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Oklahoma attorney general files elderly exploitation charges

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OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) - The Oklahoma attorney general's office has accused a nursing home worker of misappropriating money intended for three of the home's elderly residents. 

Online Oklahoma County court records indicate that 44-year-old Amy Klimkowski was charged Thursday with three counts of financially exploiting an elderly adult and 10 counts of obtaining money by false pretenses. The records do not indicate whether she is represented by an attorney.

Prosecutors allege that Klimkowski exploited three residents of Windsor Hills Nursing Center in Oklahoma City. The victims were all women over the age of 75. The misappropriated money allegedly included the victims' Social Security and Medicare benefits, as well as other various retirement and pension payments.

Court records allege she diverted more than $141,000 from the victims and used the money for various personal expenses.

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Oklahoma attorney general files elderly exploitation charges

World Elder Abuse Awareness Day is June 15th

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World Elder Abuse Awareness Day was launched on June 15, 2006 by the International Network for Prevention of Elder Abuse and the World Health Organization at the United Nations. The purpose of World Elder Abuse Awareness Day (WEAAD) is to provide an opportunity for communities around the world to promote a better understanding of abuse and neglect of older persons by raising awareness of the cultural, social, economic, and demographic processes affecting elder abuse and neglect.

Every year, it is estimated that 5 million older Americans are victims of elder abuse, neglect, or exploitation. For every case of elder abuse or neglect reported, as many as 23 cases go unreported

World Elder Abuse Awareness Day brings together senior citizens, their caregivers and governments to combat the problem of elder abuse. The focus is on the problems of physical, emotional, and financial abuse of the elderly. The world is undergoing significant demographic changes. Estimates indicate that by 2050, the global population of people above the age of 60 will exceed the number of younger people. These changes have led to a worldwide recognition of the problems and challenges that face the elderly.

To find out more about World Elder Abuse Awareness Day, you may access the link at: http://www.ncea.aoa.gov/Get_Involved/Awareness/WEAAD/index.aspx

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World Elder Abuse Awareness Day is June 15th

Elderly victim scammed out of more than $8 million in charity fraud, police say

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Joseph Edison, also known as Joseph Edison Fernando, 66, of Calgary, has been charged along with two other Calgarians in a multi-million dollar fraud investigation between December 2014 and May 2015. Investigators believe other people may have had financial dealings with the man, who goes by multiple aliases.  Courtesy Calgary Police Service / Calgary Herald

Various fake charities were used by a man known in Calgary’s charitable community to bilk an elderly victim of $8 million over 15 years, say police.

Three Calgarians have been charged as part of an ongoing fraud investigation, which police say may be connected to an international crime ring.

“Something of this scope suggests connections across the world,” said Staff Sgt. Kristie Verheul of the Calgary Police Service’s economic crimes unit. “I would compare this case to a Pandora’s box.”

Calgary police allege the main suspect used fake charities as a front to persuade the victim to invest large quantities of money, which the victim believed was guaranteed through various international means and had a high rate of return on investment. They began investigating in December 2014.

Police say the culprit had the investor pay large sums of money to have the funds released from holdings. It’s believed the money was actually funnelled through the charities to international accounts. The victim lost $8 million over 15 years.

Two people were charged, a third remains outstanding on warrants, and a fourth was arrested and later released, although police continue to investigate her involvement with the case. All involved live in Calgary.


Karatbars of gold confiscated by police in $8M fraud investigation.
Joseph Edison, also known as Joseph Edison Fernando, 66, was charged with fraud over $5,000, theft over $5,000 and forgery. Police say he is suspected to be the main individual behind the alleged crimes and goes by multiple aliases.

Stefanie Haase-Fernando, 37, was charged with fraud over $5,000 and theft over $5,000.

Warrants have been issued for Anshul Edison Fernando, 39, for fraud over $5,000 and theft over $5,000.

The economic crimes unit believes that Joseph Edison was introduced to the victim and struck up a friendship with him.

“That relationship was abused,” said Verheul.

Investigators believe the following charities were used to defraud the victim, all of which police say were determined to be fraudulent and not registered with the Canada Revenue Agency:
  • Humanitarian Foundation of Canada;
  • World Job and Food Bank;
  • Canadian Organization for International Development Strategies Foundation;
  • Lepidoptera Inc.;
  • Antennae Inc.;
  • Calgary Community Outreach Services Society
Phone calls to all organizations except Lepidoptera Inc., for which a number wasn’t found, were unanswered. Some lines were disconnected. Others went straight to voicemail.

No organization with the name Lepidoptera Inc. could be found, although two similarly named charities appear to be located in California and Florida, respectively.

The Humanitarian Foundation of Canada and the World Job and Food Bank are both on a 2008 United Nations list of organizations with special consultative status. A spokesman for the UN was not immediately available for comment.

Foreign currencies confiscated in $8 million fraud investigation.Calgary Police Service / Calgary Herald

The voicemail recording for the number listed on the Antennae Inc. website, which says it is a butterfly specimen retailer, redirected callers to a phone number identified as belonging to “Anshul.” The person answering that number refused to identify himself and denied that Antennae Inc. is connected to any of the three charged in connection with the fraud. When asked if he was Anshul Edison Fernando, he hung up.

On Wednesday, officers executed search warrants at two residences and one business. Officers seized what police say turned out to be three vans’ worth of property and evidence, including the following items:
  • Forged bank and government documents;
  • Fraudulent documents for investment accounts;
  • Pyramid scheme accounts;
  • $65,000 worth of gold;
  • 10 computers;
  • Banking records and account ledgers;
  • Safe deposit box keys;
  • Stamps bearing the logos of the charities and foreign financial institutions;
Some of the documents were letters forged to appear like they came from the White House, the U.S. House of Representatives and Air Force One. Others were requests for or receipts of payment to the charities connected with the investigation.

The gold was found in the form of Karatbars, which are small amounts of precious metals embedded into credit card-sized pieces of plastic. Police say this is a well-known Ponzi scheme from Europe, and it’s hard to charge anyone in connection with it because the metals are genuine. Anshul Edison Fernando’s Facebook profile lists him as a “gold director” at Karatbars.

As a result of finding safe deposit box keys, police executed an additional search warrant on Thursday, and discovered silver, jewels, coins and various other types of currencies.
The gems had not yet been appraised, so their authenticity could not be verified. The silver was in bar and Karatbar form.

The currency, which had not been counted, included tender from Canada, Japan, Turkey, Iraq, India, Gambia, Germany and Lithuania, among others.

None of the suspects in the investigation have prior criminal records, but police say they have found no evidence of their involvement in any legitimate business activities. Further charges could be laid as the investigation continues.

Various law enforcement agencies in United States and Canada assisted with the case, including the FBI, the Department of Homeland Security, the Secret Service, the RCMP, the Canada Revenue Agency and border services from both countries. Other organizations and banking institutions were also involved.

Investigators believe there may be more related scams and victims, and urge anyone with information to contact police.

Full Article & Source:
Elderly victim scammed out of more than $8 million in charity fraud, police say

Accountant jailed for 'plundering' $1.6 million from elderly dementia sufferer

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Mary Taylor Eva
An accountant has been sentenced to more than seven years in jail for "plundering" the estate of an 88-year-old West Australian woman with dementia, during an extended period of criminality in which he stole more than $1.6 million.

Robert Charles Atherley was Mary Taylor Eva's accountant, the executor of her estate, her legal guardian, and had power of attorney over her affairs.

