Hi all - most of my posts have been on the QDRO side, but this is a more general question.
I'm an active employee of AT&T and Fidelity is the record keeper for my Pension fund and 401K. I need to have a valuation of MY Pension - as of a particular date. (I need two of these in fact.)
I requested:
A valuation of my pension - effective June 8, 2000 (date of marraige)
A valuation of my pension - effective Feb 19, 2004 (date of divorce)
After three weeks - Fidelity replied, "We cannot provide the value of this benefit without a court-ordered subpoena."
As additional context, Fidelity was not the record keeper until April 2005. Obtaining historical valuations may require research with the prior record keeper. My retirement funds have also been subject to fraudulent activity. My ex-wife submitted a fryaudulent DRO against my 401K. This has resulted in restraining orders against Fidelity, Vacating the Fraudulent QDRO, and Order and Judgement of Contempt, and an ERISA complaint. Lots of litigation - but all resolved now except the contempt order against my ex-wife. She's a fugitive with a warrant...
As such, I can't easily determine if Fidelity is requiring a subpeona becuase its HARD to calcualte the value of the pension - or if they simply want me to jump through hoops based on all of the other litigation.
Two questions:
1) do I have a legal right to historical valuations on my pension?
2) if not, can I proceed - pro se - and subpeona the records as part of one of the many actions that might be relevant. (the divorce seems most likely, but I also have an order and judgement of contempt related to the QDRO fraud which is more recent...)
What think ye?
Cheers,
Bjorn
