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Court scrambles to replace Ayudando guardians

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State district judges in Albuquerque have identified 176 people, many of them indigent and all of them incapacitated in some way, who relied on Ayudando Guardians for help with everything from living arrangements to ensuring their funds, however meager, were safe.

Those people fall under court oversight, because the courts, over the years, have appointed Ayudando Guardians as their guardians or conservators and judges relied on annual reports from the company to keep tabs on Ayudando’s clients.

“A guardianship/conservatorship offers a higher degree of protection to the individual than other management mechanisms,” explains Ayudando on its web site.

Now that the company and its two principals are under federal indictment for looting client accounts and money laundering, two CPAs with the U.S. Marshals Service are winding down Ayudando business operations. The Albuquerque-based company has lost about half of its employees since the recent arrests of its two top managers.

Chief District Judge Nan Nash and Chief Civil Division Judge Shannon Bacon in Bernalillo County said in an interview Friday that the courts are faced with having to quickly find lawyers who will file cases for replacement guardians and conservators, and to ensure no one slips through the cracks.

“Our intention is to move heaven and earth to make sure every single case is transferred in a timely manner and in accordance with the law,” Bacon said Friday.

Bacon has also asked the State Auditor’s Office to conduct an audit of 20 other companies, like Ayudando Guardians, that have contracts with the state Office of Guardianship to provide guardianship or conservatorship services for low-income or indigent and incapacitated New Mexicans.

“We are looking into the Office of Guardianship’s oversight and lines of accountability for guardianship companies,” said a spokeswoman for State Auditor Tim Keller on Friday.

The guardianship office provides publicly funded guardianship/conservatorship services, paying contractors about $325 a month for each client.

In responding to Journal questions, officials with the Office of Guardianship last week said the agency’s most recent audit of Ayudando was in September 2016. Ayudando has 166 clients through its guardianship office contract, and is required to carry liability insurance and post fidelity bonds each year.

In Bernalillo County, about 110 clients who have court-appointed Ayudando guardians and conservators fall under the responsibility of the state guardianship office. That state agency is expected to find replacement companies, but faces budgetary issues and has only about 10 lawyers on contract, the judges told the Journal. Finding lawyers to refile cases for the remaining 66 “private pay” Ayudando clients is underway, and Bacon is also working to recruit guardians ad litem and other guardians to take over Ayudando’s role.

Outside the court’s jurisdiction are those clients who gave Ayudando authority to act as their representative payee, managing their monthly income from Social Security, VA pensions or other sources and paying their bills. That group of Ayudando clients will need to find new payees, and if they are now incapacitated, that could send another wave of guardianship/conservatorship cases into the courts.

Nash and Bacon said they learned that the U.S. Marshals Service, which has federal court authority to operate Ayudando for the time being, is expected to end its oversight by the end of August, so there is a looming deadline to transfer clients to other guardians.

As for those Ayudando employees who remain at work, many appeared shocked and worried about their clients when Nash and Bacon visited Ayudando’s office last Thursday for a meeting with U.S. Marshals.

“I can’t tell you how moved we were about the dedication of the employees,” Nash said. Even before the indictment was handed down, employees were paying for some clients’ incidentals out of their own pockets, she said.

“They were just as gobsmacked as the rest of us (about what’s happened),” Nash added.

In promising that clients’ funds will be protected, Ayudando’s web site notes, “The guardian/conservator must file an inventory which lists all the property of the client and must file accountings with the court that reflect all transactions involving that person’s assets.”

But Nash and Bacon said the annual financial reports filed by Ayudando in their courts provided no red flags. Neither judge recalled receiving complaints from Ayudando clients about missing money.

Critics say the annual reports required of guardians and conservators fall short of providing judges with enough information.

Moreover, a recent lawsuit alleges a $600,000 theft of client funds by another Albuquerque conservator, Desert State Life Management. The firm filed annual conservator reports, but accountings of the client’s trust funds weren’t in the court file, according to a lawyer involved in the case.

Full Article & Source:
Court scrambles to replace Ayudando guardians

Book: Defending Your Loved One: Avoiding the TRAPS of CONservatorship

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Sgt. David finds himself at the mercy of his psychotic ex-wife Sybil. Suffering a traumatic brain injury and trapped in a body that he no longer knows as his own, he tries to battle back only to realize that not only is he physically compromised, but also his mental capacity has failed to the point that he cannot fight the enemy on his own. Coming to grips with his new normal, he enlisted the help of family, friends and strangers.

You will read the account of an elderly woman, Rose, who was essentially kidnapped and taken away by those who were entrusted to help her, and lock away from her loving husband and preyed upon by the very system that was designed to assist the elderly in their time of need. Or the account of a lonely man with diminished capacity and estranged from his family but looking for companionship, only to have a new “relationship” revealed to be a well thought out scam unique for the cunning and deception employed to plunder an unsuspecting persons estate. These are the stories of innocent people ill prepared to deal with traps laid to ensnare them and with few answers available that could help them out of the maze of deception. What these families endured was not only unconstitutional, but also criminal. This is what this book is about, the complicated and nefarious world of conservatorship and caregiving.

As unpleasant as the thought, we may one day be incapacitated and unable to make medical and financial decisions for ourselves. No matter how well you may plan in advance, there may be those impatiently waiting on the sidelines for just the right opportunity to take advantage of an unfortunate situation, including, sadly individuals and institutions you may have thought had your best interests at heart. Your very life could hang in the balance and not being apprised of the perils that await the naive and unprepared could mean the difference between having the loved ones you wanted around you at your most vulnerable to being snatched away at a moments notice, a ward of the state and your estate bled dry. This is what this book is about. Because we lived the nightmare and made it through the other side to tell the stories so that you can avoid the pitfalls that lie ahead. 

This book contains real stories of how families can become victims of greedy scammers and how would be conservators can lay waste to your finances with the help of the system with just a few well-placed phone calls. This book will help you navigate the land mines and roadblocks that we had to face from vultures perched to feast on the bodies of those who cannot defend themselves. 

You will find out the real fight is ultimately for freedom. Freedom to vote, freedom to marry, freedom to eat what you want (or don't want) and most of all freedom to choose your own destiny from this nightmare called CONSERVATORSHIP. With the help of the book, you will become the VICTOR, not a victim.

Available on Amazon!

The Case of Carl DeBrodie: Checking The System

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Part three of a three-part series

Click to Watch Video
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. - The investigation into Carl Debrodie’s death is still underway by state and federal law enforcement agencies.

The 31-year-old, developmentally disabled man was found dead in a Fulton storage facility after being reported missing days earlier.

Investigators say evidence suggests Debrodie had died long before he was reported missing, leading them to believe there was a coverup involved.

ABC 17 News reported on May 19 when a case manager with Callaway County Special Services was fired after it was alleged that the required monthly face-to-face visits with Debrodie were not being performed.

According to the Missouri Department of Mental Health’s Division of Developmental Disabilities, the monthly support monitoring visits are one of three ways cases are reviewed and monitored on the individual level.

Debrodie’s service provider, Second Chance Homes in Fulton, underwent a licensure and certification process that involved the DMH checking to make sure the facility is able to care for its clients based on their individual needs.

The recertification process occurs every two years and doesn’t require direct contact with the individuals.

The division also performs quality enhancement reviews each year, during which documents from 400 randomly selected cases are supposed to be requested and reviewed.

If the cases involve increased medical needs, a registered nurse is supposed to perform a medical review on an annual basis.

“We have quality enhancement nurses and those nurses will review individuals, specifically individuals that have really high medical needs, about 65 percent of the 8,377 with comprehensive waivers,” said Valerie Huhn the division's director. “Those cases would warrant this annual nurse review.”

While other oversight systems exists within the division, none of them require consistent, face-to-face contact with clients like Debrodie.

The Missouri Developmental Disabilities Council shared an office building with the Department of Mental Health but it is a separate entity.

The 23-member council is federally funded and at least 60 percent of its membership have a direct connection to people with developmental disabilities.

