Saturday, April 25, 2026

Nonprofit bookkeeper who stole $79,000 from senior citizen clients gets 22 months in prison

by: Joe Schroeder

(WXIN/WTTV) — A former bookkeeper at an Indiana nonprofit will spend over a year behind bars after pleading guilty to stealing $79,000 from incapacitated senior citizens’ bank accounts.

Brenda Denise Walters, 57, of Nappanee, was sentenced this week to 22 months in federal prison and three years of supervised release. This comes after she pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court to 10 counts of wire fraud.

Court documents detail how Walters was hired in Aug. 2023 as a bookkeeper for Organization A, a local nonprofit. Walters was reportedly in charge of the Guardianship Program, which provides court-appointed legal guardians for incapacitated older adults and manages their finances.

In her part-time role, Walters oversaw the bank accounts of over 20 program clients and was responsible for paying bills and managing investments. Investigators found that, for nearly a year, the bookkeeper instead defrauded her “mentally incapacitated elderly adult clients.”

Walters reportedly stole money from the victims’ bank accounts for her own personal benefit, using the money to pay her utility bills, buy clothes, host parties and take expensive vacations to New York, Florida and Pigeon Forge. 

To conceal the theft, Walters then falsified bank statements and hid transfers to her personal accounts. Documents detail how she created a fake United Healthcare bill for a client to disguise a transfer to her Apple Card. Another time, she falsely labeled a check as being for “plumbing.”

In total, Walters stole over $79,000 from at least six clients of the Guardianship Program. Tom Wheeler, United States Attorney for the Southern District of Indiana, said she “preyed exclusively on some of the most vulnerable members of society.”

“Her conduct was not a momentary lapse in judgment but a calculated scheme to enrich herself at the expense of people who had no ability to defend themselves,” Wheeler said. “This office will continue to pursue justice for victims who are targeted because of their age, incapacity, or dependence on others.”

After pleading guilty earlier this week to 10 counts of federal wire fraud, Walters was sentenced by U.S. District Court Chief Judge James R. Sweeney II to 22 months in prison. Upon release, she will serve three years of probation.

No mugshot or booking photo of Walters was made publicly available. 

Full Article & Source:
Nonprofit bookkeeper who stole $79,000 from senior citizen clients gets 22 months in prison 

Senior scams are on the rise — and banks and businesses can’t turn a blind eye

By Steve Cohen 

Jeffrey Maas thought he was being a good citizen, helping to fix a mistake that he was told was going to ruin someone’s career. His naivete led him into a common scam that cost him most of his life savings.

Maas, a 76-year-old retiree living in New Jersey, read the e-mail that millions of people have received: “Thank you for your order of Norton anti-virus software … for $691.85…If you would like to confirm or cancel this subscription, please call…”

Unfortunately, Maas did call to cancel the subscription he never ordered – and got sucked into a scheme that cost him hundreds of thousands of dollars. He was not alone: the FBI estimates that the “phantom hacker/courier scheme costs Americans — most of them senior citizens — more than $500 million annually. And sadly, that estimate is probably woefully understated, because most people are too embarrassed to admit they have been taken, and never report it to authorities.

Tensed senior man talking on mobile phone.
Scams targeting senior citizens take many forms, including Medicare scams, “grandparent” schemes and more. WavebreakmediaMicro – stock.adobe.com

Jeffrey Maas is one of the very few victims willing to publicly admit they were taken.  And he is trying to help keep others from falling for such schemes: He identified one of the (low-level) scammers who was arrested and indicted. Maas has filed a civil lawsuit, not just against the conmen but against a major regional bank and a precious-metals-coin dealer who helped enable it.

Scams targeting senior citizens take many forms.

There are Medicare scams that get seniors to turn over personal information in exchange for “free” or unneeded medical equipment.

There are “grandparent” schemes that use texts or cloned voices supposedly from grandchildren who are in trouble and need bail money wired immediately; lottery scams that require the “winner” to first transfer taxes or fees prior to getting their prize; romance scams where fraudsters build fake relationships — often just online — over weeks or months, and then request money for emergencies, travel, or medical bills;  and IRS impersonation scams where “agents” threaten arrest for unpaid taxes unless immediate payment is made via gift cards or wire transfer.