Ms Eva, who died in 2006, lived in the small Wheatbelt town of Pingelly, about 160 kilometres south-east of Perth.

Atherley, 66, had pleaded not guilty to stealing $1.3 million from Ms Eva's account between February 2002 and August 2006, and more than $312,000 between August 2006 and July 2010.

He also denied giving false testimony in the Supreme Court regarding accounting and financial planning work he did not perform for Ms Eva.

Judge Simon Stone found him guilty on all counts and today said the offending was only discovered because the beneficiaries of her will alerted authorities.

"She was a particularly vulnerable victim," Judge Stone said.

Robert Atherley
Robert Atherley

He said the offending "constituted a gross abuse of trust".

"Ms Eva was vulnerable at the time because she relied on you for professional advice, she had health issues and later suffered from dementia," Judge Stone said.

"The beneficiaries [of the estate] were vulnerable in that they were not aware you were plundering from the estate."

He said Atherley "systematically" stole the money over a long period of time, and there were 165 separate transactions involved in the theft of the first count, totalling $1.3 million.

"Your actions were deliberate and, in my view, you were motivated by greed," he said.
Atherley invested all the money into his business, which later failed.

None of the money has been recovered and Judge Stone awarded $1.6 million in compensation to the administrators of Ms Eva's estate.

Atherley's sentence has been backdated to April this year and he will be eligible for parole after five and a half years.

Family disappointed with 'light' sentence

Outside court, Ms Eva's nephew and one of the 21 beneficiaries of her will, Lindsay Eva, said he was disappointed at the sentence.

"We think it's a bit light because of the amount of money involved, the way he did it and the fact he tried to cover up what he had done by committing perjury," Mr Eva said.

He warned other people against falling prey to similar crimes.

"You shouldn't appoint your accountant as your sole executor because there's no check," he said.
Mr Eva welcomed moves by Atherley's legal team to appeal against the sentence.

"I think that would probably would help the situation, as far as we're concerned," he said.

"We feel we've had a longer sentence than what he's getting. The amount of time we've put in personally.

"What we'd really like to know is where our money went to, we don't entirely believe what he said."

Full Article & Source:
Accountant jailed for 'plundering' $1.6 million from elderly dementia sufferer

Banks' estranged wife says caretaker has yet to provide key financial info

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A lawyer for the estranged wife of late Cubs great Ernie Banks told a probate judge Wednesday that Banks' longtime caregiver has failed to turn over key financial information in the ongoing legal wrangling over his estate.

The development comes as Banks' fourth wife, Elizabeth Ellzey Banks, is challenging a will signed by the slugger in October that left all his assets to his friend and caregiver, Regina Rice.

At a status hearing in a Daley Center courtroom, Thomas Jefson, an attorney for Banks' wife, told Cook County Judge James Riley that Rice hasn't fully responded to a court-ordered citation to discover all assets in Banks' estate.


The missing information includes a joint bank account that Rice had with Banks when he was alive as well as a trust account set up in the slugger's contested will, Jefson said. He said they also want information about "certain signed items" of Banks' that were recently sold through a website that Rice controls.

"We want receipts," Jefson said.

Rice's attorney, Linda Chatman, said she doesn't believe the bank accounts are part of the estate. The judge gave both sides more time to try to work it out between themselves, but if the impasse continues, he could issue an order compelling Rice to turn over the financial records.

The ongoing discovery process playing out behind the scenes comes as Rice filed her first inventory of Banks' personal property with the court. The inventory, disclosed publicly, contained no big bank accounts, insurance policies or real estate. Instead it consisted mostly of items from Banks' rented Trump Tower condominium as well as storage containers in Chicago and California.

The list included Banks' original Negro League contract from 1950, his Hall of Fame ring and autographed baseballs from Bill and Hillary Clinton. Other big-ticket items included a Rolex watch, the ring commemorating Banks' induction into the Hall of Fame in 1977 and the Presidential Medal of Freedom awarded by President Barack Obama in 2013.

The items found in the storage containers were decidedly more mundane. Two storage crates in Chicago included boxes of photos, used clothing, a chrome plant stand and an Ernie Banks bobblehead, according to the filing. The California storage containers held golf clubs, an old chair, a Michael Jordan jersey, pots and pans, vacuum parts and a "badly worn" garment bag, among other items.

On Wednesday, Riley granted a request from Chatman that Rice be allowed to sell Banks' 2007 Lexus. The proceeds will go to the estate, as will any money derived from the liquidation of Banks' memorabilia and other property.

Meanwhile, lawyers who represented Banks in the divorce proceedings — which were ongoing at the time of his death — have filed claims with the estate to collect legal fees. Last week, attorney Jeffery Leving, who was retained by Banks in May 2012, filed a bill for $27,550 for work his firm did. That's on top of a $27,400 bill previously submitted by the firm Grund & Leavitt, which took over the case in November 2013, court records show.

Even the attorney for Banks' wife, Barry Greenburg, has asked to be paid from the estate, claiming in a recent filing that Elizabeth Banks depended on her husband for income. Greenburg's bill comes to $11,950, records show.


The battle over Banks' posthumous wishes began soon after he died Jan. 23 at 83. Control over Banks' estate had initially been awarded to his wife, who had gone to probate court Jan. 28 claiming that Banks had died without a will. In such cases, an immediate family member is typically named the executor.But days later, Rice, 56, who described herself as a caretaker and "trusted confidant" to Banks, filed a petition disclosing the existence of a will signed Oct. 28 at an attorney's office in Lombard. The document directed that all assets be given to a trust controlled by Rice and stated that Banks was "making no provisions" for his wife and children, "not for a lack of love and affection for them and for reasons best known by them."

Rice, through her talent management company Ricer Enterprises, had organized numerous publicity events featuring Banks in recent years and runs the website ErnieBanks.net, which advertises autographed baseball bats, gloves and other merchandise for up to $400.

In a statement Rice issued in February, she said Banks had been part of her life for 12 years and that the record will "dispel any iota of concern regarding my relationship with Ernie and his trust in me to carry out his wishes" in his lifetime and after his death.

Banks' family, including his twin sons from a previous marriage, have alleged that Rice took advantage of Banks' weakened physical state and got him to sign all his assets over to her. But last month, Riley confirmed the will after two witnesses from the law office testified that Banks appeared to be of "sound mind" when he signed the document.

Full Article & Source:
Banks' estranged wife says caretaker has yet to provide key financial info

Steve Miller: Jared Shafer's Clark County Family Court Lackeys Removed From All Guardianship Cases

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The Goose that laid the golden eggs is cooked!

After years of court sanctioned bilking of wealthy senior citizens and disabled persons, the biggest shake up in Clark County District Court history has just forced the immediate removal of two well-known jurists who were allegedly doing the bidding of veteran for-hire private guardian Jared E. Shafer and his protégés.

Charles Hoskin
In the wake of the court house shake up, the Nevada Legislature on May 23, 2015, voted to change the arcane laws that allowed Clark County Family Court Judge Charles Hoskin and his appointed "Hearing Master" Jon Norheim to blanket approve the actions of unscrupulous private for-hire guardians who for over a decade preyed on the fortunes of hapless seniors and disabled people in Southern Nevada while their out of state families protested in vain. (Remember the court video of Norheim closing his court to the public upon orders of a private for-hire guardian who is not an officer of the court. That guardian, Jared Shafer, did not want the public to know that he could not account for $500.000.00 missing from one of his wards.)