"We don't delve that deep into oversight,” said Vicky Davidson, the council’s director. “We provide advice on the services systems, on how families believe the service system should be driven."

One tool the council uses is a victimization task force, something Davidson said will examine the Debrodie case closely.

"The victimization task would like to look at what systems might have broken down and work to address those and change that to make sure that doesn't happen again,” Davidson said.

The task force is only able to submit recommendations to the Department of Mental Health, meaning it's up to Gov. Eric Greitens' administration to change or update policy.

In a division that serves more than 36,000 people across the state, all of them with different needs, Huhn says it can be difficult to keep the system individual-driven.

"It can be challenging making sure all those needs are met and those rights are protected,” said Huhn.

“The system always evolves because the individuals evolve and the ways we can find to care for individuals."

ABC 17 News is closely following the Debrodie investigation and will publish updates on air and in a special section of this website: "The Case of Carl Debrodie."

Full Article & Source:
The Case of Carl DeBrodie: Checking The System

The Case of Carl DeBrodie: The Guardians

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Part two of a three-part series

Click to Watch Video
FULTON, Mo. - Before 31-year-old Carl DeBrodie's body was found encased in concrete, he was part of a lifelong custody battle.

Some key players in Carl's life say the legal struggles could have been avoided if Carl hadn't gone into Second Chance, the group home where he was last seen.

ABC 17's Deborah Kendrick got her hands on court documents that uncover more about what went on behind the scenes, including a possible conflict of interest.

Early Years

In November 1985: Carl DeBrodie was born to Carolyn Summers. Carl lived with his mother, who has mental limitations, until Carl was about 12-years-old. Carl went into the care of Mary Martin, through the foster care system.

In September 1999: Cole County Circuit Court appointed Mary Martin to be Carl's legal guardian when he turned 14-years-old.

In November 2003: Carl turned 18 and he became his own legal guardian.

In November 2006: Martin cared for Carl until he was 21. It was nearly two years later in 2008, when Carl was declared a incapacitated and disabled adult from Callaway County Court. So Karen Digh, the public administrator was appointed his legal guardian.

Legal Battles

In 2009: Martin petitioned the Callaway County Court to be named as Carl's legal guardian. The court held hearings on April 2010, but she was denied. It was that same year, Christmas Eve at Martin's when Martin claims Carl was abused. An investigation was done and found no one to be responsible. It was noted in documents that Carl sometimes "harms himself."

By 2010: Carl was living at Second Chance. Carl's former guardian ad litem, Jana Oestreich, visited Carl that year and states that she saw "tremendous positive change." A guardian ad litem is court appointed to represent the best interests of a child, or incapacitated adult. In an appeal opinion by the Cole County judge, Oestreich said Carl was "happy, healthy, robust, cozy and comfortable." Oestreich testified that when she visited Martin's home, it was "very chaotic," and "there is a lot of traffic inside of Martin's home with different children, different family members."

In August 2011: Martin petitioned the Cole County Court to adopt Carl when he was 25. It was December of 2011, when Mary Beck, Carl's appointed guardian ad litem during the adoption, made a visit to Martin's home. Beck said Carl appeared to be comfortable and familiar with his residential home and had access to the entire house. Beck stated in her guardian ad litem report, "Carl got his own drinks, letting the dogs out and interacting with family members." Beck stated neighbors and friends who were present enjoyed Carl's company not because they were being paid.

It was in front of Beck that Carl asked his 'Dad', Mary Martin's husband, if he (Carl) could stay at his childhood home. "His father hugged him, but told him he would have to leave and assured him that he was doing everything in his power to ensure that Carl could be a part of the family more often."

May 2012: Six months after the guardian ad litem's report of Carl being calm and loving at the Martin's (home). Carl was observed having an extremely opposite reaction to the mention of the Martin's name.

During a visit in May, the report noted there was a continuous presence of Sherry Paulo, the assistant director of Second Chance homes and Vickie Cole, the house manager of Second Chance homes. It was noted during the visit Carl was very "distraught, crying, screaming and shaking his head "No" when Martin's name was brought up. It was concluded that both Paulo and Cole "exerted immense influence over Carl's response to the Martin's name at the idea of adoption."

It was also in May that the Cole County Court ruled to deny the adoption to Martin because: consent of the adult was needed; no credible evidence was presented to support a finding that Carl knew the legal significance of a decision to consent to the adoption; Carl's legal guardian, Karen Digh, declined to give consent and declined to seek authority for consent.

In 2014: Martin appealed the courts decisions but she was denied. In 2014, that was the last time Martin saw Carl.

Testimonies

Sherry Paulo: a staff member and "qualified disability professional." Paulo testified that Martin and her husband were not denied visitation but they needed to be supervised.

Karen Digh: Carl's legal guardian. Digh stated when Carl returned from visits with Mary he exhibited strange or distressful behaviors.

Mary Martin: Carl's former guardian. Martin stated Carl "needed an advocate and needed somebody to watch out for him the rest of his life." Martin stated she did not want Carl living at Second Chance and believed he was being overmedicated.

Mary Beck: Carl's guardian ad litem. Beck stated that Carl really valued the role of his biological mother and Mary Martin in his life. Beck recommended that the court grant the adoption.

During a visit to Second Chance Beck asked Carl if he wanted to continue living at Second Chance or if he wanted to live with the Martins. Carl pointed to the ground and said "here." Beck asked Carl the same question when he was visiting at the Martin's Carl said, "Here. Home."

Conflict of Interest
 
The question on the minds of several people in the community, "Why wouldn't someone who has cared for him for years not be allowed to adopt him."

"Why would someone resist in giving guardianship or adoption to a family that had cared for him for 13 years and were in love with him, who had the financial means to take care of him," Beck said.

Beck states a financial tie and conflict of interest existed with the Public Administrators office and Second Chance.

"This is my guardian ad litem report to the court so it's not confidential information. There was a financial tie between Karen's office and Second Chance homes," Beck said.

In the report it states, "The legal guardian's deputy was working at Second Chance while working as a deputy to the Callaway County public administrator, which is a noteworthy conflict of interest. The deputy was very much in favor of keeping (Carl) DeBrodie institutionalized."

"It's a real conflict of interest to have a facility for incapacitated adults to have a financial tie to a main worker in the public guardian's office," Beck said.

Second Chance Finances


According to a financial document that ABC 17 News obtained from the Missouri Department of Mental Health, Second Chance was bringing in an average of $592,000 each year from 2009 to 2017. This brought the total to more than $5 million over the nine year span.

Investigation

ABC 17 News checks in daily on the investigation. So far, no arrests have been made in the disappearance and death of Carl DeBrodie.

Full Article & Source:
The Case of Carl DeBrodie: The Guardians

The Case of Carl DeBrodie: The Investigation

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Click to Watch Video
FULTON, Mo. - Carl DeBrodie's body was found encased in concrete in a Fulton storage unit.

The questions of who poured the concrete over DeBrodie's body and stashed him out of sight has been the target of an intense investigation over the last 11 weeks.

ABC 17's Jordana Marie has been digging through hundreds of court documents, looking into who was responsible for keeping him safe. She's found a court custody battle, a list of people responsible for his daily care and at least one serious potential violation of state law.

ABC 17 spoke with a former guardian of DeBrodie about what she fears happened.

“I think somebody lost it on him and that’s how he died,” Mary Martin said.

Martin is a former guardian for DeBrodie. She took care of him most of his childhood until he was 21 years old.

Martin said DeBrodie is developmentally challenged and doesn’t speak well but can get his point across to those who know him.

She said he went to live at Second Chance homes, an Independent Supported Living facility in Fulton about nine years ago. That’s where she said things started to go south for DeBrodie.

“When he went into Second Chance, he was put on meds and it upped and upped and upped until he had the Thorazine shuffle," Martin said. "He was not Carl anymore. He walked like a Zombie”

On April 17, Fulton police received a missing person’s report from Second Chance homes. They quickly realized DeBrodie had been missing a lot longer than the Second Chance workers had reported.