Elderly man in a park looking at his phone with a worried expression.
Senior citizens are more likely to get scammed because they might not understand technology. Ezequiel MartÃÂnez – stock.adobe.com

While the scams take many forms and have numerous variations, there are some common denominators.  They target older adults who are less tech-savvy, perhaps more trusting, more gullible, but certainly more likely to fall for the scam — and lose more money — than their younger counterparts.  The AARP reports that people in their 70s reported a median loss of $1,000 per fraud incident, compared to a median of $417 for those in their 20s. Those in their 70s also reported losing a median of $20,000 to investment scams, versus $1,551 for victims in their 20s.  Sadly, the FBI estimates that Americans lost $4.9 billion to scams in 2024, up 43% from the year earlier.

Exactly why the problem is getting worse is unclear. Perhaps the scammers are becoming more sophisticated; or there are just more of them. Another reason may be that companies which are supposed to have processes in place to help protect the elderly either do not or are simply not following them. 

A great-grandmother talking on a smartphone.
Those in their 70s also reported losing a median of $20,000 to investment scams, versus $1,551 for victims in their 20s. tan4ikk – stock.adobe.com

That’s what happened to Maas. After being convinced by the scammers that his bank account had been erroneously credited with several hundred thousand dollars — and the “proof” was eerily credible — they then convinced him that the only way he could return the money without causing the person who made the error to lose his job was to deliver gold coins to a certified messenger.

In retrospect, this “solution” was obviously preposterous, and Maas realized that just as he handed over a second tranche of coins — and then snapped a photo of the courier’s license plate. But in the moment, it seemed reasonable, and Maas was conned.  

Gold bars placed on a pile of gold coins.
As part of one scam, victims were told to deliver gold coins to a certified messenger. Thicha – stock.adobe.com

There were multiple checkpoints throughout the con where others could have intervened but didn’t. Maas had been instructed to go to his local bank and wire money to one of several precious-metal-coin companies recommended by the scammers. At the bank, Maas told the banker he wanted to wire nearly his entire life savings to the coin company — and all the while was on an open phone call with the scammer. The banker did not ask a single question of this obviously distressed, elderly man, such as,  “Why are you doing this? Did you get financial advice? Who is on the phone?”

Similarly, the coin company owner never asked him a single question. And here too, Maas was on an open phone call with the scammer. But perhaps most remarkably, this whole scheme happened twice — two days in a row — because the scammers knew they had a live fish on the line. And no one who could have stopped it — or even slowed it down — was doing anything. They were just treating it as business-as-usual.

A senior woman looks concerned while on a phone call in her kitchen, gesturing with her free hand.
To cut down on senior scams, businesses need to do more than the bare minimum to ensure that each transaction is sound. Liubomir – stock.adobe.com

Banks — and to a smaller extent coin companies — have a responsibility to know their customers and take precautions to prevent what is known in their industries as elder financial exploitation. There are federal regulations — about staff training and procedures — and specific red flags that employees are supposed to be on the lookout for. One is whether the elderly customer is taking directions from someone with whom they are speaking on a cellphone. In addition to the federal regulations, there are New Jersey statutes designed to help protect seniors. None of them were followed.

A judge and jury will determine whether the bank and coin company were negligent in Maas’ case. And a different jury will determine if the courier or anyone else was criminally liable. Until then, we need to get banks and coin companies to stop being complacent and helping to enable these scams. They need to slow down these transactions — even by a few minutes — and ask a few questions. Such delays won’t hobble the economy, and they might help save other seniors from the financial and emotional harms Maas has suffered. Criminals may be driving these scams, but lazy companies willing to look the other way are making them possible.

Steve Cohen is an attorney at Pollock Cohen LLP.

Full Article & Source:
Senior scams are on the rise — and banks and businesses can’t turn a blind eye 

Friday, April 24, 2026

CBS family's year-long fight for disability benefits resolved after guardianship papers accepted

Colin Bradley's federal disability payments will now be issued after prolonged administrative delay and review of guardianship paperwork filed in PEI

Colin Bradley with his sister and caregiver, Teena Bradley Rumbolt, who has now secured his federal disability benefit after a year long struggle. CONTRIBUTED

A Conception Bay South family says a year-long delay in accessing a federal disability benefit has now been resolved, with Service Canada confirming that monthly payments will begin in May.

In a post shared on social media, caregiver Teena Bradley Rumbolt said she was contacted by the national director of the program last week and informed that her brother, Colin Bradley, will receive all backdated payments, too.

“He will receive all of last year’s payments in May, and start with the monthly payments in May as well,” Rumbolt said.

