This report may shed a bit of light.
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/florida/sfl-fmoney18mar18,0,864919.story?coll=sfla-news-florida
You brought out good point: How can Terri be declared indigent if her husband (who claims to love her so much) lives in a $300,000 house with a silver Mercedes???
I still say the Mercedes must be the Felos vehicle. Meanwhile, let us hope Terri gets a lawyer to run down those expenses...and maybe sue Jodi for alienation of affection.
There are probably ways to 'invest' Terri's assets into things that (for the purposes of measuring assets) don't count.
In some states for example, if you are sending a child off to college, and filling out a scholarship form, a HOUSE or CAR may not be counted when testing a person's means.
The same might be true for measuring if a person is indigent.
another thought... what if the money were 'invested' in major assets like a house, then a mortgage was taken out, the mortgage money put back into the trust fund, and frozen for collateral purposes?
or the reverse to that... what if the money in the trust fund was used as collateral for loans.
I will bet the financial auditors could think up much better possible scams than these