“We conducted a foot search, a search with drones, a tracking dog from the Highway Patrol," Fulton police Lt. Bill Ladwig said. "It became pretty apparent by speaking to some other people that were in the area that Mr. DeBrodie was probably missing for longer than just 30 minutes on that morning.”

A week later, his body was found, encased in cement, in a storage facility.

“With the decomposition of the body, it was probably there for months,” Fulton police Chief Steve Meyers said.

So when did DeBrodie go missing? Who was responsible for making sure he was alive and healthy while living at Second Chance homes?

According to former Cole County Prosecutor Bill Tackett, everyone.

“It’s everyone who touches the oversight of him," Tackett said. "Everybody plays a part in what happens to any of these people but specifically him.”

ABC 17 News has been looking through hundreds of documents from various agencies, looking for who would be responsible for DeBrodie.

At the top of that list, DeBrodie's court-appointed legal guardian: Callaway County public administrator Karen Digh.

“So she would be one of the people in the network of people of players that were responsible for protecting Carl DeBrodie,” Tackett said.

Next on the list, the case manager responsible for monthly face-to-face visits with DeBrodie.

In May, ABC 17 News reported Callaway County Special Services, the agency that employed that case worker, determined that employee was not meeting monthly with DeBrodie despite filing reports stating otherwise.

That employee has been fired.

“There are criminal statutes for false reporting, filing a false report," Tackett said.  "There's forgery.  There’s a litany of prosecutorial remedies for a lot of what’s happened here.”

Right now, no one with CCSS has been charged, though it is possibly a part of the larger investigation.

We also know Rachel Rowden owns Second Chance Homes. Her name has not been mentioned in the investigation to this point.

Second Chance Homes was an Independent Supported Living facility, with only two or three residents at a time living there.

“All she had to do was drop in," Martin said. "I mean, she didn’t have that many clients.”

ABC 17’s Jordana Marie went to Rowden’s house to ask her the last time she saw DeBrodie, if she knew what happened and how she thought his body ended up encased in cement.

Her daughter said Rowden was out of the state and referred to the lawyers when asked about the investigation.

At the bottom of the responsibility totem pole are the people working in the home day in and day out.

Through court documents and police reports, ABC 17 News has determined Sherry Paulo was one of the employees at Second Chance from as far back at 2011 to as recently as 2016.

In a court document from 2014, Paulo is listed as a staff member and “qualified disability professional" at Second Chance Home in Fulton.

Fulton police records also put Paulo in the home in October 2016 when a resident allegedly threw punches at her and her husband, Anthony Flores.

Neighbors also told ABC 17 they saw Paulo at the house the night before DeBrodie was reported missing.

More than two months have passed since DeBrodie was reported missing and his body was found.

There have been no arrests, no named suspects and no timeline of when justice for DeBrodie will be served. The community wants answers.

“This is one that needs to be compartmentalized and worked through slowly, but surely and get to the bottom of what happened to Carl DeBrodie,” Tackett said.

As a former prosecutor, Tackett said the key to ensure justice is properly served for Carl is to find out what happened before he was reported missing.

“What happened before April 17th? We know what happened after April 17th," Tackett. "What went on before the date that this was called in? What you’re hearing is the chief of police talk about the decomposition of the body being months and if you do the math on it, it doesn’t work out.”

Tackett has not been involved in the investigation of this case. But, he did say if this case was presented to him, based on the facts we know so far, he’d likely take it to a grand jury before deciding who to ultimately prosecute, and for what crimes.

We know Callaway County has a standing grand jury, but it’s not known if this investigation has been presented to that grand jury.

Full Article & Source:
The Case of Carl DeBrodie: The Investigation

The 17 Worst Nursing Homes in PA

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Nursing Home Compare, run by the federal government, is considered the best available source of quality-related information about nursing homes.

It uses a five-star rating system. Five star homes are considered the best, one star homes are considered the worst.

Click [the source link below] to see the midstate homes with one-star ratings as of late June or click here to read more about problems in Pa. nursing homes.

Source:
The 17 Worst Nursing Homes in the Midstate

Jailhouse call from suspect accused of exploiting the elderly leads judge to delay granting bond

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CLEARWATER, Fla. - Professional guardian Fernando Gutierrez was charged last month with financially exploiting seniors through power of attorney or health care surrogate agreements.

He couldn't use the money from his business bank accounts to pay bond, because prosecutors thought that money may have come from victims.

The call for help Guitierrez made from jail made the judge suspicious as well.

Prosecutors allege professional guardian Fernando Gutierrez stole hundreds of thousands of dollars from vulnerable seniors he was supposed to protect.

Full Article & Source:
Jailhouse call from suspect accused of exploiting the elderly leads judge to delay granting bond

A Green Bench for Willie

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Jane Barr, Heather Riley & Willie Berchau
Publisher’s Note: The story of Willie Berchau and his ordeal as a ward of a professional guardian is sad, complicated and just one example of how the elderly can be abused. Thank goodness for the people who fought to help him. This is an updated version of the printed story.

A green bench, reminiscent of those that lined the streets of St. Petersburg for 50 years in the 20th century, was dedicated to “Willie” Berchau at the Fountains in S. Pasadena in early July.

It was a synergistic event whose participants included a volunteer for a program that advocates for the elderly, a former mayor with a passion for green benches, a local wood craftsman, a reverend, and a number of caring friends who loved Willie.

The story began in 2011 when Jane Barr, a volunteer Florida Long Term Care Ombudsman was assigned to Willie,97 at the time, after he became a court-appointed ward of a professional guardian. Jane visited him at the Fountains where he lived and was puzzled.

“I can’t figure out why this man at 97 years old even had a guardian because he does everything for himself, he knows everything, he speaks four languages,” she recalls.

Willie was a Lutheran so Jane introduced him to her friends Heather and Jimmie Riley so they could all go to church together. Willie and Jimmie both had railroad careers and the they all hit if off. They and other acquain- tances visited Willie often and even hosted a 99th birthday party for him at their home in 2013.

Later that year his guardian had him placed in an Alzheimer facility despite evidence that it wasn’t warranted.

Jane, Heather and Jimmie were horrified. Willie’s pastor recalls visiting and said it was pathetic to see him there. They wrote countless unanswered letters to the judge and even the governor, then finally enlisted the help of State Senator Jeff Brandes who heard Willie’s story, visited him immediately and got a lawyer to help.

They also told their story to ABC Action News and after a piece aired about his plight, he was moved to a less restrictive area and after six months in the facility he was allowed to move back to the Fountains.

Meanwhile Fountains’ resident and former S. Pasadena Mayor Dick Holmes, had been working on a book about green benches and read a news article about a local craftsman Flash Williamson who was making them. Holmes called, they talked, became friends and Holmes started buying the iconic benches for the Fountains complex.

Williamson, who owns Green Benches & More in Clearwater, started building benches in 1983 at the request of a client who had one of the originals from the city. The customer wanted some made for his mobile home community in Dunedin and brought the bench to Clearwater. Williamson made a template, built the benches out of pressure treated pine, and that was that… or so he thought.

Friends of Willie dedicated bench
“In 1987 he called me, and I recognized his voice immediately,” said Williamson. “He said, ‘Remember those benches you built for me?’ I said, ‘Yes,’ thinking there was something wrong with them. He said, ‘Well I need five more.’”

He built the benches and decided during the economic slowdown of 2008/9 to experiment to find other more resilient materials and settled on recycled plastic. He put one in front of his store where it gets hit with direct sunlight and it didn’t need maintenance, it didn’t even accumulate dirt, and he was reducing waste by recycling. “It was fantastic, so I thought why not emphasize the “green” in the green bench.”

This green bench, crafted by Flash Williamson of Green Bench & More in Clearwater, was purchased by Jane, Heather, Jimmie and Willie’s family. Friends gathered and dedicated it to former resident Willie Berchau in early July.

Fast forward to 2017 and Holmes is having plaques made for the benches to commemorate the 100th anniversary of their introduction to the city in 1917 –Jane, Heather, Jimmie and Willie’s family bought a bench and arranged to have it dedicated to Willie–and that is how a group of previously unassociated people ended up toasting to Willie and his bench by the pond in front of the Fountains. Willie passed away at 101 in 2015.