Colin Bradley with his sister and full-time caregiver, Teena Rumbolt. CONTRIBUTED

GUARDIANSHIP DOCUMENTATION DEEMED SUFFICIENT

The delay in getting the payments stemmed from a concern about the wording for the long-standing guardianship order for Bradley, which was not accepted when the family attempted to apply for his payments. They feared they would have to go through the expense of having the paperwork, which was originally issued in Prince Edward Island, filed again in Newfoundland.

“I was finally contacted by the national director for the disability program… and she apologized many times, as our legal paperwork was sufficient and never should have been questioned,” she said.

Rumbolt said she was informed that the case had led to changes in how legal documents are assessed within Service Canada.

“Due to the mishandling of Colin’s case, they will receive further training, and they also have implemented a new procedure with legal documents,” she said.

"From now on, when a Service Canada officer receives legal documentation, it will require two sets of eyes before moving on to be denied or approved.”

STRAIN OF A PROLONGED APPLICATION

The family has been waiting nearly a year for the benefit, which is administered federally through Service Canada and supports eligible adults with disabilities.

The process required repeated follow-ups with government offices, legal representatives, and elected officials.

Rumbolt said the delay placed significant strain on the household.

“It’s beyond exhausting, constantly having to advocate for family. This world these days requires someone to do the work and keep pushing for what is right. If not, you get nothing,” she said.

“Don’t give up. Don’t accept what you know is not fair and continue to speak up. One person can make a change, and this is proof.”

Colin Bradley spends much of his day by the window, watching the world outside from his home in CBS. CONTRIBUTED

SERVICE CANADA CONFIRMS APPROVAL, ACKNOWLEDGES ERROR

In a statement to The Telegram, Service Canada confirmed the case has now been resolved and that payments have been approved.

“Upon receipt of all required documentation, the file was processed successfully. C. Bradley’s application has been approved, the file is now current, active, and in pay,” the agency said.

It added that all applicable retroactive payments have been authorized and that ongoing monthly payments are now in effect.

“The initial documentation received led to a denial for this client, which was an accurate decision given the documentation provided at the time,” the statement said.

“Upon receiving an additional legal document from the client, Service Canada misinterpreted the legal requirements, thereby incorrectly maintaining the original decision. Upon further review, it was determined that the original denial decision was incorrect.”

REVIEW AND INTERNAL PROCESSES

Service Canada said legal guardianship documents are assessed in accordance with legislative and regulatory requirements tied to each program.

Officers are supported by training, procedural guidelines, and internal resources when evaluating documentation, the agency said, adding that additional advice is available when required.

“Service Canada continually reviews its processes to better ensure clarity, consistency, and decision-making across cases,” the statement said, including in the handling of legal documentation such as guardianship and proof of representation.

Full Article & Source:
CBS family's year-long fight for disability benefits resolved after guardianship papers accepted  

Polk County Approves Funding to Support Health & Wellness for Seniors & Disabled


Des Moines, IA- The Polk County Board of Supervisors, on Tuesday, approved agreements aimed at enhancing assistance for elderly and those individuals with developmental  disabilities. The first agreement, in collaboration with the Iowa Developmental Disability Council and 
the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services Division of Aging and Disability Services, is designed to launch a Supported Decision-Making demonstration project, made possible through grant 
funding.

Supported Decision-Making is an innovative approach that seeks to empower individuals by providing them with the necessary support to understand, consider, and communicate their decisions effectively. 
This practice not only promotes autonomy and preserves legal rights but also contributes significantly to informed decision-making.

With the second agreement, Aging Resources of Central Iowa will contribute $404,000 each year for the next two years to assist with nutrition, transportation needs, program outreach, health promotion 
and disease prevention.

Polk County Board Chair Matt McCoy states, “This project is a crucial step in ensuring that our elderly and those with disabilities have the support they need to make informed choices about their 
health and wellbeing.”

“Through Supported Decision-Making, we are paving the way for a future where individuals feel empowered to make decisions that affect their lives, promoting both dignity and independence.” Said, 
Joel Olah, Executive Director, Aging Resources of Central Iowa.

Please call your closest Polk County Senior Center for more information or call the Senior Services Administration office at 515-286-3679.
 
Information also available at https://www.polkcountyiowa.gov/community-family-youthservices/senior-services/about-us/

Source:
Polk County Approves Funding to Support Health & Wellness for Seniors & Disabled  

Thursday, April 23, 2026

Forest Grove police investigate nursing assistant in multivictim elder exploitation

By Nick LaMora 

Forest Grove police say they have charged Willow McCullough for numerous financial abuse-related charges involving several elderly victims. (File photo)

A certified nursing assistant who worked in multiple senior care facilities across Washington County is facing a slate of felony charges for allegedly financially exploiting elderly residents, according to police.