Too often, the "ward's" wishes to move to another state to be with family are ignored by the court so the estate can continue paying the guardian's outrageous fees until the ward dies, and sometimes for years thereafter with the court's approval (see: Grave Robbery Under Color Of Law! The story of the late Leanne Peccole).

Jon Norheim
One of the Nevada laws that Hoskin and Norheim relied upon limited those who could become fiduciaries of the estates of Nevada "wards" of the court to only those persons who physically resided within Nevada thus prohibiting out of state children of well-to-do elderly persons from overseeing the fortunes of their own parents. This bad law opened the way for unscrupulous for-hire guardians to be appointed by Hoskin and Norheim to fleece elderly widows or widowers. As of last Saturday, the Nevada Legislature voted to change that law and allow out of state relatives to govern the assets of incapacitated loved ones living in Nevada.

Another law was enacted to require all for-hire guardians to be licensed and bonded - a first for Nevada. Most decisions made by Hoskin and Norheim were based on the amount of wealth the surviving spouse had, not their actual needs (poor people are not provided private professional guardians). After the passing of a parent, out of state relatives would soon learn that their surviving mother or father was secretly made a ward of the court during their grief, and that a stranger was the best choice to be given full power of attorney by Hoskin or Norheim to manage their loved one's estate without allowing input from family members living outside Nevada. In some cases, family members who actually live in Nevada were disapproved if their loved one was extremely wealthy. The appointed for-hire guardian would tell Hoskin or Norheim during a hearing that the local relative was an "exploiter" or "unfit," often falsely accusing the relative of drug addiction or being a compulsive gambler. In all cases researched by INSIDE VEGAS, Hoskin or Norheim took the side of the for-hire guardian, and the fleecing continued. '

The out of state family is told that someone called authorities to report that their parent or relative was in need of help, and a for-hire guardian was "temporarily" appointed by the Family Court to look after the physical needs and assets of the loved one. Within months, sometimes weeks, the temporary status is changed to permanent by Hoskin or Norheim when its determined that there are no relatives living in Nevada who can care for the "ward" allowing life's savings to be drained through double charges, excessive fees, and outright thievery by the appointed "guardian," and assets can be liquidated without anyone's approval (see cashed checks below, and review this website for documentation.

This legal, but immoral practice was finally exposed by Nevada media, and the scam's effect on Las Vegas' second most lucrative business - retirement - is only now being realized, i. e., who would want to retire to Sun City Anthem in Henderson, or Sun City Summerlin in Las Vegas if they knew that local Family Courts would collude with certain private "guardians" to take the retiree for everything they're worth before their children could receive their inheritance?

I wrote my first editorial on this subject in April 2002, for a local weekly newspaper. The editorial was republished by an Internet magazine on May 31, 2006.

The National Association to Stop Guardian Abuse (NASGA) also began reporting Clark County guardian abuse cases in April of 2006. The organization's president, Elaine Renoire, has closely followed the exploitation of Las Vegas victims Marcy Dudeck and Guadalupe Olvera.

INSIDE VEGAS began exposing this racket February 25, 2013, on AmericanMafia.com in a story entitled "GUADALUPE OLVERA'S WAR." Several more columns followed until I was able to expose the modus operandi of the scheme in "Las Vegas' Death Watch - The chain of events start at Sun City Anthem and end in private guardian Jared E. Shafer's pocket" published March 17, 2014, on AmericanMafia.com. In the column, I explained how a cartel of local attorneys, judges and guardians would single out wealthy elderly couples who had no relatives in Nevada, and after the death of a spouse, collude to drain their estates.

Up until that point, no one in Las Vegas media would ever believe such a horrible thing was happening right under our eyes to our most vulnerable citizens. I persisted writing, hoping the stories would gain traction before more people were injured.

The next to tell this sordid story was The Vegas Voice, a hard copy publication with a vast circulation to local senior citizens and retirees. On August 18, 2014, the paper began running a hard hitting series exposing the ill-deeds and names of corrupt for-hire guardians. But the paper went one step further. Publisher Dan Roberts and Political Editor Rana Goodman flew to the state capitol in Carson City to lobby for changes in the guardianship laws, specifically that out of state relatives could handle the finances of loved ones living in Nevada, and that all private for-hire guardians be licensed and bonded. They also circulated a petition gathering over 3,500 signatures. The paper soon received a letter from attorneys Gardener Jolly and Bruce Woodbury threatening a libel (SLAPP) lawsuit if they continued writing about their client, for-hire guardian April Parks. However, The Vegas Voice stories continued unfettered until Parks' double billing and lack of accountability was confirmed by KTNV Contact 13.

Then on March 6, 2015, KTNV TV Contact 13 News producer Kean Bauman and investigative reporter Darcy Spears aired "Valley man wrestles with guardianship system," which told of 25 year old cerebral palsy victim Jason Hanson, and how for-hire guardian Jared Shafer allegedly took him for everything he had.

INSIDE VEGAS videographer Mike Christ had interviewed Jason in April, 2014, for my March 3, INSIDE VEGAS column. Here is a LINK to Mike's heart rendering video: "Special Administrator Jared E. Shafer takes house and inheritance from 24 year old man with cerebral palsy."

April 11, 2015, the Las Vegas Review-Journal, Nevada's largest newspaper, began a series of front page stories written by investigative reporter Colton Lochhead. The first story was "Clark County’s private guardians may protect — or just steal and abuse."  In the same RJ edition was the story of Guadalupe Olvera; "Escape was only option for an old soldier trapped in guardian system," telling about the 95 year old World War 2 hero's exploitation by Jared E. Shafer, and his escape from Shafer's abusive custody.

Then on April 17, 2015, another of Colton Lochhead's stories appeared on the RJ's front page entitled "Chief judge vows to improve guardianship process." On April 21, the front page article by Lochhead headlined; "Clark County Commissioners want reform of ‘appalling’ guardianship program," followed April 26, with an Editorial; "Guarding the guardians," and the May 5, story by Lochhead; "There's now a hotline to call with guardianship complaints," that stated, "Cases highlighted in the Review-Journal showed a lack of oversight by the courts that allowed people who were wards of the county to lose hundreds of thousands of dollars to their private professional guardians. In those cases, the court failed to enforce state laws, such as the requirement to file a yearly accounting of money spent on behalf of wards, and ignored the wishes of wards and their families."

 Clark County Commission Chairman Steve Sisolak responded by scheduling a special hearing to discuss the guardianship problem. At that hearing held on April 21, LVMPD  Lt. James Weiskopf told the Commission "And the complaints we get from the citizens is that Judge Hoskin will rubber stamp it and say Norheim made appropriate decisions, or Judge Hoskin doesn't hear the family's complaint."  ...

Full Article and Source:
Jared Shafer's Clark County Family Court Lackeys Removed From All Guardianship Cases

New Guardianship Rules Start Today in Ohio

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Court-appointed guardians across Ohio will all have to follow the same set of basic requirements starting June 1 as they manage the affairs of Ohioans who are deemed unable to care for themselves — children, the elderly and people with mental disabilities.

The new rules require training, monitoring and background checks and say that guardians must meet with their wards at least every three months.

A court-appointed committee had studied the issue for more than eight years before releasing a draft set of rules for guardians last spring — just as The Dispatch published an investigation in May that revealed how the state’s patchwork quilt of local rules has failed Ohioans.