Full Article & Source:
A Green Bench for Willie

Woman pleads guilty to bilking elderly Chicago man out of $4.5 million

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CHICAGO (AP) - A woman has pleaded guilty to federal charges she bilked an elderly suburban Chicago man out of about $4.5 million over six years.

Corrine Dziesiuta entered her guilty plea Thursday to three counts of fraud.

The 39-year-old Dziesiuta was accused of persuading the 87-year-old Palatine man to wire funds from his U.S. bank account to banks in Nicaragua and Costa Rica. She told him he'd won millions of dollars in prize money but needed to pay insurance, taxes, and fees.

The FBI recorded 27 telephone calls between the victim and Dziesiuta in 2016. She was arrested after making arrangements to fly him to New York so he could deliver a check for more than $3.7 million.

Dziesiuta faces up to 6½ years in prison when sentenced in October.

Full Article & Source:
Woman pleads guilty to bilking elderly Chicago man out of $4.5 million

The Abduction of Anastasia Adams

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Day 168 – I’d Bet Money On It


(Anastasia and me in 1969. Picture taken by our mom to send to our
dad who was fighting in Vietnam)

AUG 3, 2017 — It has been 168 days since my sister Anastasia was forcibly abducted into an unethical questionably legal guardianship by Inova Fairfax Hospital, and their designated guardians; 168 days since she has been outside and seen the sky or felt the sun on her face because she is forbidden to go outside.

I saw Anastasia today. She is still looking a little pale, is still under weight, and she has not opened her eyes since Friday. (On Friday I was horrified to see her left eye had a bunch of goo in it and the right eye was red). She tried to open them through the visit but was unable to get them open more than 1/4" before she had to close them again. Her pupils were rolled up. When she was able to keep her pupils level I could see her eyes were extremely red. I would bet $50 she has pink eye or a similar eye infection. It appeared the facility knew nothing of this even though it was stated she had not opened her eyes for them the last couple of days.

I have been allowed to give her a kiss and hug at the beginning and end of each one of the 3 hour visits. You can see on her face that she needs this and today she got the sweetest smile on her face after I gave her the kiss and hug. I was told by the facility that this could all go away if Labowitz gets another call from APS or if I complain about injuries. I won't comment on that right now.

I have had several nightmares about my sister in the past week. I still am not sleeping well. I don't believe she is either, she had dark circles under her eyes that almost looked like black eyes.

I miss not having my sister at home. Everything is off in every area. Anastasia should be home sleeping in her own bed.

Full Article & Source:
The Abduction of Anastasia Adams

Jury hits lawyers with $16.4M for doing senior wrong in guardianship

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Advocates for guardianship reform clamored in vain for years that Florida’s system failed to properly protect incapacitated seniors, that its primary purpose had been perverted to line the pockets of greedy attorneys and professional guardians with the hard-earned life savings of the elderly.

Now they can point to a new federal verdict awarding a whopping $16.4 million in a lawsuit claiming that two West Palm Beach attorneys breached their fiduciary duties while running up “unnecessary and excessive fees” of $1 million.

“It’s really kind of a landmark case,” said Julian Bivins, who brought the suit as the personal representative of the estate of his father, Oliver, a Texas oil man. “It sends a message to these unscrupulous lawyers and guardians that they are not going to be able to get away with it anymore.”

The Bivins guardianship case emanates out of the court of Circuit Judge Martin Colin, the subject of an investigation by The Palm Beach Post into the judge’s conflicts of interest because his wife is a professional guardian.

Colin in open court had heaped praise on the attorneys who lost the case and refused to hold a hearing to decide whether the attorneys had “secretly” kept money from the sale of one of Oliver Bivins’ properties in an escrow account for more than a year, according to court documents.

The Post’s award-winning series featuring Colin, Guardianships: A Broken Trust, resulted in an overhaul of guardianship rules in Palm Beach County. Colin retired last December after he was transferred from the Probate & Guardianship Division because of The Post’s reporting.

Weeks after The Post published, Julian Bivins filed a motion to disqualify Colin, saying his concerns about the “close-knit atmosphere of the Guardians, their attorneys” and Colin had been “glaringly brought to light” in the stories.
Retired Judge Martin Colin
Held captive? 
The younger Bivins said he felt his father was “held captive” in South Florida by the guardianship so the attorneys could liquidate real estate assets — including a New York City Upper East Side mansion — and charge more fees. Colin granted an emergency order prohibiting the senior from returning to Texas.

The jury found on July 28 that attorneys Brian M. O’Connell and Ashley N. Crispin of the Ciklin, Lubitz & O’Connell firm not only breached their fiduciary duty but committed professional negligence.

The lawsuit claimed they failed to get appraisals on two high-end New York City properties being divided among family. They were not of equal value and as a result, Julian Bivins ended up with one that was worth millions less than other.

The jury’s decision to award $16.4 million makes up the difference.

But the fight over the property is far less important to reform advocates than the fact that attorneys who carry out the wishes of professional guardians and are paid with the ward’s money were held accountable.

Oliver Bivins died at age 97 in March 2015. He ended up in the court-ordered guardianship when he visited his condominium in Palm Beach in 2011 and a social worker became concerned with his well-being, according to court documents.
Oliver Bivins appeared to be coming to Florida for a weekend vacation, leaving his refrigerator in Texas fully stocked, plaintiff attorneys told the jury. His son said he often didn’t visit his Palm Beach condominium for years at a time.

The verdict takes a further step toward re-establishing that attorneys are supposed to represent the incapacitated ward, not the court-appointed professional guardian — a position many lawyers have argued in court to thwart families trying to rein in a fee frenzy.

“If it wasn’t for me, they would have completely depleted my dad’s estate,” said Julian Bivins, who now lives in Palm Beach. “I’ve been fighting them from the beginning to just get him back to Texas. Finally, I got him back there 35 days before he passed away.”

As with many family members who challenge the status quo in guardianship in Palm Beach County, Julian said he found himself relentlessly attacked in court. He was even sued by one of the guardians in the case, Curtis Rogers.

The biggest toll, he said, though, was his relationship with his father as Rogers told the elder Bivins that his son only wanted his money. “He turned my dad against me,” Julian Bivins said. “I could never explain to my father how he was being held for ransom, how they wouldn’t let him go.”

The Ciklin firm said it is confident it can prevail on post-trial motions in front of U.S. District Court Judge Kenneth Marra.

“We think the verdict was not in keeping with the law or the facts and, in fact, was considerably more than the plaintiff even asked for,” said Alan Ciklin, the firm’s managing partner. “We feel pretty good about our ability to have this reduced dramatically.”

Rogers, one of two professional guardians dismissed as defendants in the lawsuit, testified for more than two days at the trial. He told The Post he believes the younger Bivins financially took advantage of his father. “The verdict was a total shock to me,” he said. “I anticipated there was no way that type of verdict could be made.”

Colin during a Feb. 3, 2016, hearing in the guardianship case bristled at the suggestion that the Ciklin Lubitz firm was not acting as a good custodian of Bivins’ assets. The senior’s son questioned why the firm had failed to turn over $472,000 from the sale of his father’s commercial property in New York City, requesting Colin refer their actions to the Florida Bar or keep them from holding onto the money.

“The Ciklin Lubitz law firm has a well-earned reputation of honesty. And this is honesty,” Colin said in court. “Not for a moment do I have any concern because their reputation is well-earned in this respect.”

Colin denied Julian Bivins’ request without hearing any evidence but ordered the firm to return about $400,000.

An attorney for Julian Bivins filed a motion to disqualify Colin because of those statements, but the judge denied it.

“We never got anything done in his court,” Julian said. “We complained about the amount of the fees and he (Colin) cut them down 25 percent, but then we had to pay their fees for them to defend those fees. So they just made it back.”