The Forest Grove Police Department, working with the Beaverton Police Department and the Washington County District Attorney’s Office, is investigating Willow McCullough, who authorities say is tied to multiple cases of financial abuse.

Investigators say the alleged conduct spans several assisted-living and senior care facilities in Forest Grove, Beaverton and the surrounding area, where McCullough was employed as a nursing assistant.

Court records show at least six victims have been identified, and authorities believe there may be more.

McCullough faces 22 charges across two separate cases, including six counts of identity theft, three counts of aggravated identity theft and six counts of fraudulent use of a credit card, as well as three counts of first-degree theft, one count of aggravated first-degree theft and three counts of second-degree theft.

Officials are asking anyone who believes they or a family member may have been affected to come forward. Reports can be made through Oregon’s Adult Protective Services hotline at 855-503-7233 or by contacting local law enforcement. Forest Grove investigators can be reached at 503-992-3260.

Full Article & Source:
Forest Grove police investigate nursing assistant in multivictim elder exploitation 

Case against Decatur officer accused of exploiting elderly person moves to grand jury

By Javon Williams

DECATUR, Ala. (WAFF) -A Decatur Police officer’s criminal case is headed to a Morgan County grand jury to determine if his case goes to trial.

Elijah Cole was arrested in early March and charged with theft and financial exploitation of an elderly person. He was placed on administrative leave following his arrest.

Cole’s arrest stemmed from an investigation into a December report alleging criminal activity by a DPD officer.

Court records revealed that Cole is accused of taking more than $8,000 from a 68-year-old victim.

The court filing alleges that Cole got the money under false pretenses, spent it on means other than what it was falsely represented for, then ended communications with the victim with no efforts to repay the money.

During his preliminary hearing on Tuesday, a judge found probable cause in Cole’s case.

Cole has served for over four years with the department, in two separate periods of employment, as a patrol officer. 

Full Article & Source:
Case against Decatur officer accused of exploiting elderly person moves to grand jury 

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Real estate investors are buying up long-term care facilities. Residents can suffer

By Jordan Rau 

Leslie Adams holds a photo of his mother, Shirley, who died after developing infected bedsores at a rehabilitation center, according to a lawsuit he filed. A court awarded the family $17 million, but they are still trying to collect it.

Taylor Glascock for KFF Health News

By the time she was hospitalized in 2020, Pearlene Darby, a retired teacher, had suffered open sores on both legs, both hips, and both heels, as well as a five-inch-long gash on her tailbone. She died two weeks later at age 81 from infections and bedsores, according to her death certificate. Her daughter sued the nursing home, alleging it had left Darby sitting in her own feces and urine time and again.

The lawsuit, settled on confidential terms last year, blamed not only the managers of City Creek Post-Acute and Assisted Living but also the building's owner, a real estate investment trust, or REIT. In the year Darby died, City Creek paid CareTrust REIT more than $1 million in rent, while the Sacramento, California, nursing home ran a deficit, court records show.

Federal tax rules ban REITs from running health care facilities, but CareTrust was not an absentee landlord either, according to internal records filed in the case. It chose the nursing home's management company and required through the lease that the home keep at least 80% of beds occupied. CareTrust granularly tracked how well the home kept to its financial plan, down to the money spent monthly on nurses and food, the records said. And the documents showed that the real estate company kept tabs on government safety inspection findings and Medicare quality ratings.

Both CareTrust and the nursing home operator denied liability for Darby's death. CareTrust officials said in court papers that it is not involved in day-to-day nursing home decisions or patient care, and that it monitors facilities to ensure nothing jeopardizes rent payments.

In a written statement, CareTrust Corporate Counsel Joseph Layne told KFF Health News: "We are the property owners, not the operators."

Pearlene Darby is shown in a family photo with her grandson Caleb Darby. She has a big smile and they are both doing a dance move, with an outstretched arm.

Pearlene Darby, pictured here with her grandson Caleb Darby, was a resident of a Sacramento, California, nursing home. She died two weeks after being hospitalized for bedsores and an infection. The home denied liability and the case was settled out of court.
Shirlene Darby

Landlords with influence

Over the past decade, real estate investment trusts have bought thousands of buildings that house nursing homes, hospitals, assisted living facilities, and medical offices. A KFF Health News examination of court filings and corporate records shows that these landlords have more influence than the health care facilities publicly acknowledge.

