DailyAccess Makes Second Acquisition This Year

DailyAccess Corporation, a Mobile, Alabama-based plan service provider, has acquired Leggette Actuaries, Inc.

A DailyAccess news release said DailyAccess will incorporate into its existing operations Leggette’s recordkeeping, administration, benefits consulting, and actuarial services and will continue to maintain Leggette’s Dallas, Texas, facilities.

“Our acquisition of Leggette is one more step in the continued execution of DailyAccess’s strategy to provide client-centric and financial adviser-focused solutions to the marketplace,” said Tommy Thomasson, president and CEO of DailyAccess Corporation. “With the addition of Leggette as our second acquisition this year, our number one priority is to our current clients and financial adviser partners—delivering top quality service that is continually enhanced through innovation and is fueled by our drive to help our clients succeed.”

DailyAccess acquired FBD Consulting’s pension and group benefits businesses in June (see “DailyAccess Buys FBD Pension, Benefits Business” http://www.planadviser.com/NewsDealsPeople.aspx?id=3819).

DoL Sues Plan Trustees for Misuse of Plans' Assets

The U.S. Department of Labor has sued defunct Vinyl-Mark Products Inc. of Hueytown, Alabama, and the company's pension and profit-sharing plan trustees for allegedly misusing plan assets to pay the operating expenses of the company.

A DoL press release said the lawsuit alleges that the company, formerly known as First Alabama Supply Co. Inc., and trustees Willard D. Bailey Jr. and Jessie Mae Bailey violated the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) by allegedly making a series of transfers totaling $898,259.69 from the plans to the operating accounts of the company at various times between October 2004 and February 2007.

The suit seeks a court order to require that all defendants restore all losses incurred by the plans and disgorge any profits or illegal gains, and that the trustees’ retirement accounts be offset to repay losses and lost opportunity costs owed to the plans. Money offset will be re-distributed to the accounts of the remaining participants covered by the plans, according to the announcement.

The DoL also asks that the court appoint an independent fiduciary to oversee the plans, and that the trustees be permanently barred from serving in a fiduciary capacity to any plan governed by ERISA.

The company was a wholesale distributor of vinyl siding, accessories, and windows, and sponsored a defined benefit plan for 59 participants and a profit-sharing plan covering 29 participants. As of December 31, 2005, the plans held cumulative assets of $701,361.

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