Guardianship Catch-22 
It is in this Catch-22 that families often find themselves when trying to decide whether to fight unethical actions by a professional guardian: Either way they pay, and either way the lawyers’ wallets grow fatter.

The guardianship issue is being looked at by a task force formed by Florida Supreme Court Justice Jorge Labarga. The state Legislature established the new Office of Public & Professional Guardianship as a result of lobbying by advocacy groups and others about lawyers and guardians siphoning off fees.

Attorney Greg Coleman, past president of The Florida Bar, wrote to the work group in June to alert it to “inappropriate, improper and illegal activities of a very small number of Florida attorneys” practicing in the guardianship arena.

“Unfortunately, the way guardianship statutes and rules are currently constituted allows for a window of exploitation by bad attorneys and bad guardians for their own personal monetary gain,” said Coleman, who was not associated with the Bivins guardianship or any of the relating litigation.

Coleman said everything is moving in the right direction for seniors. “The issue has the (Florida Supreme) Court’s attention, I can tell you,” he said. “It is not something that is being ignored or swept under the rug.”

Dominoes falling? 
Attorneys who represented the Bivins family — Charles D. Bavol and Ron Denman of The Bleakley Bavol law firm in Tampa — compared the trial to a climactic brawl from the movie Rocky. The Ciklin defendants knocked out their expert witness and cited attorney-client privilege in refusing to turn over crucial emails between the Ciklin lawyers and the guardians. The son’s testimony persuaded the jury, his lawyers said.

“What the defendants did in this case was wrong,” Denman told the jury. “It was legally wrong, what they did was ethically wrong, and what they did was morally wrong.”

Bavol and Denman said the verdict builds off a 2015 state court appellate finding out of Palm Beach County, ruling that the guardianship attorneys’ duty is to the incapacitated adult, not the professional guardian.

The 4th District Court of Appeal in recent years has reined in circuit courts in Palm Beach County that reform advocates say patently favor professional guardians and their attorneys.

Bavol and Denman said the verdict underscores the need for accountability from guardians and their lawyers.

“Based on this significant jury verdict and the ongoing investigative journalism in Southern Florida concerning professional guardianships, the need for reform of the guardianship system to protect Florida’s elderly citizens is again underscored,” the lawyers said in a news release.

Full Article & Source:
Jury hits lawyers with $16.4M for doing senior wrong in guardianship

Fight over right to sue nursing homes heats up

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Consumer groups are making a last ditch effort to stop the Trump administration from stripping nursing home residents and their families of the right to take facilities to court over alleged abuse, neglect or sexual assault.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) announced plans in June to do away with an Obama-era rule that prohibited nursing homes that accept Medicare or Medicaid funds from including language in their resident contracts requiring that disputes be settled by a third party rather than a court.

Public comments on the CMS proposal to do away with that rule are due Monday, and groups are urging the agency to reconsider.

More than 75 consumer, health and advocacy groups have come together to form the Fair Arbitration Now Coalition to stop CMS from reversing what they claim is a critical protection for the elderly.

Remington Gregg, counsel for civil justice and consumer rights at Public Citizen, said the rule change is not only unnecessary, but shameful.

Gregg said the provisions, known to lawyers as pre-dispute arbitration agreements, create an unequal balance of power between the nursing home and its elderly patients or the family members caring for them.

“When you are trying to get someone in a nursing home, often time it's stressful or an emotional time. Often times loved ones can’t take care of themselves, so for a nursing home to say in order to get in you have to waive your right is shameful,” he said.

“We’re talking about everything you may have a problem with — abuse, neglect, sexual assault, a wide variety of things — they are now saying you are waiving your right to full justice.”

CMS said it decided to reconsider the rule after a federal district court judge in Mississippi issued an order in November temporarily blocking the rule from taking effect.

The American Health Care Association (AHCA) and a group of nursing homes had sued CMS and the Department of Health and Human Services in October, claiming that the rule violated the Federal Arbitration Act and that the agencies had overstepped their statutory authority in issuing the law. The AHCA said Congress has repeatedly rejected legislation to invalidate arbitration agreements.

In June, the federal judge agreed to the parties’ joint request to put the case on hold while CMS revises the rule.

Under its proposed revisions, CMS said nursing homes would be required to write the arbitration agreements in plain language and explain the agreement to the prospective resident or his or her representative. Residents would also be required to acknowledge they understand the agreement.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce is also backing the rule change. The nation’s leading business group fought against the original rule, claiming that restricting arbitration would raise the cost of nursing home care and make it harder, and more costly, for residents to resolve disputes.

“For many individual disputes, litigation in court is simply impractical. Litigation in court is procedurally complex, which means that non-lawyers need legal representation to have any hope of successfully navigating the system,” the chamber said in 2015 comments to the agency it provided The Hill.

“But many plaintiffs’ claims are too small to justify paying a lawyer to handle the matter and, in any event, most people do not have the resources to do so.”

The AHCA did not comment but provided a fact sheet outlining its position, which said arbitration is faster and cheaper than litigation. It also claimed there's no limit on the monetary award that residents can receive.

The Fair Arbitration Now Coalition, though, is making a full-court press to save the rule.

AARP, which is part of the coalition, argued in comments it submitted to CMS on Thursday that the agency lacks the statutory authority to eliminate a protection that was properly written.

“To the extent that CMS may be relying on the authority to promulgate regulations ‘to promote the effective and efficient use of public moneys’ the regulations still need to be for the benefit of Medicare and Medicaid nursing facility residents and not to their detriment,” wrote the nonprofit group for Americans 50 years and older.

In its proposal to revise the rule, CMS said “upon reconsideration,” it believes “that arbitration agreements are, in fact, advantageous to both providers and beneficiaries because they allow for the expeditious resolution of claims without the costs and expense of litigation.”

But AARP claims that statement contradicts evidence the agency cited in 2016 when it issued the rule.

Carolina Fortin-Garcia, a CMS spokeswoman, said the agency will respond to public comments received when it issues the final rule.

Opponents of the rule change are also weighing legal action.

Gregg said it’s never a good idea to threaten litigation but that Public Citizen will explore all of its options if CMS ultimately decides to allow arbitration agreements in nursing home contracts.

“Any agency action must meet a high bar for ensuring the action taken isn’t arbitrary and capricious,” he said.

“Simply making the argument that we are a new administration and want to make sure corporations don’t have regulations that are forcing them to be accountable is not a good enough reason to change a rule that underwent extensive review."

Full Article & Source:
Fight over right to sue nursing homes heats up

Two arrested in Volusia elderly exploitation case, third sought

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"They are the epitome of what a scumbag is, to go after your grandparents," Sheriff Mike Chitwood said.

Click to Watch Video
Investigators in Volusia County are have arrested two of three people, including the granddaughter of a victim, in connection to an elderly exploitation case.

Candyce Nesheim said thieves broke into her Gardenia Avenue home and ransacked the place while she was away in July.

Nesheim said the thieves cut a screen, shattered a window and stole a television, tools, money and precious heirlooms.

Deputies with the Volusia County Sheriff's Office said surveillance images from a local pawn shop showed Matthew Hall with some of the stolen items but said Albert Blackburn was the actual thief.

The pair were living next door to the burglary victim at the home of an elderly couple.

Deputies said they'd been invited in by the couples' granddaughter, Mary Hall.

"They are the epitome of what a scumbag is, to go after your grandparents," Sheriff Mike Chitwood said.

Chitwood said police found out the three were exploiting the seniors, getting money from the couple through threats and intimidation.

"To basically eviscerate these folks in their golden years, to destroy their money and their sense of security," Chitwood said.

Sheriff's Office investigators said the elderly couple lived in such fear of their granddaughter and the two men she allegedly brought into their home, they lost significant weight, their health deteriorated and they are now in an assisted living facility.

Investigators said the suspects have since disappeared after Mary Hall allegedly stole her grandparents' car, but they've spotted her out of state on social media.

"Now she's set up a GoFundMe account claiming she needs money to get to Florida to take care of her elderly grandparents," Chitwood said.

Investigators said the only people the suspects were helping were themselves.