The documents reveal REITs often select the management who oversee the operations and leave them in place even when they are aware of threadbare staffing, floundering governance, repeated safety violations, or other problems that hamper quality of care. A California jury in March awarded $92 million in punitive damages against a former REIT over the death of a 100-year-old resident with dementia who froze to death outside her assisted living facility.

"The REITs are in charge," said Laraclay Parker, one of the lawyers who represent Darby's daughter.

Absence of oversight

Despite their ubiquity, REITs remain invisible to state and federal health regulators. Hospitals and nursing homes are not required to disclose rent payments or landlord identities in the annual reports they submit to Medicare.

Under President Donald Trump, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services indefinitely suspended a Biden-era requirement that nursing homes disclose REIT involvement. Catherine Howden, a CMS spokesperson, said in a statement that the agency does not regulate facilities based on their tax status or corporate form and instead focuses on the quality of the care they provide.

REITs now own a fifth of the nation's senior housing, which includes assisted living, memory care, and independent living, according to an industry analysis. REITs also hold investments in 1 in 6 nursing homes. Publicly traded REITs that focus on health care are worth nearly a quarter of a trillion dollars, according to Nareit, an industry association.


While one research study found REIT investments were associated with higher spending on nursing wages, another concluded that after being bought by REITs, nursing homes frequently replaced registered nurses with less skilled nurses and aides. A third analysis concluded that health inspection results were worse after REIT investment.

Researchers also found that investor-owned hospital chains that sold buildings to REITs were more likely to close or go bankrupt, as happened in 2024 with Steward Health Care. Often, private equity investors kept the sale proceeds as profits while the hospitals were burdened with new rent costs. "There were no improvements in clinical outcomes," said Thomas Tsai, an associate professor at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

REITs are required to distribute most of their income and don't have to pay the 21% federal corporate income tax on it. There is a catch: A REIT that "directly or indirectly operates or manages" a health care facility loses the tax break for five years. Typically, a REIT leases the property to another company that runs the nursing home or assisted living facility and maintains its tax break. Nareit said health care REITs distributed more than $7 billion in dividends in 2024.

Michael Stroyeck, head of health care analysis at Green Street, a real estate research company, said "there's definitely a symbiotic relationship" between REITs and facility managers because they have the same goals. He said he has seen REITs replace operators that are having difficulties or go bankrupt.

John Kane, a senior vice president at the American Health Care Association and the National Center for Assisted Living, an industry group that represents nursing homes, said in a statement: "Given government funding often falls short, REITs have been valuable partners in helping to invest in long term care without influencing daily operations."

Low staffing at a chain

Strawberry Fields REIT, which like CareTrust trades on the New York Stock Exchange, owns or controls the buildings of 131 nursing home facilities. The nursing home operations inside 66 of those facilities are owned by Moishe Gubin, Strawberry Fields' chief executive, and Michael Blisko, one of its directors, according to Strawberry Fields' annual report for last year.

Gubin and Blisko also jointly own Infinity Healthcare Management, which manages their nursing homes; Blisko is Infinity's CEO. On average, Infinity-affiliated nursing homes provided an hour and a quarter less nursing care per resident per day than the national average of four hours, a KFF Health News analysis of federal records found.

Infinity and several of its nursing homes have recently settled 30 death and injury lawsuits in Cook County, Illinois, totaling more than $4 million, said Margaret Battersby Black, a Chicago lawyer. A jury last year awarded $12 million in a lawsuit brought against Infinity and one of its Chicago nursing homes over the 2023 death of Shirley Adams. A retired candy factory worker, Adams died after developing infected bedsores at Lakeview Rehabilitation and Nursing Center, according to the lawsuit.

"She had wounds that no one could explain," one of her adult children, Leslie Adams, testified at trial. Medicare gives Lakeview its lowest quality rating, one star out of five.

Leslie Adams is shown sitting on a staircase outside a brick building.

Leslie Adams lost his mother, Shirley, who died after developing infected bedsores at Lakeview Rehabilitation and Nursing Center, according to a lawsuit he filed. "She had wounds that no one could explain," he testified.
Taylor Glascock for KFF Health News

Paul Connery, a lawyer for Adams' family, said they are still trying to collect on the judgment against the nursing home and management company, which now totals $17 million with interest and attorney fees.

