Showing posts with label guardianship legal abuse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label guardianship legal abuse. Show all posts

Friday, November 13, 2009

Reno woman facing elder abuse and concealed weapon charges allegedly found with drugs in jail cell

Source : http://www.rgj.com/article/20091112/NEWS01/91112064/1018/SPORTS/Reno-woman-facing-elder-abuse-and-concealed-weapon-charges-allegedly-found-with-drugs-in-jail-cell

By Jaclyn O'Malley • jomalley@rgj.com • November 12, 2009

A 35-year-old former Washoe County legal guardian jailed last week for bringing an unloaded gun into a Reno court was booked additionally for possessing prescription drugs after deputies found them during a search of her jail cell.

Angela Cheri Dottei was arrested Nov. 3 on suspicion of carrying a concealed weapon into Reno Justice Court. An unloaded firearm was allegedly found in her belongings as she went through the court’s metal detector. Authorities said she had gone to the court for a scheduled hearing. She was arrested on-site and later ordered jailed in lieu of $25,000 cash bail.
Dottei is also under investigation by Reno police for allegedly financially exploiting her elderly wards. A Washoe Family Court investigation revealed she was allegedly stealing money from her wards while in her role as a legal guardian through her company, Assurity Guardian Resources. A judge in September placed sanctions upon her, fined her hundreds of thousands of dollars and suspended her license to work as a guardian.
Wednesday, during a search of her jail cell, deputies found a plastic bag containing multiple types of prescription drugs hidden in hygiene products, said Deputy Brooke Keast. She was booked additionally on two counts of suspicion of possessing a controlled substance by an inmate, which is a felony.
Deputies were still investigating how she possessed the drugs. Keast said that under the law, inmates may not be strip searched unless there is a reasonable suspicion they may have hidden contraband. In this case, she said deputies had no reason to believe she hid anything.
Keast said it’s rare that inmates are found in possession of drugs.
“We always do systematic searches of cells,” she said. “The search is what lead us to finding the drugs. It’s why we do them.”
Reno police fraud detectives say they are investigating Dottei for allegedly exploiting at least three of her elderly wards. No charges have been filed.

Source : http://www.rgj.com/article/20091112/NEWS01/91112064/1018/SPORTS/Reno-woman-facing-elder-abuse-and-concealed-weapon-charges-allegedly-found-with-drugs-in-jail-cell

Friday, June 5, 2009

Be on the Lookout: Con Artists Stealing Guardianship of Senior Parents

Be on the Lookout: Con Artists Stealing Guardianship of Senior Parents
September 26, 2007 by

Accociated Content
Senior adults have been targeted as easy victims in a number of different scams for the last two decades now, and it's only getting worse. Instead of just stealing money from them or ripping them off, con artists are now actually stealing guardianship of many senior adults. Some criminals have figured out that they can assume guardianship of elderly individuals just by telling a judge they are no longer mentally stable. When approaching a judge, these crooks don't have to do anything to prove that they are related to the individual they are trying to assume guardianship of. Courts are so busy and over-packed with cases that they just don't have the time or resources to make sure that the person making the claim is on the up and up. There's no easy way to find out when this occurs, so family members often have no idea that someone is stealing guardianship of their parents and simply have no recourse in the event that it happens. Usually the ruling happens quickly and the victims have no idea when it happens. If you have any aging parents, you have to look out for them and make sure they are not victimized. It's extremely easily to steal the money from your ageing parents and almost impossible to get it back after it's stolen. If you have senior parents, there are several legal things you can do to protect your senior parents. You can get a durable power of attorney for health care which will enable you to make decisions for your senior parents if they cannot speak of make competent decisions upon their own behalf. If you already have a durable power of attorney for health care, their guardianship can't be taken away because you already have it, and in the event that they are no longer competent, you are the one that will be able to make their health care decisions. You can also get a regular durable power of attorney, which requires the assistant of an attorney and is a bit more difficult to get. A durable power of attorney enables you to take care of your senior parent's finances, which would make it impossible for these types of criminals to steal your parents assets by claiming guardianship over them.

(continue reading article here)

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This article is almost two years old. Matters have gotten worse not better. Now they will just ignore the power of attorneys and still grant the guardianship. Warn your Loved ones today ! Designate who you want your guardian to be and who your want your conservator to be and don't trust the system! Give away your family heirlooms before it is too late because if you do not and you end up in guardianship the guardian can sell or auction off EVERYTHING including the diamond ring your great grandmother gave you to give to your daughter one day. Nothing is off limits.