The series, “Unguarded,” available online at Dispatch.com/unguarded, found widespread problems with the way some guardians were managing the care of their wards, including instances of abuse, neglect and financial exploitation.

The court pulled back the draft after receiving more than 100 pages of comments, prompted in part by the Dispatch series.

The committee work started in 2007 after national news stories raised an alarm about the lack of oversight in guardianship cases. While Ohio was one of the first states to form a committee to study the issue, much of the rest of the country raced ahead with comprehensive state standards.

Julia Nack is one of the state’s few certified master guardians and the director of the volunteer guardianship program at the Central Ohio Area Agency on Aging. She both commented on the draft rules and was part of the committee tasked with redrafting the rules based on that feedback.

Ohio Supreme Court:  New Guardianship Rules Start June 1

INADVERTENT RELEASE OF CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION

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Contact: Meredith Beatrice
850.245.6522
Meredith.Beatrice@dos.myflorida.com

INADVERTENT RELEASE OF CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION

DOS providing free credit monitoring services

TALLAHASSEE – The Florida Department of State, Bureau of Archives and Records Management, preserves Florida's permanent historical records and makes them available to the public.  Among those records made available to the public are copies of emails sent to and received from former Governor Jeb Bush during his tenure in office. Unfortunately, certain confidential information was contained within the emails obtained by members of the public who requested them.

Individuals potentially affected by this inadvertent disclosure of confidential information, which was released as part of recent public records requests, include approximately 13,000 persons on a wait list for developmental disability health care services from 2003, whose names, dates of birth, and social security numbers were included in an email.

Individuals who believe their personal information may have been released may contact: (850) 245-6068

Potentially affected individuals also may wish to review their credit history for any potential fraudulent or suspicious activities they have not authorized. To protect themselves from the possibility of identity theft, they may also place a free fraud alert on their credit files.  A fraud alert notifies creditors to contact individuals before opening new accounts in their name. Individuals can call any one of the three major credit reporting agencies at the numbers below to place a fraud alert on their credit files and may obtain a free credit report at www.annualcreditreport.com

Experian - 1-888-397-3742

Equifax - 1-888-766-0008

TransUnion - 1-800-680-7289

Additionally, the Department of State has arranged to have LifeLock provide identity theft protection for one year to each individual whose social security information was released as a consequence of this inadvertent disclosure. If you believe your social security information was released, you may call: (850) 245-6068. If your social security information was released, you will receive instructions on how to take advantage of the LifeLock service at no cost to you.

Full Article & Source:
INADVERTENT RELEASE OF CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION

NASGA Press Release: Marcia Southwick Joins NASGA Board of Directors

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PRESS RELEASE
For immediate release

June 1, 2015


For more information contact:
Annie McKenna
NASGA Media Liaison
info@StopGuardianAbuse.org

______________________________________________________________

Marcia Southwick Joins  NASGA Board of Directors  ______________________________________________________________

NASGA (National Association to STOP Guardian Abuse) is pleased to announce the addition of Marcia Southwick to its Board of Directors.

Marcia originally came to NASGA to learn more about guardianship abuse after her best friend’s companion was wrongfully and needlessly guardianized.

Two years later, this previously virile and healthy man was dead and his estate had paid for the abuse he had endured and the torment to his beloved companion at the end of his life.   What Marcia witnessed through this experience horrified her; and she became a strong advocate, firmly resolved to dedicate herself to raising awareness so the unwary might avoid the “protection industry.”

She created “Boomers Against Elder Abuse” on Facebook; and every day she begins a conversation to educate and forewarn her readers, which she has grown to over 100,000 “friends.”  She brings this wealth of knowledge and experience from the discussions and thousands of comments she receives on her page to NASGA. 

NASGA is very pleased to have Marcia Southwick on our Board and looks forward to working with her toward our goal:  STOP GUARDIAN ABUSE.

###


See Also:  Boomers Against Elder Abuse

Pike Road man accused of scamming elderly woman out of thousands

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MONTGOMERY CO., AL (WSFA) - A young man from Pike Road is behind bars this weekend, facing charges for exploiting an elderly woman in Virginia with diminished mental capabilities.

Investigators were able to trace the origin of the scam back to the same jail he's sitting in now.

“These con-artist's are trying to get creative,” said Tommy Hunt, Investigator with the Montgomery County District Attorney's Office.

We've all heard of the grandparent scam, a con artist posing as a grandchild or a friend of a grandchild will call and say they are in a foreign country, in trouble, and need money right away. This case uncovered was a new twist on grandparent scam.

“They took advantage of her being an easy target and was able to profit off of it,” said Montgomery County District Attorney, Daryl Bailey.

This scam starts and subsequently ends at the Montgomery County Jail. Investigators say the victim's son was incarcerated at the detention facility, and after striking up a conversation with fellow cellmate, Trederris Cowan, Cowan got out of jail and allegedly targeted his former cellmate's 74 year old mother who suffers from the early stages of dementia.

“They know the questions to ask and they really spend a lot of time listening more than talking and when they think they've got a target they'll start asking questions,” said Hunt.

According to authorities, Cowan conned the woman, name dropping an attorney's office and lying about meeting with a judge and the District Attorney.

“Telling her that he has been talking with her son and that he knows of an attorney, gave an attorney's name and can help get her son of jail if she will meet him and give him approximately $8000 dollars,” explained Bailey.

The elderly woman drove all the way from Virginia, handing over cash to the 24-year-old, now charged with financial exploitation of an elderly person.

“If they're asking to meet you in a bank parking lot and asking for cash that's a lot of red flags right there,” said Bailey.

When Cowan demanded $5,000 dollars more a few days later she got suspicious, but Bailey says those red flags should have gone up sooner. “Never give out your personal information, never make contact with someone you don't know and certainly never give cash to someone who is promising to do something for you without checking them out,” he said.

After handing over thousands to an alleged thief, the victim still had to bail her son out of jail, a costly reminder to ask questions before doing business with anyone.

Cowan is being held on a $30,000 dollar bond.

Full Article & Source:
Pike Road man accused of scamming elderly woman out of thousands

POLICE: Mattapoisett man arrested, charged with bilking elderly woman

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MATTAPOISETT – A Mattapoisett man has been arrested and charged with bilking an elderly woman out of more than $100,000 over the course of six months.
Mattapoisett Police arrested Jason A. Bobola, 31, of Mattapoisett, Wednesday, May 27, following an investigation of a complaint of theft by fraudulent means. Bobola, who up until earlier this year was the owner of Jay’s Automotive Service Center on Route 6 in Mattapoisett, was arraigned before Brockton Superior Court Judge Thomas McGuire. Bail was set at $30,000. Bobola is currently on probation out of the Wareham District Court on a number of other matters, according to Beth Stone, spokesman for the Plymouth County District Attorney Timothy J. Cruz’s office.
Bobola was arraigned May 28 in Brockton Superior Court on 11 counts of larceny over $250 on a person 60 or older, Stone said.
The charges allege that on various dates from July of 2013 through January of 2014, Bobola stole more than $100,000 from an elderly woman in Mattapoisett. Bobola is charged with having taken the money, in some instances, without the victim’s permission by maxing out her credit cards, Stone said. On other occasions, the woman gave Bobola loans that Bobola promised to pay back when he sold the assets of his automotive repair business. His automotive repair station closed late last fall.
According to the district attorney’s office, Bobola would call the victim “Gram” and often told her he loved her more than his own family. The victim lives alone and on a fixed income after her retirement.
A Plymouth County Grand Jury returned 11 secret indictments against Bobola last week and a Superior Court judge issued a warrant for Bobola’s arrest.
Bobola is next scheduled to appear in Brockton Superior Court June 29 for pre-trial conference.
Plymouth County Assistant District Attorney Jessica Healy is prosecuting the case. The Mattapoisett Police Department led the investigation.
Full Article & Source:
POLICE: Mattapoisett man arrested, charged with bilking elderly woman