"If I get caught speeding and I went to court, they issue me a ticket and I've got a fine to pay," Adams said in an interview. "How are they able to still continue to move on with business like nothing has happened?"

In a phone interview and an email, Gubin said Strawberry Fields, Infinity, and the nursing homes are all legally distinct and that he has not played an active role in Infinity in more than a decade. He said nursing homes get sued all the time but that the verdict against Lakeview is so large that it will force the home to declare bankruptcy or shut down.

A multistory brick building on a city street is show. Two bare trees are visible. The word "Lakeview" appears on an awning, and a large sign says, "Thank you, Staff."

The owners and operators of Lakeview Rehabilitation and Nursing Center in Chicago also are directors of the real estate investment trust that owns the building, a securities filing shows.
Taylor Glascock for KFF Health News

"The whole thing is unfortunate," Gubin said by phone. "For 15 years they were a perfectly good guardian" and "a well-run building," he said. "You wouldn't think it was fair to be judged on your worst day."

Blisko and an Infinity lawyer did not respond to requests for comment.

Strawberry Fields, which owns 10 assisted living facilities and two long-term care hospitals in addition to the nursing homes, earned net income last year of $33 million from $155 million in rent, a 21% profit margin, securities filings show. Gubin said those weren't excessive returns.

A $110 million verdict

Traditionally, REIT leases make the operating companies responsible for paying property taxes, insurance premiums, and maintenance costs. In 2008, Congress gave health care REITs a new option to make money: On top of collecting rents, they could set up subsidiaries and take profits directly from health care businesses. They still must have independent management overseeing care decisions. Many REITs have embraced the role even though the subsidiaries must pay corporate taxes and risk losing money if the businesses do poorly.

Colony Capital was a REIT that through layers of shell corporations owned both the building and the operation of Greenhaven Estates, a Sacramento assisted living and memory care facility. In 2018 Greenhaven paid Colony $1.4 million in rent, nearly a third of its $4.5 million in revenue that year, according to financial records filed in court.

Greenhaven also was on the verge of losing its license, according to a revocation notice filed in November 2018 by the California Department of Social Services. Greenhaven had racked up years of health violations, including from letting untrained workers administer medications, lacking enough employees to care for people with dementia, and neglecting a resident who smeared feces over his body, bed, floor, and bathroom, the notice said.

In February 2019, a few weeks after celebrating her 100th birthday, Mildred Hernandez, a resident with Alzheimer's, wandered out of Greenhaven in the middle of the night. Her assisted living wing had no exit door alarms even though it housed several residents with dementia, court records showed. Berta Lepe, one of Greenhaven's caregivers, found Hernandez under a bush, wearing only a shirt and underwear. The temperature was in the 30s.

Mildred Hernandez is pictured in a midrange photograph. She is smiling broadly and has curly gray hair.

Mildred Hernandez was 100 when she died of hypothermia after wandering out of her assisted living facility in the middle of the night. A jury awarded $92 million in punitive damages against the owner of the home.
Ric Tapia

"She was talking, but I couldn't understand what she was saying," Lepe testified at trial over a lawsuit from Hernandez's family. Hernandez died of hypothermia a few hours later, according to her death certificate.  Frontier Management, the company that Colony had hired to manage Greenhaven, denied liability and settled the lawsuit on undisclosed terms.

Since the lawsuit, Colony has changed its name to DigitalBridge, which no longer owns Greenhaven and gave up its REIT status. At trial earlier this year, DigitalBridge said resident care was the responsibility of Frontier and that Colony "encouraged" Frontier to address problems. Richard Welch, a former Colony executive, testified that replacing management is disruptive. "I viewed it as a last resort," he said.

In March, a jury awarded Hernandez's family a total of $110 million: $10 million in compensatory damages, $92 million in punitive damages against DigitalBridge, and $8 million in punitive damages against Formation Capital, an asset management company.

"REIT money is very detached from knowing about or caring about patient or resident outcomes, because it's not in their business model," Ed Dudensing, a lawyer for the family, said in an interview. "Their allegiance is to their investors."

DigitalBridge has asked the judge to delay finalizing the judgment while its legal challenges to the lawsuit and the verdict are evaluated. A DigitalBridge attorney and a corporate spokesperson did not respond to requests for comment, a Formation attorney declined comment, and a Frontier attorney and a spokesman did not respond to a request for comment.

'Wet from head to toe'

When CareTrust bought City Creek Post-Acute and Assisted Living in 2019, the Sacramento nursing home where Pearlene Darby lived had a one-star Medicare rating and was losing money. CareTrust leased the building to a management company called Kalesta Healthcare Group based on the business plan Kalesta submitted.

