A recipient received $10,000 from an insurance settlement. The claims representative
                  (CR) later develops how they spent the $10,000.
               
               The recipient paid back creditors with $7,000, and purchased $3,000 in jewelry that
                  they ordinarily wear.
               
               Because Mthey wear the jewelry, the CR must determine if SSA can exclude the jewelry
                  from resources as personal effects or a countable resource, in the form of other personal
                  property.
               
               The recipient's statements establish that the jewelry has no family significance and
                  that they purchased the jewelry for its value, as a means to spend down the $10,000.
               
               The CR correctly determines that the jewelry is not an excludable personal effect
                  because an item purchased for its value cannot be a personal effect. The CR also correctly
                  determines to consider the jewelry as “other personal property” and evaluates it using
                  normal resource counting rules.