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When word spread last Thursday morning that Pleasanton retiree Mary Lawson had passed away at age 84, no one was more upset than Lawson herself, who was very much alive and enjoying a historical novel on CD.
An employee at Lawson's doctor's office called to inform her that, according to the Social Security Administration, she had died Jan. 11. So how had she managed to keep her subsequent appointments?
The employee laughed, and so did Lawson -- until she realized the pitfalls associated with no longer being alive. She found her bank account frozen and her monthly $832 Social Security check missing. Her doctors were told they couldn't claim Medicare for a corpse.
After a few stressful days, Lawson was relieved to learn Monday afternoon that she was officially alive. The government acknowledged the mistake, resurrected her and promised to fix any problems that had cropped up while Lawson wasn't really dead.
"I'm the healthiest ghost you've ever seen," Lawson declared Monday from the recreation room at her mobile-home park. But the former schoolteacher, who survived two husbands and now claims three great-grandchildren, admitted, "This is the first day I haven't been shaking.''
Lowell Kepke, a Social Security spokesman in Richmond, confirmed that Lawson had been reported dead but said it wasn't clear why.
"It appears a wrong Social Security number was put in our system," he said.
Such cases are "extremely rare," Kepke said, adding, "With 47 million beneficiaries, some mistakes will be made."
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2005/02/15/BAGU1BB1S81.DTL