The Defense of Marriage Act made it illegal for the federal government to recognize same-sex marriages, despite some states recognizing such marriages. As a result, same-sex married couples were not eligible for coverage under federal benefits. The Supreme Court’s ruling only affects people in states where same-sex marriage is legal, and only applies to federal benefits. Furthermore, individual companies that do not currently offer benefits to same-sex spouses are not forced to change their policy, according to CFO (6/26/13).
The Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) is one of the federal laws affected by the Supreme Court’s striking of DOMA. ERISA sets minimum standards for how pension plans run in the private industry are managed. One of the standards of ERISA is whether spouses have a right to part of the employee’s pension in the event that the employee dies. ERISA also sets out what is required of plan fiduciaries, and requires plans to provide adequate, regular information to plan participants.
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In May, an ERISA lawsuit brought by Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine resulted in a settlement worth more than $150 million. That settlement, reached with defendants Fannie Mae and KPMG, alleged the firms issued false and misleading financial reports that artificially inflated the value of Fannie Mae’s securities. Originally, plaintiffs sought $6 billion in damages, but the lawsuit was sent to a mediator, who negotiated a settlement for $153 million.
The lawsuit is Federal National Mortgage Association Securities, Derivative and “ERISA” Litigation, 04-cv-01639, US District Court, District of Columbia (Washington).