NASGA Press Release: Legislation Update: The State of Illinois Passes HB2505

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PRESS RELEASE
For immediate release

June 2, 2015


For more information contact:
Annie McKenna
NASGA Media Liaison
info@StopGuardianAbuse.org

_________________________________________________________

Legislation Update:  The State of Illinois Passes HB2505
 _________________________________________________________

NASGA (National Association to STOP Guardian Abuse) is pleased to announce HB2505, introduced by Representative David Harris (R) in March of this year, and sponsored in the Senate by Senator Steve Stadelman (D) has passed both houses!  NASGA Director Sylvia Rudek conferred with Representative Harris on this bill as well as two others this session which we hope will pass as well.

HB2505 provides that a temporary guardian of a disabled adult shall have limitedpowers and duties (instead of “all the powers and duties”) of a guardian of the person or estate which are enumerated by court order.

In other words, a temporary guardian no longer will automatically have full autonomy over an elderly or disabled person. Limiting the powers or reach of a temporary guardian is a common sense, practical change in the laws which significantly protects the person and the person’s estate. 
 
NASGA continues to applaud Representative Harris and Senator Stadelman’s commitment.   NASGA looks forward to more collaboration from these esteemed lawmakers from different political partieswith the same goal:  to protect the elderly and disabled citizens of the State of Illinois  from guardianship abuse.###

See Also:
Illinois Representative David Harris Introduces Three Bills in the 2015 Legislative Session

NASGA Members in Legislative Action

Federal court: no liability for PA judge who made up criminal charge

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Photo courtesy of EllwoodCity.org
A federal court recently told a Lawrence County woman she’s simply out of luck and can’t sue local officials, including a Common Pleas judge who apparently made up a criminal charge that was used to place her on electronic monitoring.

A judge has absolute civil immunity, even if the action “was in error, was done maliciously, or was in excess of his authority,” the three-judge panel ruled in its six-page opinion.

Judge Thomas Piccione had ordered Lynn Van Tassel to report to jail after she didn’t pay her ex-husband’s attorney’s fees as ordered — even though she was appealing that order. He sentenced her to 90 days in jail and had her arrested on a bench warrant.

He then put a criminal charge in the system to place her on electronic monitoring. Van Tassel had never been charged with anything, much less had a trial or been convicted. And the law the judge used clearly describes what it’s for, and there’s certainly no mention of using it to collect attorney fees.

Van Tassel was almost fired for being absent without leave from work because she was in jail and the criminal charge she could provide no paperwork for, because that process hadn’t occurred in any real-world way.

But there’s no remedy for Van Tassel.

Like a bad April Fool’s Day joke, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit officially agreed April 1 with the district court’s tossing of the case.

Full Article & Source:
Federal court: no liability for PA judge who made up criminal charge

From NASGA's Victims Page: Yolanda "Linda" Hutton

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Elder Financial Exploitation, Neglect and Abuse Victim
Violating Institution : Bendigo Bank
Suspects :  Bank Manager Christine Frankham & Susan Bogaard Paid Care Giver Suspected Accomplice: Peter Hadley Wood (Solicitor/Attorney) 

Yolanda was the first Elder Financial Exploitation, Neglect and Guardianship Abuse Victim reported to NASGA from Sydney Australia in late 2013,  she was also a Victim of Australia's Institutionalized Elder and Disabled Financial Exploitation and Cover-Up's within Australia's Banking and Financial Services Industry.. !!

Yolanda is the mother of Mareea Watts and Tony Hutton (NASGA and Banking Abuse Advocate), both the Bendigo Bank and Bank Manager Christine Frankham have now been placed on NASGA's "Wanted List" and all information received by NASGA from Banking Abuse Whistleblowers in relation to either Australian or American Banks will be kept Strictly Confidential .. !!

Case History :-

Bendigo Bank Manager Christine Frankham and Susan Bogaard a Paid Carer of Yolanda Hutton were under New South Wales (NSW) Police Investigation from August 2011, during this time Bank Manager Frankham was suspended for 18 months from Bendigo Bank pending the Police Investigation.

Bendigo Bank Manager Frankham and her friend Susan  Bogaard had been appointed Guardians and Financial Managers of Yolanda Hutton (who in June 2007 was diagnosed with Advanced Dementia), until they relinquished their role prior to a Guardianship Hearing on 26/7/2011, due to intensive Investigation by the Australian Media .. !!

Following a story screened by Channel 7 News over 3 nights, the matter was referred to the Assistant Police Commissioner Nick Kaldas (the story was screened on 8/8/2011 - 22/8/2011 - 23/8/2011).

After the first night’s screening another family contacted Channel 7 in Sydney, advising them that their Aunt (Joan Douglas) had been befriended and allegedly targeted by Bendigo Manager Frankham in a similar way to Yolanda Hutton, when Frankham was manager of the Commonwealth Bank at Brookvale NSW... !!

Yolanda Hutton also had an account at the same branch of the Commonwealth Bank, at the same time and both where customers of Bank Manager Christine Frankham...!!


Christine Frankham left Commonwealth Bank in July 2002 and joined the Bendigo Bank at Dee Why as the Branch Manager,  Yolanda Hutton accounts immediately followed Manager Frankham to the Bendigo Bank... !!

A Current Affair (Channel 9, in Sydney) also screened a half hour special on 11/11/2011 that started with the story of a Sydney Taxi Driver. who was allegedly Targeting and Defrauding Vulnerable Elderly People, it then led into the Yolanda Hutton's Story and her involvement with Bank Manager Christine Frankham....!!
    
There were also articles in the Daily Telegraph by John Rolfe (News Director of the Daily Telegraph) on 8/8/2011 & 10/11/2011 relating to Christine Frankham, without Yolanda's name being mentioned for legal reasons, as Yolanda was a Protected Person (being a Ward or Protected Person the Daily Telegraph was unable to publish her name) .... !!

Different rules apply to Australian TV Media, who exposed Bendigo Bank Manager Christine Frankham, also published the name and details of the alleged victim Yolanda Hutton (with the Families Approval)... !!

The Family gained documentary evidence in the diaries of Just Better Care, found in Yolanda's home when Police forced access on 21/05/2011...!!

Just Better Care called at Yoland's home every day for about 3/4 of an hour to prepare her a meal, the diaries showed evidence of the horrendous alleged Neglect and Abuse of Yolanda, by her then Guardians Bendigo Bank Manager Christine Frankham and Frankham's friend Susan Bogaard... !!

Yolanda was in a Deplorable State on the 21/5/2011 when Police Gained Forced Entry to her home, as allegedly Bendigo Bank Manager Frankham and Susan Bogaard, had the locks changed for the third time at Yolanda's expense, to deny Yolanda's Family access... !!

Yolanda had been on the timber floor for up to 20 hours, wearing only a thin nightie, when Police entered the home. It had also been a very cold night, Yolanda was hypothermia, tachycardia, had a urinary tract infection, with impacted feces and severe scalding in her Genital Area... !!