Albert Blackburn and Maria Hall have been arrested in North Carolina.

Full Article & Source:
Two arrested in Volusia elderly exploitation case, third sought

Editorial: Commission needs to dig deep into guardianship travesty

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It would be impossible for a special commission — appointed by the New Mexico Supreme Court to review and recommend changes in the state guardianship system — to ignore shocking recent allegations of outright theft by guardians and conservators.

These are the same guardians and conservators who are appointed by judges to protect some of our most vulnerable residents — the elderly and disabled.

When federal investigators describe a commercial guardian company like Ayudando Guardians Inc. as “permeated by crime,” it would seem even the most ardent defenders of the system would have to take notice. Remember, Ayudando was appointed in hundreds of cases and represented the professional guardians at one commission hearing.

Such cases highlight obvious areas in need of reform. The courts have no forensic auditing capability, there are no meaningful financial reporting requirements, no requirement in state law for guardians and conservators to post bond and no place for families to complain.

 But the commission and court also need to look at other, more subtle, problems in a system that lacks meaningful oversight even though it is susceptible to corruption.

Consider these scenarios, based on real-life examples from the Journal’s ongoing investigation:

1. You are struggling with how to care for a parent whose mental faculties have deteriorated. You temporarily put Mom in a care facility, then decide to bring her home. But caregivers and attorneys who make a living in this system urge you to petition for a guardianship. It will be so much less stress, they say. The professionals can handle it so much better, they say. You can go back to being son or daughter. They might even privately urge Mom to tell you that’s what she wants. The pressure is subtle and they don’t mention, of course, that this is their source of income.

2. You concur and petition for a guardianship. A judge declares Mom or Dad incapacitated and appoints a guardian and/or conservator. But a year or so later you aren’t happy with the care Mom’s getting and you think the charges racked up by the professionals — and taken from Mom’s assets — are excessive. Conservators and guardians have virtually no check on their spending other than possible after-the-fact review by the judge. You object. But they dismiss your complaints. You have nothing to say about this any more.

3. You can’t even discuss these issues with Mom. It “upsets” her, says the guardian. In fact, so much so they can cut you off from Mom. Totally. Without judicial approval. Visits, if allowed, will be “monitored” for content.

4. You go back to your attorney for help. Ooops. He/she can’t help you because he/she represents the guardian and/or conservator in other cases. This is, after all, an industry dominated by insiders.

5. The guardian and/or conservator fight your efforts for removal and even cut off your visitation. They, after all, are empowered by the court. And they pay their lawyers who are fighting to keep you away from Mom out of — you guessed it — Mom’s estate. And they don’t need advance court approval for this.

6. You’ve found a new lawyer and started over. But it’s an uphill battle. You will be portrayed as the shrill and “emotional” family member by industry insiders and their lawyers, who are smooth and polished before the judges they know well and who defend them publicly.

7. You dig into your own pocketbook and the guardian and/or conservator finally relent. OK. You can see Mom and maybe they will even agree to step aside and allow appointment of another firm. But part of the price to end the legal war is a “side” agreement in which you promise never to criticize the company or even acknowledge the existence of such an agreement.

8. You’ve had running disputes with the conservator but really want the estate settled now that Mom’s gone. You’re asked to sign a document releasing the conservator from all liability and, likely, a promise you won’t criticize. But you want a real accounting? You may have to post a significant bond — even though guardians and conservators typically in New Mexico haven’t been required to do that when they take over your loved one’s estate and finances.

The initial reaction by some District Court judges in Albuquerque to family complaints — Judge Shannon Bacon being a notable exception — was one of denial. Nothing to see here. Move along.

But that’s not possible now with law enforcement accusations of millions of dollars stolen from protected wards by court-appointed guardians such as Ayudando.

Yes, there are some obvious reforms. And as noted in today’s Page 1 story by investigative reporter Colleen Heild, Bernalillo County district judges have begun taking important steps.

But to fix the structural problems that have allowed this abuse of people and their assets, the commission and the Supreme Court will need to dig a little deeper into the decay that has allowed these problems to flourish.

This editorial first appeared in the Albuquerque Journal. It was written by members of the editorial board and is unsigned as it represents the opinion of the newspaper rather than the writers.

Full Article & Source:
Editorial: Commission needs to dig deep into guardianship travesty

West Columbia assisted living facility director charged with assault of resident

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WEST COLUMBIA, SC (WIS) - The executive director of Brookdale Assisted Living Facility has been accused of abusing one of the residents in a police report obtained by WIS.

Gary Mark Tyson, 59, is accused of assaulting two residents in formal complaints made to the West Columbia Police Department.

In one report, the daughter of a resident at the assisted living facility claims that Tyson hurt her mother on July 11. A witness and employee at the home said the daughter called, claiming her mother accused Tyson of forcing her to take a shower, leaving bruises on her body.

Another incident report claims that a welfare check was made when a 911 caller said the facility was understaffed when her mother was picked up and took her home.

The incident report also states that the employee who officers spoke with was the only one on staff, which is a violation of DHEC regulations.

Tyson was arrested on July 28 and charged with third-degree assault.

Brookdale Assisted Living Facility is located on 190 McSwain Drive.

Full Article & Source:
West Columbia assisted living facility director charged with assault of resident

Attorney Forges Judges’ Signatures Over 100 Times. Earns Jail, Sick Burn

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It’s been about a year and a half since we last checked in on Jose Camacho, a Florida lawyer charged with forging the signatures of seven different judges on over 100 documents. Yesterday, he was sentenced to 364 days in jail, 10 years of probation, and a comical tongue-lashing from the court.

Ultimately Camacho forged signatures on 114 documents — structured settlements factoring transactions for his clients — and filed them with the Broward County clerk. Broward has since put a stop to allowing attorneys to file documents supposedly coming from the judges, a policy fix so obvious it’s shocking it wasn’t long in place. (UPDATE: Originally this article described these documents as setting up structured settlements, but it’s a little different than that. The National Structured Settlement Trade Association points out that the documents at issue set up factoring transactions that allowed settlement purchasers to offer discounted cash payments in exchange for the rights to future settlement payments. This supercharges the potential for abuse here because, while judges most often approve these deals, they should be scrutinizing them due to the risk of disadvantaging victims.)

It remains one of the most baffling cases of professional misconduct we’ve covered at Above the Law for the simple reason that Camacho seemingly garnered no advantage at all from his actions. The settlements would’ve earned a rubber stamp had he submitted them to the court. He just… didn’t.
“He was lazy,” she testified. “He was purely lazy.”
That’s Judge Marina Garcia-Wood, one of the Broward judges who uncovered the scheme, testifying at Camacho’s sentencing this week.

Meanwhile, Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Ellen Sue Venzer, who presided over the case because, quite frankly, how could you trust the Broward courthouse after realizing they let this go on, offered a time-worn burn while she sentenced Camacho:
“In today’s environment, lawyer jokes are abundant. You’ve heard the one about what’s 1,000 lawyers at the bottom of the sea? A good start,” Venzer said. “You only only reinforce that stereotype, but you buttress the idea that lawyers can’t be trusted.”
It’s bad enough to be heading to jail, but to sit through a lawyer joke too? It’s not even one of the good lawyer jokes either! That’s what makes it such a harsh rebuke — Judge Venzer didn’t even find Camacho worth crafting a good joke for. She just threw out a lazy quip that’s been copied a hundred times.

Oh. That’s some postmodern trolling, right there.

Full Article & Source:
Attorney Forges Judges’ Signatures Over 100 Times. Earns Jail, Sick Burn

Professional for-profit Guardians: Just one step away from the public auction block

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I have watched in dismay as bills have been introduced and/or passed supposedly addressing the trafficking of human beings including the elderly, the disabled and children through the cash incentive systems that fund the buying, selling and trading of the American public. We have been commodified. This system is so rampant and so blatant that we are literally just a step away from auctioning off human beings for profit in the public square. And it wouldn’t be the first time this has happened. The US has a sordid history of selling human beings for profit, only this time around we are all potential property that can be auctioned off.

