We present three giant stars from the ongoing Penn State-Toru\'n Planet
Search with the Hobby-Eberly Telescope, which exhibit radial velocity
variations that point to a presence of planetary --mass companions around them.
BD+49 828 is a M=1.52±0.22M⊙ K0 giant with a msini=1.6−0.2+0.4MJ minimum mass companion in
a=4.2−0.2+0.32 AU (2590−180+300d), e=0.35−0.10+0.24
orbit. HD 95127, a logL/L⊙=2.28±0.38, R=20±9R⊙, M=1.20±0.22M⊙ K0 giant has a msini=5.01−0.44+0.61MJ minimum mass companion in
a=1.28−0.01+0.01 AU (482−5+5d), e=0.11−0.06+0.15 orbit.
Finally, HD 216536, is a M=1.36±0.38M⊙ K0 giant with a msini=1.47−0.12+0.20MJ minimum mass companion in
a=0.609−0.002+0.002 AU (148.6−0.7+0.7d),
e=0.38−0.10+0.12 orbit. Both, HD 95127 b and HD 216536 b in their
compact orbits, are very close to the engulfment zone and hence prone to
ingestion in the near future. BD+49 828 b is among the longest period planets
detected with the radial velocity technique until now and it will remain
unaffected by stellar evolution up to a very late stage of its host. We discuss
general properties of planetary systems around evolved stars and planet
survivability using existing data on exoplanets in more detail.Comment: 47 pages, 11 figures. Accepted by Ap