Yolanda was taken to Mona Vale Hospital by Ambulance, Mona Vale Hospital Emergency Admission and Clinical Notes where also given to Police.

The Just Better Care Diary when transcribed consists of 120 pages, the diary continually mentions the poor state of Mrs. Hutton health, which allegedly Bank Manager Christine Frankham and Paid Care Giver Bogaard disregarded...!!

The most appalling evidence (apart from the alleged neglect and abuse) that was found, appears to be that Bank Manager Christine Frankham and Paid Care Giver Bogaard’s, efforts in arranging Yolanda to sign 4 consecutive wills in 4 years (8/9/06--13/10/06--30/4/08--3/4/09).... !!

In each of these wills Manager Christine Frankham was the Executor, with both Frankham and Bogaard’s percentages of Yolanda's Estate increasing, until the final will in 2009 arranged by the alleged perpetrators (before Yolanda was freed from this nightmare, making her last and final will)  .. !!

In the last will of this "Undue Influence" saga both Manager Frankham and her friend Paid Care Giver Bogaard, were to inherit the entire estate of approximately $1.5 Million Dollars, with an additional clause inserted, that if anything happened to either of them, then their share would have gone to "Their Children". They only allowed $20,000 to be given to one of Yolanda's Granddaughters Jacki Riley. Jacki was 1 of the 8 Grandchildren of Mrs. Yolanda Hutton... !!

Interestingly the Wills were prepared by Northern Beaches Solicitor Peter Hedley Wood from Wood Marshall Williams at Brookvale, who for some unknown reason MUST work under the supervision of another Attorney.... !!

It's also interesting to point out that Christine Frankham had been allegedly involved in a similar situation before, with another Elderly Women named Joan Douglas who died in 2004... !!

As we stated before in July 2002 Bank Manager Frankham left Commonwealth Bank, allegedly "Head Hunted" by the Bendigo Bank, where she became the Manager of it's Dee Why Branch... !!

Allegedly on 26/4/2000 Christine Frankham arranged to take Joan Douglas to prepare a new will with David Tuckerman (solicitor) from Rees Tuckerman in Brookvale, whereby Manager Frankham became a beneficiary receiving  $30,000 and Bank Manager Frankham was also included in the line of beneficiaries for Joan’s house at Beacon Hill... !!

In February 2001 Frankham allegedly asked Joan for a loan of $10,000 and this money was allegedly transferred to Frankham on 19/2/2001... !!

Allegedly Joan then had great difficulty in the loan being repaid and as Joan’s demands became more public, the loan was eventually repaid on 30/4/2001, allegedly $10,000 was withdrawn by Manager Frankham from Yolanda's Visa Credit Card account at Commonwealth Bank in Brookvale, where Frankham was previously a Manager (the card had a limit of $10,000 & had never been used before)... !!

Joan Douglas died on 18/12/2004, but Christine Frankham was unaware that Joan had made another will, where in Bendigo Bank Manager Frankham was no longer a beneficiary... !!

Allegedly when Bendigo Bank Manager Frankham discovered that she would no longer beneficiary, she then confronted Joan’s Nephew Frank Henry and major beneficiary, demanding $40,000. On 26/1/2005 allegedly Bank Manager Frankham arrived at the Nephew’s house at night in an "Aggressive Manner" demanding $40,000 or she would contest the will, at that point Frank Henry told her she was trespassing, asked her to leave and closed the door in her face..!!

Trying a gentler approach on 28/2/2005 Frank Henry alleges he received a letter from Frankham, in a "Bendigo Bank Envelope" again demanding $40,000, Joan’s Nephew Frank Henry ignored Bendigo Bank Managers Christine Frankham’s Demands... !!

Documents to support the above relating to the Joan Douglas allegations, where also given to the NSW Police. .. !!


Full Profile and Source:
NASGA:  Yolanda "Linda" Hutton

See Also:
Facebook:  BendigoBanksters

Utah bill would protect the right to visit ailing parents

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A Utah senator is working on a bill that would protect the right of adult children to visit ailing parents.

Woods Cross Republican Sen. Todd Weiler said the daughter of the late actor Peter Falk asked if he would sponsor visitation legislations as part of her push for similar laws around the country.

Falk was put in a conservatorship in 2009 so his daughter could visit the ailing "Columbo" star, who had advanced dementia. Falk died in 2011.

In a statement, Catherine Falk said that when she was in court fighting to visit her father, she decided to advocate for laws securing the right to visit ailing parents so others didn't have to go through a similar situation.

Falk points to disputes such as the recent case pitting the children of B.B. King against his longtime manager. Before King's death May 14 in Las Vegas, one of his 11 surviving children sought to wrest control of his affairs from his longtime business manager who had power-of-attorney.

Several daughters alleged that they were being kept from seeing the blues legend while he was in home hospice care.

A judge dismissed the dispute, and King's manager said the children were free to schedule visits.

Two of his children now want to block the business manager from becoming executor of King's estate. They say they believe King was poisoned. A lawyer for the estate calls the claims ridiculous, and says three doctors examined King before he died.

While high-profile cases have highlighted the issue of visitation, Weiler said he doesn't know specifically of similar battles in Utah.

Lawmakers in New York are also considering a proposal on visitation rights for adult children, according to a statement from the Catherine Falk Organization.

Weiler said it's important to give people a chance to visit family members before they die.

"I think most people want to make peace and express their love and sadness and maybe try to clear up any misunderstanding before someone passes away," Weiler said.

The specifics of his Utah proposal aren't ready, but he said he'd like to see if there's a way it can allow people to secure visits without going to court.

He hopes to have state lawmakers consider the proposal during their 2016 session.

Full Article & Source:
Utah bill would protect the right to visit ailing parents

"Westland Cops Break Court Order"

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This is Westland Police & an assistant to a court guardian, breaking the law! A judge ordered that my mother Gayle Robinson was NOT to be removed from her home without a court order signed by him! They had none!

Source:
YouTube:  Westland Cops Break Court Order

Jack Halpren: Long Term Care and the Nursing Home Industry

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Jack Halpern is the CEO of the New York City-based "My Elder Advocate, LLC". The organization provides advocacy services and helps seniors with issues such as eviction prevention, nursing home or assisted living placement and long term care planning.

In March, Mr. Halpern was showcased in the episode "Home Health Aides from Hell", which will be the focus of discussion for members of the New York State Standing Committee on Aging during its next legislative session, as confirmed by Senator Joseph Addabbo, Jr., who serves on the committee.

Mr. Halpern recently asked The G-Man Interviews to meet with him to discuss what he described as a dangerous trend – in New York nursing homes and those in other states – that will lead to the evictions or deaths of Alzheimer’s and dementia residents who need and rely on long term care.

The interview was conducted on May 22nd at My Elder Advocate’s Brooklyn office.

Source:
YouTube:  Longterm Care and the Nursing Home Industry

Texas minister who put Bibles on the moon being held ‘incommunicado’

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Some wealthy American seniors have discovered the dark side of getting a court-appointed guardian: losing basic rights


DAYTON, Texas – Preston Kirk drove through four hours of torrential rains, hoping to visit an old acquaintance living at a nondescript nursing home outside Houston.

He knew his chances of seeing the Rev. John Stout were slim.

“I just want to talk about astronauts and his triumphs and achievements,” Kirk said about the visit.