While CareTrust was not the operator, it held periodic phone calls with Kalesta, which provided "a full update of what's happening at the facility," including changes in leadership, financial progress, and health inspection survey results, according to deposition testimony by Ryan Williams, a Kalesta co-founder.

According to a state inspection report, in 2020, the year Darby died, City Creek left a resident in soiled linens "wet from head to toe lying in bed" for more than eight hours. During a different visit, a health inspector cited the home after watching a nurse put a dirty diaper back onto a resident after caring for a wound. "It was just a small stool and it is far from where the wound is," the nurse told the inspector, according to the report.

James Callister, CareTrust's chief investment officer, said in his deposition that CareTrust officials "review results of regulatory surveys provided to us by the tenant. We review the five-star rating." He said, "We evaluate results of care, but we do not evaluate types of care given or how or when, no."

Darby had been living in City Creek since 2011 after a stroke left her in a wheelchair. She needed help getting in and out of bed. From September through November 2020, Darby lost 30 pounds, her family's lawsuit alleged. During those months, employees dropped her three times as one worker rather than the required two operated the mechanical lift, the lawsuit said.

The suit alleged City Creek failed to reposition her every two hours in bed or her wheelchair, which is the clinical standard for people at risk of bedsores, and to promptly order devices to protect her skin.

In November, the nursing home sent Darby to the hospital. A blood test found bacteria had entered her bloodstream from her feces' touching open skin wounds, according to the lawsuit. The hospital diagnosed her with sepsis. A surgeon said she needed an operation to redirect fecal waste from her intestines but concluded she wasn't medically stable enough for surgery, the suit said.

Darby began receiving comfort care measures and was sent back to City Creek. She died two weeks later. In court filings, CareTrust and Kalesta denied the allegations.

In a phone interview, Williams, the Kalesta co-founder, said Darby's death occurred during the most challenging point of the COVID-19 pandemic, when California rules required any nurses testing positive for the virus to be sent home and nurses were quitting out of fear for their health. "It was the most herculean of professional efforts to secure enough staff," he said.
While expressing sympathy for Darby and her family, he said it was "unconscionable" that personal injury lawyers sued nursing homes over care failures during "the worst of times."

In court, CareTrust petitioned Judge Richard Miadich to dismiss it from the lawsuit before trial. "This case does not concern a property condition," CareTrust's lawyers wrote. "CareTrust is simply a landlord." But the judge ruled last year a jury should decide whether CareTrust "exercised actual control over City Creek."

The case was settled out of court a few months later. All parties declined to reveal the settlement terms.

A 67% profit

As recently as November 2023 — four years after its acquisition — City Creek earned one star from Medicare. It was cited for failing to have the minimum nursing home staffing required by California law during five of 24 randomly selected days in 2022, according to an inspection report. Williams said in the interview that Kalesta had increased spending on nursing over the course of its ownership, including boosting wages, but that it takes a year or two to turn around a troubled nursing home. He said the home's star rating in 2023 was dragged down by its poor inspection history from before Kalesta took over.

Full Article & Source:
Real estate investors are buying up long-term care facilities. Residents can suffer 

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Connecticut conservator must forfeit $20K for fees collected after clients died, state says

By Bill Cummings 


A court-appointed conservator improperly billed the state’s probate courts for representing people who had died and improperly collected certain fees, a state investigation determined. 

Lisa Foy, a Canton attorney who worked in probate courts from Torrington to Niantic, forfeited $20,859 in fees that the state had overpaid her, after the investigation found this amount was over-billed and incorrectly billed, according to an agreement with the state. A review of Foy’s billing practices “revealed a pattern of billing for matters in which the protected persons have been deceased,” read a July 11 letter addressed to her. There were also instances in which she was collecting the full fee when she was not entitled because she had been appointed as conservator with one or more other people, according to Sept. 30 settlement with the Probate Court Administrator.

Foy, who began resigning from conservatorships last year while the state investigation was underway, expressed remorse over her actions.

“It is hard to imagine that my billing errors were errors but as hard as it is to imagine, I made mistakes,” Foy said in a statement to CT Insider last month. “There were many contributing factors but the only one that matters is that I failed to sufficiently review my bills to avoid the mistakes. I deeply regret and I am sorry that this happened.”

Foy said as soon as the mistakes “were brought to my attention, I engaged in a long and thorough review cooperatively, with the Probate Court Administration and immediately paid back all the funds that were paid to me in error.”

