do everything in your power to keep the research anonymous. Find trusted relatives that you will give explicit verbal and written instructions to... possibly with the addition of "burn these documents after you've read them or they are no longer useful" instructions.
The laws change depending on country, state, type of debit left, (probably) what type of estate planning was done, and quite probably the amount of debit left to be dealt with by the executor of the deceased's estate.
Even if the original holders of the debit don't try to collect it (the CC companies) they will still have no problem selling the debit to a collection agency (even if the local laws say that a dead person's CC debit dies with them) and they can harass your family. It won't matter that it might be illegal to try to collect the debit, they know that most people can't get a lawyer to counter the harassment. So part of the research will need to be about dealing not only with debit owed to the original source but any following owners of the debit as well.
What are the statute of limitations on collection debits incurred by the deceased? What are the specifics?
Don't forget to figure out how to "sell" the precious metals you are putting in your stash. I know nothing about it, but it wouldn't surprise me if there some rules (like with buying Money Orders) that selling less than $xx.xx of precious metals doesn't need to be reported to some Authorities but selling more than $xx.xx in a given time period does. Knowing where to look for the most up to date "value" of the metals, where to sell them, how much to expect to lose in the transaction, at what amounts can they get straight cash that isn't reported at the time of sale and what amounts would be reported or only allowed in digital transactions (instantly creating a paper trail to your family).