Stout, 92, was a NASA scientist and chaplain. Now, he's a ward of the state, one of about 1,300 in Texas.

Stout's visits, phone calls and mail are all tightly restricted by his state guardians. Kirk said the state has barred him from visits with Stout, even after submitting to a background check. Kirk said the state is holding Stout “incommunicado.”

The Rev. John Stout
“They say it's for his own protection. ‘You can't see him for his own protection,’" Kirk said. "What are you protecting him from?”

Guardianship is designed to help those who are unable to care for themselves or act in their own best interests. County judges in Texas appoint guardians and oversee the program. Usually, guardians are family members. If no family members or friends can or will do the job, then the county or state appoints somebody else.

Once people are declared wards of the state and placed under a guardian, they no longer have the right to speak for themselves, hire their own lawyers or even to decide where to live or what medications they take.

“You have no liberty. You have no freedom. Under the current law there’s no one can protect you but one person, and that’s the probate judge,” said Debby Valdez, who founded Guardianship Reform Advocates for the Disabled and Elderly.

‘For his own protection’


When he worked for NASA as a scientist and chaplain during the height of the space race, John Stout made it his mission to get Bibles to the moon. - courtesy

Kirk was a young reporter covering the space race for United Press International when he first met Stout. A chaplain to many astronauts, Stout had made it his mission to get Bibles to the moon.

When microfiche versions of the King James Bible made it to the lunar surface with astronaut Edgar Mitchell on Apollo 14 in 1971, Kirk broke the news about the "lunar Bibles" around the world.

In 2010, Stout was declared a ward of the state – a decision he opposed. At the time, the Presbyterian minister was active on the Internet, emailing friends and writing letters, Kirk said. Stout was placed into guardianship after he attempted to give a couple of small parcels of land he owned to his hometown of La Porte, Texas, Kirk said.

Stout was also the keeper of some lunar Bibles, now worth a small fortune. One hundred made it to the moon, and they’ve sold at auction for as much as $75,000 each. Stout had as many as 60 in his apartment, according to Kirk.

The state has since seized all of Stout’s property – customary in guardianship cases.

Stout’s visits have been restricted to only his son and daughter-in-law, according to court documents. Kirk said they live out of state and do not visit.

America Tonight also requested permission to visit Stout. The request was denied.

Cecilia Cavuto, a spokeswoman for the state Department of Aging and Disability Services, said privacy concerns prevented her from talking about individual cases. In an email, she said: “The most important job of any guardian is to protect the individuals he or she serves. As such there are times when a guardian must make difficult decisions such as restrict visitors for certain individuals.”

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Guardianship is a massive intrusion into a person’s life. They lose more rights than someone who goes to prison, but it’s always based, or should be based, on medical evidence and then actual anecdotal evidence of their deficits.

Steve King
probate judge in Tarrant County, Texas

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In depositions, state Department of Aging and Disability Services personnel admitted Stout was not allowed to use the Internet, mail letters or use the phone, except to talk to his son and daughter-in-law. The department screens all incoming communications, according to the depositions.

“This is not the way we need to take care of our elderly citizens,” said Kirk, who has asked Texas officials to look into Stout’s case. Kirk even filed a complaint with the Department of Aging and Disability Services, saying the agency was guilty of elder abuse by cutting Stout off from the outside world. The department concluded the claim was unsubstantiated and that only one person – not Kirk – had been restricted from visiting or contacting Stout.

But America Tonight found others who have tried to visit Stout and were rejected by his state guardians.

Betty Duke, a member of Faith Presbyterian Church in Pasadena, Texas, said she and four others went to visit Stout last September. The nursing home placed a call to Stout’s guardian seeking permission but were told, “It was not in his best interest,” Duke said via email.

“It’s pretty outrageous for them not to allow access,” said Inez Russell, executive director of the Texas Guardianship Association. “I think it’s incredibly important to the quality of their life to have visitors. To have people to come and interact with them and remember together.”

Russell was quick to add that most guardians do a good job looking out for the interests of their wards.

“I think we still have a lot of work to do,” Russell added. “Texas has 254 counties. There’s not enough money in most of the county governments to have the people on staff to be court investigators and go and check to see that the guardianship is going well and that the person is being well cared for.”

When that’s not the case, the ward of the state is powerless to fight back, according to Valdez of the guardianship reform group.

“These guardianship providers strip them of every right they have: to speak, to visit, everything,” Valdez said. “You can’t defend yourself.”

Valdez makes frequent trips from her home in San Antonio to the state Capitol to push for more oversight of the guardianship process. So far, she hasn't been successful.

‘Tyranny’



“I was not allowed to vote, to marry, to contract, to have my own money, to give gifts,” said Dorothy Luck, who was made a ward of the state of Texas. ~America Tonight

Dorothy Luck’s fortunes changed in 2010 when a couple of attorneys showed up at the door of her Fort Worth home. Eighty-two at the time, Luck was involved in a legal dispute with her brother-in-law’s children over a trust that was to be their inheritance.

After a medical exam concluded Luck was “partially incapacitated” and unable to make “complex financial decisions,” Tarrant County Probate Judge Steve King appointed an attorney and a guardian for her and another guardian for her estate, which court records show was worth close to $2 million at the time.

“I was not allowed to vote, to marry, to contract, to have my own money, to give gifts,” Luck told America Tonight.

Asked how she would describe guardianship, Luck didn’t hesitate: “I would describe it as tyranny. I would describe this as the Gestapo.”

King would not comment on Luck’s case because it is “still open on the books of this court,” but said he appoints guardians only as a last resort.


Dorothy Luck was made a ward of the state after a medical test she was forced to take by a judge found that she was “partially incapacitated” and unable to make “complex financial decisions.” ~America Tonight

“Guardianship is a massive intrusion into a person’s life,” said King, whose opinions on guardianship are sought internationally. “They lose more rights than someone who goes to prison, but it’s always based, or should be based, on medical evidence and then actual anecdotal evidence of their deficits.”

Luck tried to bring her own attorney to court, but King ruled she already had a lawyer – her court-appointed attorney. That attorney settled the civil case over the trust.

“It was closed-door. I was never informed of anything,” Luck said.

Luck paid $1.3 million in 2012 to the trust and $180,000 to the attorney representing her brother-in-law’s children; she also paid $81,000 to her attorneys and guardians, according to court records.

“They have run through my money like it was a cookie jar,” said Luck, who is now on a $7,600-a-month allowance under the agreement her court-appointed attorney reached on Luck’s behalf.

Luck was adamant that she never should have been placed into guardianship. Asked if she was capable of making financial decisions, she said, “I do it every day.”

Valdez said Luck is a “prime target” for guardianship “because she's a widow, she's wealthy, she has no children. No one to come in and defend her.”

‘I don’t want to go’



Denise Tighe (left) and her friend and neighbor Virginia Pritchett - courtesy

In 2012, Denise Tighe began to suffer from dementia. A Palo Pinto County judge ordered her into guardianship. Tighe came to the attention of authorities when she collapsed at a local restaurant.

Police arrived one morning to take her from her home in Mineral Wells, an hour west of Fort Worth.

“She was screaming, 'I don’t want to go!,'” recalled friend and neighbor Virginia Pritchett. “She never wanted to go to a nursing home.”