State records show Foy has earned $911,234 since 2016 for her work as a probate court conservator. Like many state-appointed conservators, Foy often represented clients unable to assist themselves or afford private representation and settled their estates after they died.

A letter from the Probate Court Administrator’s office shows the state last summer informed the Auditors of Public Accounts of its investigation into Foy’s billing, which began in April 2025.

“In reviewing the matters in which Attorney Foy was appointed as conservator, PCA determined that Attorney Foy billed, and was paid, for services provided to deceased protected person and billed at the full contract conservator rate when she was entitled to only one-half as there was another professional co-conservator,” Beverly Streit, the probate court administrator, told auditors in a July 15, 2025 letter.

“Attorney Foy is working cooperatively with this office to resolve the billing and overpayment issues,” Streit added. “We will keep you informed as to any such resolution.”

In response to questions from CT Insider, the probate court administrator’s office declined specific comment.

“Please know that this office’s statutory function is to support the operations of the Connecticut Probate Courts and to develop legislation, regulations, and policies to improve the Probate Court system,” the administrator’s office said in a statement. “We are unable to provide comment on matters pending before the courts.”

Conservator pay

Court-appointed conservators often make far less than private attorneys performing similar duties. The basic fee for a state conservator is set at $52 an hour, state records show, and there are caps on the amounts they can earn over certain time periods. As a result, court-appointed conservators often take on a large volume of clients to offset the earning restrictions.

For example, a conservator representing a person in a nursing home can earn no more than $600 over the first six-month period and $300 annually after that initial period. If a client has a psychiatric disability, the pay increases to $1,200 for the first six months of representation and then $1,200 annually after that initial period.

If a client does not reside in a nursing home or similar facility, the conservator can make no more than $1,200 during the first six months of representation and $600 annually after that initial period.

Resignation

A review of probate court records showed Foy began resigning from her conservatorships while the state investigation into her billing was underway, a fact Foy confirmed.

“In May of 2025, I began resigning from my files with the Probate Courts as the system could not pay me for services rendered while the review was ongoing and they couldn't guarantee when I would be entitled to and paid future payments for work that had been performed,” Foy explained in a statement to CT Insider.

“As a result, I pursued other opportunities,” Foy noted. “I was asked by the Probate Court Administration and the Probate Courts to remain as conservator on my files and to accept new files. Instead, I made the decision that this chapter in my professional life had regrettably come to an end.”

Foy added “as soon as the mistakes were brought to my attention, I engaged in a long and thorough review cooperatively, with the Probate Court Administration and immediately paid back all the funds that were paid to me in error.”

Court records show Foy often told the various courts where she was resigning that she had taken a new job or employment. Some of the courts where Foy represented clients included Torrington, Tolland, Hartford, Niantic, Mansfield, Litchfield, Bristol and Ellington.

Paper Trail

The letters from the probate court administrator show an evolving process that resulted in varying estimates for Foy’s overbilling, negotiations over invoices and acknowledgement by the state that some suspect invoices were legitimate. The final agreement between Foy and the state covered the period between December 2017 and December 2024, the settlement said.

In a July 11, 2025 letter to Foy, the probate court’s chief counsel, Heather Dostaler, listed the allegations in considerable detail. The letter also indicated Foy was actively auditing her own billing and had found additional examples of discrepancies.

“In the majority of these matters you failed to file any conservator reports, which are required to be submitted annually, and did not file an inventory or financial report unless faced with removal by the court,” Dostaler noted.

“In addition, there appears to be a pattern where you failed to timely notify the courts of the death of the conserved person, sometimes for years, and there were fee waivers signed under penalty of false statement on which you reported income after the person's death,” Dostaler said.

At the time of the letter, Foy was told she owed just over $16,000 to the state. That figure later grew to nearly $21,000, including deductions based on documents Foy submitted which the state agreed showed that certain suspected billing was proper.

An Aug. 20, 2025 letter from Dostaler established the final cost to Foy for the overbilling and how the matter would be settled.

“Based upon the foregoing review, we have determined that the total amount of $20,859.00 has been improperly paid to you as a result of your over- or incorrect billing,” Dostaler wrote.

The money, Dostaler explained, would be deducted from a scheduled payment to Foy.

Full Article & Source:
Connecticut conservator must forfeit $20K for fees collected after clients died, state says 

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Parent Workshop: Supported Decision-Making, Guardianship, and Other Alternatives