Having successfully stolen an estimated 3-5 billion annually from the elderly (low estimate) some think the real amount is closer to 10 billion. And, while there are cases of family members, friends, or others in the community who have exploited the elderly and abused them, the vast majority of cases, especially where a large estate is attached, are committed by parasitic individuals who work as predators within and with the cooperation of the probate system, for no other purpose than self-enrichment. These parasites could not care less about the lives they destroy or the misery they cause other human beings.
“Go ahead and see what you can do, because you have been deemed incapacitated, so everything you say or do is meaningless,” said Brenda Uekert, principal court research consultant with the National Center for State Courts. “You can’t even get an attorney, because a judge has already determined that you don’t have the ability to make decisions for yourself.
Two recent bills supposedly intended to address the growing threat of predation of senior citizens who committed the new age crime of aging with assets, address none of the real causes of abuse, neglect, and financial exploitation that occurs under the protection and direction of the so-called “stakeholders” who assembled this system of trafficking, legalizing the conversion of assets from the targeted individuals into the accounts of total strangers whose only interest is self enrichment, is even acknowledged.
What Is Stolen?  

Thefts from the dead fall into two basic categories:

1) Theft from the body of a dead person; and

2) Theft of property and/or money from their home and estate.

It just so happens that thefts from vulnerable adults and elders also fall into two basic categories:

1.) Theft of property, including homes deeded over, cars retitled, medication (especially narcotic pain medications that can be sold for cash), art work or jewelry taken without the knowledge or the consent of the elder, or taken from an elder through coercion or intimidation or undue influence; and

2) Theft of financial assets such as: taking cash or draining bank accounts; running up credit card balances or getting new cards in the elder’s name; stealing IRS refunds; stealing Social Security retirement or disability checks; stealing pension payments; defrauding elders into investing in businesses that don’t exist; coercing an elder into co-signing a loan at a bank; getting elders to buy expensive cars and jewelry and making “gifts” to the abuser. Frankly, the list is endless in this category.

The administrative tribunals called “probate” were constructed specifically to avoid your natural rights and liberties as protected in the Constitution for the United States. What are referred to as “collateral consequences” are civil and regulatory and therefore not subject to Constitutional limits.

In “probate” as with all administrative tribunals, you have no rights. And there are far too many examples of probate administrators who sit in place of an actual Judge of the law, who will vehemently threaten those who are forced into these tribunals, with being sent to jail if they mention the Constitution or who may try to claim their natural rights and liberties contained in it. More than one administrator has screamed at those captured in these tribunals that “the law is what I say it is”. This most likely is one of the few honest statements you will hear. These tribunals are not bound by the rules of evidence as would be adhered to in an actual court of law.

The predator who is about to steal your identity from you can and will make serious charges of neglect, abuse, exploitation and other egregious claims for which they have no evidence, and are never required to produce any evidence that these claims have any truth to them. And the victim, nor his/her advocates are allowed to present any evidence that may contradict the exaggerated and baseless claims made by the predators. The administrator won’t allow it….don’t even try to put it on their desk.

This is really a handy system. This way, transcripts read that no one objected and no one presented any evidence to contradict the claims of the predators.

How it works


Using exaggerated and/or fabricated claims of imminent danger, the professional predator files an emergency petition for guardianship. In almost every instance of these claims, the predator has never even seen the targeted victim, and could not identify them if they were in a one person lineup. But what they have seen is a list of assets including property owned, liquid assets, personal items of value, possible stock portfolios or other real property.  Where did they find these assets?  Ask that estate planner who sold you that plan how this information can become available to interested party’s.

Collateral Damages


The result of being declared a “ward” is the loss of legal status which is an inherent element of criminal punishment. Being declared a “ward of the state” is a statutory civil death. It is equivalent to natural death in its legal consequences and has historically been treated as criminal punishment.
Why would you construct a system that treats aging with assets as a crime? And it must be viewed by the BAR Associations and their cohorts as such as it is they who assembled and wrote the statutes in every state that deprive you not only of your assets and your freedom, but also your very identity.

The ultimate in Identity Theft


Once guardianized, now having suffered a statutory civil death., you cannot speak for yourself. Dead people can’t talk. 

From “The New Civil Death”

As stated by Chitty, “he is disqualified from being a witness, can bring no action, nor perform any legal function; he is in short regarded as dead in law.”
 
The Illinois Supreme Court in 1907 quoted approvingly a scholar’s conclusion that it raises a feeling of repulsion, whether the incapacity is presented singly or as a consequent of another punishment. It is a barbarism condemned by justice, by reason and by morality.”

Your identity is stolen from you and given to your new owner; the professional predatory guardian. Now under the legalized theft of your identity, they speak, act and present themselves legally as YOU. With this theft of identity, comes access to all of your assets, personal possessions and anything else you may own or possess. Your home will be violated, your possessions inventoried (unless of course they find something really valuable and somehow these items never appear on the inventory) while mementos, family albums, and personal items of sentimental value are added to a pile of trash. 

Those estate plans you paid an attorney to put together for you? Any probate administrator in the country can and routinely does discard all pre-standing legal instruments if the new guardian hasn’t disposed of them already and denied that these documents ever existed. Once discarded and cast aside, all benefits, powers of attorney, medical directives, estate administration and distribution is held by your new owner: that person who now presents themselves as you. 

Neither bill addresses the redistribution of wealth, the interference with inheritance, the conversion of property under the guise of protection, that operates inside administrative tribunals constructed specifically to facilitate the now legalized theft of estates by professional predators who make their living converting the assets of targeted victims, into their own private accounts. All to benefit the “ward” of course.

What these bills do, is to expand and further empower the very agencies and associations that are used to facilitate the destruction of lives, the theft of the estate, and the rendering of basic human rights as void.

When I see a bill come out that actually addresses the root causes of this epidemic, that holds accountable the people, institutions, associations and agencies responsible; when the federal government stops funding the exploitation of the American public through cash incentive programs hidden in regulations that keep state treasury’s flush with cash, I’ll support those bills.  Until then, do not expect me to cheer for these do nothing bills that are nothing more than fluff and buff bills meant to make you think they really do care.  They don’t.

And for those of you who are enamored by, brought to your knees in supplication by the mere presence of politicians who graciously gave you a few minutes of their time and then immediately forgot you…..get over it.  Remember who you are, and that it is YOU who employs them.  It is YOU who pays for the grand building they sit in along with that elegant office and the staff that tends to his or her Royal Highness.  And it is YOU who not only pays their salary but most likely helped put them in position.  Treat them as you would any other employee….respect them but demand that they do the job they were hired to do.

Full Article & Source:
Professional for-profit Guardians: Just one step away from the public auction block

Power Of Attorney 101

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 Perhaps you've heard the phrase "Power of Attorney" on a TV lawyer show, or even from a real lawyer. Ever wonder what it means?

What is Power of Attorney?

A Power of Attorney (POA) is a document granting one person or organization (typically called an agent or attorney-in-fact) the authority to act on the behalf of another person. POAs can be general and broad in scope or limited to specific aspects such as health-care decisions or financial management.

A POA is often used to outline plans in case you become incapacitated and are unable to handle your own affairs. In that case, a POA is called a durable power of attorney since it continues beyond your incapacitation.

It is important that your agent for the POA be a reliable individual whom you can trust. Agents are expected to look out for your best interests and must not abuse the powers that you have given them.

You can revoke your POA at any time by notifying your agent in writing and collecting all the existing copies of the POA. You may also need to notify agencies and financial institutions that the POA has been revoked. Once you have signed a POA, you can continue to make your own decisions until the conditions that trigger the POA happen (such as incapacitation).

An attorney is not necessary to create a POA, but it is usually wise to consult with one. The POA defines the powers that are to be given to the agent and the conditions under which they are valid (such as durability). It is very important to write the POA precisely as per your wishes to ensure that they are carried out properly.

Financial POAs are usually set up for an agent to take care of day-to-day decisions as well as major financial ones in case you are unable to make these decisions for yourself. They could include bill paying, tax obligations, disposition of property and assets, or directing investments.