Originally from Switzerland, Tighe was a retired Wall Street bank manager. Pritchett said she could have afforded round-the-clock care for the rest of her life. At the time she was placed under guardianship, court records show Tighe had more than $200,000 in the bank, a home that was paid for and benefits worth more than $2,500 a month.

Once in a nursing home, Pritchett said no visitors were allowed unless Tighe’s guardian was there to supervise.

“I was going to visit her for Christmas. I was told by one of the guardians they were going to be with their own families and there was nobody to sit with her and supervise her,” Pritchett recalled. Even photographs with Tighe were prohibited, Pritchett added.

As Tighe’s health began failing over Martin Luther King Jr. Day weekend last year, Pritchett tried to pay a final visit.

“One of the guardians told me, 'We’re going to be closed on Monday,' so they made us wait. It was too late. She didn’t make it,” Pritchett said, fighting back tears.

A ward of the state of Texas, Tighe died alone at age 87.

Full Article & Source:
Texas minister who put Bibles on the moon being held ‘incommunicado’

Under-fire Banstead care home left injured 101-year-old to wait for two days to see doctor

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Jessie Keys, pictured left last March, and right last week in Epsom Hospital
A 101-year-old woman who suffered a serious head wound after falling out of bed at a failing nursing home was not taken to hospital, or seen by a doctor, for two days.

Jessie Keys, from Carshalton, who has been a resident at Firtree House Nursing Home, in Banstead, for three-and-a-half years, is in Epsom Hospital while a safeguarding investigation is conducted by social services and the Care Quality Commission (CQC) into why it took so long for her to be admitted.

In an inspection in November, the health and social care watchdog the CQC rated the home "inadequate overall", although the owner insists improvements had been made.

From March: Owner of Banstead care home rated "inadequate" confident it will not be closed down
 
Her great niece Kim Clements, 47, also from Carshalton, said Miss Keys was found by Firtree’s staff on the morning of May 18, after falling out of her bed.

She said: "She fell out of bed on Monday.

"They phoned my mother to say she had a scratch on her head but not to worry as she was fine.

"She had a big gash in her head. It was absolutely awful.

"Firtree phoned for an ambulance on Wednesday.

"Her head must have been pouring with blood every day."

Miss Clements said, days earlier, she had been shocked to discover that Miss Keys did not have a pressure mat placed next to her bed, just a "normal rubber mat" drenched in urine.

A pressure mat would alert staff if Miss Keys tried to get out of bed unaided, but Miss Clements was told it was "broken" and would be replaced.

Miss Clements said Firtree’s matron - who was not working at the time of the incident - told her Miss Keys was found on the floor at 6.15am, having been helped to go to the toilet at 6am.

She said: "The matron said they phoned an out-of-hours doctor who said she would not be coming out, but could visit on Wednesday.

"I thought they would have phoned an ambulance straightaway.

"On Wednesday morning the doctor came and said Jessie needed to go to hospital.

"The matron said they should have got help earlier, that it was left too long.

"She said the nurse [involved] had been severely reprimanded."

Miss Clements said her great aunt has experienced no other major problems during her time at Firtree and the home has "always kept her safe", but added: "It’s just lately. The staffing is terrible.

"We are worried about her going back."


When Salim Jiwa, the owner of Firtree, was contacted for an explanation he insisted the newspaper should call the nursing home and speak to the matron, who he named only as Denise.

When questioned, he would not say whether, 10 days after the incident, he had personal knowledge of what had happened, given that he is the owner of the nursing home.

He later phoned back to say: "An investigation is ongoing and there is no other comment at the moment."

The care home's website lists Maria Varnava as manager and head nurse, and Mary Jones as deputy manager and staff nurse. There is no mention of anybody called Denise.

In October, Firtree was placed under police investigation after another Firtree resident, Frank West, 86, was admitted to Epsom Hospital, having fallen out of bed and sustaining a head injury.

He died in hospital 11 days later.

From October: Under-fire care home in Banstead being investigated by police after death of resident
 
Although Mr West died of natural causes, he had pneumonia when admitted and police told his daughter, Trudy Hampton, that there was a high level of opiates in his blood - of which there was no record at the home.

Speaking to this newspaper this week, Ms Hampton, said the police investigation into the matter had concluded but they "didn’t say there was any criminal activity or not" because police had needed a blood sample from Mr West, whose care at Firtree was funded by Surrey County Council (SCC).

Ms Hampton added: "The CQC didn’t give me their report [into the matter] as they said it’s not their policy.

"Social services didn’t share anything either due to data protection.

"There are still big questions over this.

"I think there’s a bit of a cover-up from the CQC point of view."

She added: "Firtree has had all these chances for a number of years to correct the inefficiencies and it has not corrected them.

"I wouldn’t put anyone there."

Of the 23 residents at the home, 13 are funded by SCC and four by Sutton Council.

An SCC spokesman pointed this newspaper to Sutton Council, but said: "We have asked the home to complete an internal investigation in the next 28 days just to make sure nothing happens again."

A Sutton Council spokesman said SCC was the relevant authority: "Safeguarding investigations are led by the local authority where the incident occurs, which in this case is SCC.

"SCC’s investigation into the care of Mrs Keys is ongoing and we are awaiting the outcome of its investigation."

He added: "Sutton Council and SCC have been working together with Firtree since its CQC inspection in November 2014 to raise the standard of care there."

A follow-up inspection to the one in November was conducted in March this year, but the findings have not yet been published by the CQC.

From October: 'Care Quality Commission complicit in wrongdoing of nursing homes', says angry relative
 
Asked about the incident involving Miss Keys, a CQC spokesman said: "We are aware of it.

"There is ongoing safeguarding work going on between ourselves, the local authorities and stakeholders and we cannot comment at this time."

He said the most recent inspection report for Firtree had been sent to Mr Jiwa and there is "no reason why it shouldn’t be published this month".

Sutton Guardian:

"THERE HAVE BEEN NOTABLE IMPROVEMENTS"
 
Tom Hurst, 61, from Epsom, is a relative of a resident who has been at Firtree for four years.

He said the nursing home has made significant process recently and criticised the our recent coverage of the problems there as "unnecessarily sensationalist".

"I would say there have been notable improvements," Mr Hurst said.

"The new matron, Denise, has been there three months now. She is very much on top of things.

"There have been several monthly residents’ meetings. At the last one there was not one single complaint.

"They have done a pretty good job over the four years. Overall, the family’s happy."

He said Firtree is not the only care home in the area not providing a link to it most recently published report on its website and that "Firtree didn’t deserve to be singled out" by the newspaper for this.

Last month: Care home slammed by watchdog still not showing damning inspection report on its website
 
Mr Hurst said his main frustration is the delay in the CQC inspecting homes and then publishing its reports.

He said: "I am dumbfounded that the CQC inspected Firtree in March of this year and here we are in June and there is no sign of the report."

Full Article & Source:
Under-fire Banstead care home left injured 101-year-old to wait for two days to see doctor

Former Glynn County Judge indicted

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Former Brunswick Judicial Circuit Chief Judge Amanda Williams was indicted Wednesday by a Fulton County grand jury on one count of making false statements and one count of violating her oath of office, The News has learned.

Williams resigned from the bench in January 2012 amid allegations of ethics violations in a 2011 state Judicial Qualifications Commission report.

Following the allegations and Williams' resignation, Attorney General Sam Olens appointed Fulton County District Attorney's office to investigate Williams for potential criminal charges.

Full Article & Source: 
Former Glynn County Judge indicted
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