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The Intersection of Veterans Benefits and Civil Matters 2026

Product ID: CA4002R
Presented By: State Bar of Wisconsin PINNACLE

For those who served

Your client is a veteran receiving service-connected disability compensation from the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). Behind the scenes, that monthly benefit can affect their Social Security eligibility, complicate asset and income calculations in a divorce or support proceeding, and create unintended consequences in an estate plan. If VA benefits aren’t on your radar, you could be exposing the client to benefit loss, overpayment liability, or plans that won’t hold up. 

Over here

The Intersection of Veterans Benefits and Civil Matters helps you recognize and address these issues competently, whether veterans benefits are your focus or a more occasional variable in client matters. 

Examine how service-connected disability compensation interacts with means-tested federal and state programs and why the distinction between types of compensation matters. You’ll also receive tips on approaching wills, trusts, and estate plans when VA benefits are part of the picture.

Read More ↓

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Pricing

Member $109.00

Non-Member $159.00

Credits

1 CLE

Date and Time

Wednesday, July 01, 202612:00 PM - 12:50 PM CT

Add to Calendar 7/1/2026 12:00:00 PM 7/1/2026 12:50:00 PM America/Chicago The Intersection of Veterans Benefits and Civil Matters 2026

For those who served

Your client is a veteran receiving service-connected disability compensation from the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). Behind the scenes, that monthly benefit can affect their Social Security eligibility, complicate asset and income calculations in a divorce or support proceeding, and create unintended consequences in an estate plan. If VA benefits aren’t on your radar, you could be exposing the client to benefit loss, overpayment liability, or plans that won’t hold up. 

Over here

The Intersection of Veterans Benefits and Civil Matters helps you recognize and address these issues competently, whether veterans benefits are your focus or a more occasional variable in client matters. 

Examine how service-connected disability compensation interacts with means-tested federal and state programs and why the distinction between types of compensation matters. You’ll also receive tips on approaching wills, trusts, and estate plans when VA benefits are part of the picture.

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For those who served

Your client is a veteran receiving service-connected disability compensation from the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). Behind the scenes, that monthly benefit can affect their Social Security eligibility, complicate asset and income calculations in a divorce or support proceeding, and create unintended consequences in an estate plan. If VA benefits aren’t on your radar, you could be exposing the client to benefit loss, overpayment liability, or plans that won’t hold up. 

Over here

The Intersection of Veterans Benefits and Civil Matters helps you recognize and address these issues competently, whether veterans benefits are your focus or a more occasional variable in client matters. 

Examine how service-connected disability compensation interacts with means-tested federal and state programs and why the distinction between types of compensation matters. You’ll also receive tips on approaching wills, trusts, and estate plans when VA benefits are part of the picture.

Read More ↓

Monica Irelan Karas, attorney and partner at Tabak Law, LLC, is a Milwaukee native raised on the city’s south side. She attended the University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee and obtained a Bachelor of Business Administration with an emphasis in Marketing in 2002. She attended the John Marshall Law School – Chicago (now UIC Law) and graduated in 2012 with a Juris Doctor.

Attorney Karas began her legal career in 2000, working as an Office Administrator at a large Milwaukee litigation firm. In 2012, she began her career as an attorney. She joined Tabak Law in 2018 and was promoted to Partner/Shareholder in 2021. Attorney Karas is an accredited Veteran’s Benefits Advocate and concentrates her practice on litigating Veteran’s claims against The Department of Veterans Affairs, at the agency level, The Board of Veterans’ Appeals (BVA), and the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims (CAVC). Attorney Karas is a current member of the National Organization of Veterans’ Advocates (NOVA).

Attorney Karas is the daughter of a United States Marine Corps Vietnam Veteran and the granddaughter of a Slovak American immigrant who was a World War II Army Veteran and a Milwaukee-area attorney whose practice spanned five decades. She is the proud wife of a Police Lieutenant and the mother of two phenomenal children and one black Labrador-Retriever. In her spare time, Attorney Karas enjoys hiking, rock climbing, and traveling.

  • Provide veteran clients with more comprehensive advice about how their VA benefits affect other legal matters
  • Ask the right intake questions when a veteran comes to your office for legal services 
  • Answer the VA benefits questions your existing clients are already asking
  • Avoid planning errors in wills, trusts, and estates that could inadvertently disqualify clients from benefits 
  • Understand how VA disability compensation factors into divorce and support matters
  • Broaden your expertise in VA claims assistance, dependency and survivor benefits, and workforce services coordination
  • Attorneys representing military veterans or their families
  • Public benefits lawyers
  • Estate planning lawyers
  • Elder and special needs law practitioners
  • Family lawyers
  • Civil litigators
  • Solo and small firm practitioners
  • General practitioners
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