What You Need to Know About Being Granted Power of Attorney

What if you are on the other end of a POA and named as an agent for another person? Once you assume the POA for another person, you have a fiduciary responsibility to that person to act in his or her best interests. The first item of business is to read the POA and make sure that you fully understand the powers that are being granted to you. The POA document and applicable state laws outline and define your powers.

Note that you are obligated to carry out the directions in the document, even if you believe that one of those directions should be done differently. If you do not think you can carry it out, ask your principal to find another agent. When possible, continue to involve the principal in the financial decisions.

It is extremely important to keep the principal's finances separate from yours and to keep meticulous records to track the principal's finances. As an agent, you must avoid conflicts of interest or even the appearance of such not easy to do when you are the agent for a close friend or relative.

When a principal's government benefits such as Social Security are involved, you will not be able to manage them as the agent without a special appointment by the agency. There may be a separate representative payee for these benefits. Co-agents are not uncommon, and co-agent relationships are sometimes directly spelled out in the POA. Regardless of how co-agents are designated, you are obligated to work with the co-agent to maintain the best interests of the principal.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) has more details on your responsibilities and options in case you are asked to become an agent. See their pamphlet, "Managing Someone Else's Money" for more information.

POAs are important, powerful documents that are not to be taken lightly whether you are the principal or the agent. Set up your POA carefully with appropriate legal assistance. If you are named as an agent, make sure you take your POA responsibilities seriously and be diligent in executing them. Treat the principal as you would want to be treated.

Let the free Retirement Planner by MoneyTips help you calculate when you can retire without jeopardizing your lifestyle.

Full Article & Source:
Power Of Attorney 101

Cornyn, Klobuchar Bill to Protect Seniors from Financial Exploitation Passes Senate

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Court-Appointed Guardian Accountability and Senior Protection Act would help crack down on elder abuse by strengthening oversight and accountability for guardians and conservators
WASHINGTON – Today U.S. Senators John Cornyn (R-TX) and Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) announced that their bipartisan legislation to protect seniors from neglect and financial exploitation has passed the Senate. The Court-Appointed Guardian Accountability and Senior Protection Act would help crack down on elder abuse by strengthening oversight and accountability for guardians and conservators.
 
“This bill strengthens support for our nation’s senior citizens by ensuring they get the court-appointed care they need, while also protecting them from exploitation and fraud,” said Sen. Cornyn.  “I’m proud to join Sen. Klobuchar in standing up for enhanced oversight to ensure this critical program helps, not harms, America’s senior citizens.”
 
“While most court-appointed guardians and conservators are undoubtedly professional, caring, and law-abiding, there are some who use their position of power to exploit seniors,” Senator Klobuchar said. “This bipartisan legislation would strengthen oversight and accountability for those entrusted to with the well-being of seniors, and will protect those who are most vulnerable.” 
 
Cornyn and Klobuchar’s bipartisan legislation passed as part of the Elder Abuse Prevention and Prosecution Act. The Court-Appointed Guardian Accountability and Senior Protection Act makes courts eligible for an already existing program designed to protect seniors. Under the program, state courts would be able to apply for funding to assess the handling of proceedings relating to guardians and conservators, and then make the necessary improvements to their practices. For example, the courts could conduct background checks on potential guardians and conservators, or implement an electronic filing system in order to better monitor and audit conservatorships and guardianships.

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Cornyn, Klobuchar Bill to Protect Seniors from Financial Exploitation Passes Senate

Reforms starting for guardianship system

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More than 100 adults, including incapacitated and disabled people, are alleged to have suffered combined losses of at least $8 million at the hands of New Mexico guardians and a trust company that were supposed to be watching over their finances.

So far, there is little indication these people will recover their money because of weaknesses in the safety net designed to protect them.

Yet, some changes are in the works.

For instance, judges assigned to the civil bench in Bernalillo County have agreed to require conservators to post bonds when appointed to manage funds of an incapacitated person with assets over $30,000, said civil division chief Judge Shannon Bacon and chief Judge Nan Nash. Currently, state law gives judges the option to do so, but it’s not mandatory.

Meanwhile, Bacon has asked the state Supreme Court to support legislation that would make the bond posting requirement mandatory.

Bacon said in a July 18 letter to Chief Justice Judith Nakamura that while judges can currently require bond, “In our experience, this statutory provision is rarely if ever employed by courts in Conservator cases.” Bacon wrote that the bond would be paid for out of the assets of the estate, “as it protects the value of the estate and inures to the benefit of the protected person.”

Changing the law to require bond would “provide additional protection for the estates of incapacitated adults,” Bacon wrote.

Bacon has also asked State Auditor Tim Keller to audit all commercial guardianship companies on contract with the state Office of Guardianship.

System rocked


While some judges and others have publicly defended the commercial guardianship industry in New Mexico, the system has been rocked by two recent cases.

In one case, the FBI and state agencies are investigating the alleged embezzlement of at least $4 million from an estimated 70 clients of the Desert State Life Management trust company. In the other, federal prosecutors have filed a 28-count indictment against two top managers of the Ayudando Guardians Inc. guardian/conservatorship company – president Susan Harris and chief financial officer Sharon Moore. The company itself is also a defendant.

Federal documents allege that more than 40 clients’ Ayudando accounts were siphoned over a period of years. Client funds were allegedly used to pay off more than $4 million in charges on a company credit card account used by Harris, Moore and their families for personal purchases.

Court records show that Ayudando was appointed as conservator, or guardian/conservator in more than 40 court cases since 2010.

Desert State served as court-appointed conservator in about seven cases in recent years, but the company’s focus was primarily on managing private trust accounts for special needs clients, the elderly and others. In some cases, family members were guardians in charge of care, but relied on Desert State for money management.

One of Desert State’s conservatorship cases involved the loss of as much as $600,000 intended to help care for four developmentally disabled adults, according to one recent lawsuit pending against Desert State.

In that case, Desert State filed the required annual reports with District Court and noted that an accounting was attached. But an attorney in the case says there was no accounting in the court file.

As a trust company, Desert State falls under oversight of the state Financial Institutions Division. But the company is designated as nonprofit and wasn’t required to post a bond when Paul Donisthorpe took over as CEO in 2006. The state also hadn’t conducted a financial examination of Desert State’s books since 2008.

New Mexico Regulation and Licensing Superintendent Mike Unthank said his agency is proposing legislative changes to ensure clients of nonprofit trust companies, like Desert State, are better protected.

“We believe moving forward with reforms for non-profit trust companies will be crucial to ensuring this type of victimization cannot happen again. My plan is to put forward a straightforward, common sense approach with backing from the industry and with the good of all New Mexicans in mind,” Unthank told the Journal on Friday.

Ayudando is also a nonprofit corporation, but is not a trust company. In addition to reporting to the courts, Ayudando was subject to oversight for the state Office of Guardianship for about 166 indigent or low income clients who receive guardianship services.

Under its most recent state contract, Ayudando posted a $1.5 million “fidelity” bond, said John Block III, executive director of the Developmental Disabilities Planning Council. He said the bond would cover expenses incurred by the guardianship office in finding new guardians for Ayudando clients in light of the recent federal indictment.

But Block said it hasn’t been determined whether that fidelity bond could be used to reimburse Ayudando clients for their losses.

More info required


Bernalillo County District Court, which has been working on guardianship/conservatorship issues for more than two years, has substantially increased the amount of information conservators are required to provide in their annual reports to the court. Those reports are confidential under state law, but are designed to help judges oversee the incapacitated people whose finances are managed by conservators – private or professional.

Instead of relying solely on a two-page form in use by courts elsewhere in New Mexico, Albuquerque judges are also requiring detailed conservator reports to show the protected person’s income sources. Expenses are to be itemized, down to the amount spent for clothing and entertainment each year.

The new accounting measures adopted in Bernaillo County District Court don’t require documentation, such as bank statements.

Full Article & Source:
Reforms starting for guardianship system
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