THIS IS A SHAME AND OFTEN A CRIME !

stopguardianshipabuse@gmail.com ============================================

Monday, June 1, 2009

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

The Nightmare of Living Probate

As Carolyn Henderson anxiously watched her husband's flickering vital signs on the Intensive Care Unit monitor, she considered the irony of their circumstances. When she and Kirk planned how they might spend their thirtieth wedding anniversary, this sickbed vigil was the farthest thing from
their minds. But then on the very day they planned to celebrate 30 years of marriage, Kirk Henderson, a robust, health-conscious, ex-pro football player in his mid-fifties, unexpectedly suffered a stroke. As the hours ticked by with no sign that Kirk would regain consciousness, Carolyn considered for the first time that he might not pull through.

Although Kirk didn't die, he hasn't fully recovered. Today, two years after his stroke, the aftermath of his illness has rendered him barely able to walk or use his right arm. His speech is slurred, his thinking processes are muddled, and he will probably need physical therapy for the rest of his life.
Carolyn tries not to dwell on the tragedies of her husband's illness, emphasizing instead the miraculous progress he has made in so many areas. But just when she starts to think things are returning to normal, she's reminded that in the eyes of the law, her husband is as good as dead.
Declared mentally incompetent in a court of law, Kirk Henderson no longer has the right to make any decisions for himself. He can't sign a check, conduct a financial transaction, or even decide how he wishes to be cared for.

When they least expected it, the Henderson’s discovered what insurance companies have been tying to tell us for years. For most of our lives, the greatest risk to our well-being isn't death. It's the ever-growing likelihood of becoming seriously ill or injured. And when illness or injury makes us
unable to manage our affairs for ourselves, we may face an ordeal nearly as debilitating as our disability itself. It's a legal process commonly called Living Probate, and for those who must endure it, it is often a living nightmare.

WHAT IS LIVING PROBATE?


Many people know that probate occurs when someone dies with a will in force, or intestate without a will. This legal process is so-called death probate, and it establishes the validity of the deceased's will (or when there is no will, determines the deceased's heirs). The probate process identifies and establishes values for the assets of the deceased; ensures that creditors are paid; sees the courts and attorneys get their fees for handling the probate; and lastly, distributes to the heirs whatever remains of the estate after all debts and expenses have been paid.

What most Americans don't know, however, is that they may find themselves in the midst of probate while they're still alive. This living probate ensnares many of those who become unable to make personal or financial decisions as a result of serious injury or debilitating illness.
Few can argue with the idea behind living probate. Its goal is to protect an individual who can no longer protect himself or herself, and it seeks to identify the person or persons best suited to take over the individual's financial affairs and personal care. That's the theory. But in practice, living
probate can be a costly, time-consuming, bureaucratic and public process that often achieves an outcome vastly different from what the individual would have wanted, just like death probate.
......

Continue reading here
http://www.morristrust.com/uploads/reportfiles/The%20Nightmare%20of%20Living%20Probate.pdf

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Out of money, Excelsior woman still fighting

By JAMES ELI SHIFFER, Star Tribune
Last update: April 28, 2009 - 10:58 PM

After watching court-appointed officials spend more than $600,000 of her money, Peggy Greer is returning to court to try to win it back.
Greer, 86, of Excelsior, has filed suit in Hennepin County District Court, claiming that her former guardian and conservator failed to protect her assets, heed her wishes and otherwise fulfill their duties to look after her best interests.

In March 2005, a Hennepin County probate judge ruled that Greer, then recovering from painkiller addiction, was unable to make decisions for herself, and appointed Professional Fiduciary Inc. as her guardian and Wells Fargo Elder Services as her conservator.

Over the next two years, the guardian and conservator spent $672,000 on health costs, attorney's fees and other expenses, despite objections from Greer and other family members that the spending was excessive and unjustified.

Greer won back her rights in July 2007, after her assets were exhausted and the guardian and conservator no longer opposed their dismissal. After the Star Tribune reported in February about Greer's experience, attorneys David Bland and Andrew Pieper of Robins, Kaplan, Miller & Ciresi took on her case.

(continue reading)
http://www.startribune.com/local/west/43917782.html?elr=KArks:DCiUHc3E7_V_nDaycUiD3aPc:_Yyc:aUU