A St. Louis County man was indicted by a grand jury, accused of sexually abusing a dementia patient.
Source:
Dementia patient sexually abused by medical employee, police say
A St. Louis County man was indicted by a grand jury, accused of sexually abusing a dementia patient.
Source:
Dementia patient sexually abused by medical employee, police say
ATLANTA, Ga. - A new law now on Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp’s desk would give banks and credit unions a tool to temporarily delay certain transactions when there is reasonable cause to suspect financial exploitation.
House Bill 945 applies to an “eligible adult,” defined in the bill as someone 65 or older or a disabled adult. Under the bill, a financial institution may place a hold on the execution of a financial transaction if it has reasonable cause to suspect the transaction may involve, facilitate, result in, or contribute to financial exploitation.
The bill allows holds on transactions involving:
If a hold is placed, the financial institution must notify in writing all parties authorized to transact business on the account and any “trusted contact” on the account within three business days, unless the institution reasonably believes those people may be involved in the suspected exploitation.
The institution must also initiate a review of the facts and circumstances that led to the hold.
A hold expires on the 15th business day after it is placed, but the financial institution may extend the hold for up to an additional 15 business days if its review continues to support a reasonable belief of financial exploitation.
The bill says the length of a hold may be shortened or extended by a court. It would allow an eligible adult to designate at least one trusted contact on an account. A financial institution could contact that person to address possible financial exploitation or other concerns related to account administration.
To add a trusted contact, account holders should speak directly with their bank or credit union.
HB 945 includes immunity provisions for financial institutions and their employees who act in good faith and exercise reasonable care under the bill.
The bill’s current version does not include a specific effective date clause. That typically means it would take effect upon the governor’s signature, unless another date is set in the final enrolled act.
To report suspected elder financial abuse to your bank or credit union, ask to speak with a fraud or compliance officer.
You should also file a police report with your local department if you believe you or a loved one is the victim of financial exploitation or fraud. Keep a copy of the report number; you may need it when contacting your bank, an attorney or a state agency.
You can also report it to these agencies:
Full Article & Source:
New law aims to protect Ga. seniors from financial exploitation
Story by Iman Palm
The investigation, known as Operation Skip Trace, resulted in the arrest of five people after searches of 10 locations in Southern California. In addition, two handguns and over $757,000 in cash were seized.
DOJ filed three criminal complaints charging 21 defendants with conspiracy to commit health care fraud, health care fraud, money laundering, and identity theft. Prosecutors also added aggravated white‑collar crime and aggravated money‑laundering enhancements.
“This isn’t a political game for us. This is about protecting taxpayer dollars, protecting the programs that sick and vulnerable Californians rely on, and protecting our state,” Bonta said in a statement. “Over the life of this fraud scheme, not a single legitimate hospice service was ever provided, yet millions were billed in a brazen, calculated scheme that exploited the Medi-Cal system. This wasn’t a mistake or a loophole; it was deliberate fraud.”
The California Department of Justice launched the investigation after receiving a credible fraud allegation from the Department of Health Care Services.
According to investigators, the suspects purchased personal information for non‑California residents on the dark web and used those stolen identities to enroll individuals in Medi‑Cal through Covered California.
Authorities say 14 hospice companies were then purchased using straw owners, and billers submitted claims for hospice services that were never provided. The fraudulent billing totaled approximately $267 million.
During Bonta’s tenure, the DOJ conducted 294 hospice‑related investigations, filed 119 criminal cases, and secured 51 convictions tied to hospice fraud.
Full Article & Source:
California officials dismantle $267M hospice fraud network, 21 suspects charged
WISCONSIN RAPIDS − A 65-year-old Nekoosa woman was sentenced April 10 to eight years of probation and must pay $82,438 restitution for stealing from an elderly Arizona woman's account.
Janice A. Christiansen pleaded guilty April 10 to theft in a business setting. Wood County Circuit Judge Timothy Gebert withheld a prison sentence and placed Christiansen on probation. He ordered her to pay $82,438 restitution, with $5,000 to be paid by May 11 and $500 a month to be paid starting June 1. Gebert also ordered Christiansen to undergo any counseling deemed necessary, have no contact with the victim and not to serve as a guardian or power of attorney for anyone other than her spouse.
According to the criminal complaint, on Nov. 10, an investigator from the state of Arizona contacted the Wood County Sheriff's Office and said she was investigating fraudulent spending from an 82-year-old Tucson, Arizona, woman's bank account. The woman has dementia and is in an assisted-living community, the investigator said.
The investigator said Christiansen had been spending money out of the woman's personal account for about two years, dating back to about June 1, 2023. The investigator said a check for $10,500 was written on the account, as well as ATM withdrawals at machines at the Ho-Chunk Casino and White-Tail Crossing in Nekoosa. The total amount was between $20,000 and $30,000.
Officials learned Christiansen had the woman's "power of attorney," according to the complaint. The automatic payments to the woman's assisted-living center had been turned off and a check written to the facility had bounced. Notice of termination of the 82-year-old woman's patient status with the center was given because she was about $32,000 past due, according to the complaint.
Officials chose a random month, May 2024, to look closely at transactions. During the month, they found 17 cash withdrawals all made in Wood County, according to the complaint. No withdrawals were made in Arizona.
The total amount of Christiansen's withdrawals from the elderly woman's account minus deposits she made from June 25, 2023, to Feb. 3, 2025, was $59,410, according to the complaint.
Christiansen told investigators she and her husband got to know the older woman when the couple was going down to Arizona during the winter for seven years. Christiansen said she and her husband stopped going to Arizona about three years ago. Christiansen said the woman asked her to become her power of attorney, according to the complaint.
Christiansen said she struggled to pay the elderly woman's rent because the woman received $4,000 a month income and rent was about $3,500, according to the complaint. The investigator went over the woman's monthly expenses and income with Christiansen and she agreed there should be a monthly surplus of about $270, according to the complaint.
Christiansen said the facility had increased the rates. She called them several times to try to verify the rent but she couldn't get the information, she said. Christiansen said she became confused about how much the rent was and how much back pay was owed, according to the complaint.
Investigators learned Christiansen had lost $150,000 gambling at a casino. Christiansen said she didn't believe the whole amount she lost came from the older woman's account. When the investigator asked Christiansen how much she thought she had taken from the woman, Christiansen said she didn't know but she thought it might be between $50,000 and $60,000.
Full Article & Source:
Nekoosa woman gets 8 years probation for theft from elderly AZ woman
Two decades after Pinellas County resident Terri Schiavo died following high-profile legal, political and ethical battles over removing her feeding tube, a state appeals court has rejected an attempt to unseal records about the case.
A three-judge panel of the 2nd District Court of Appeal on Wednesday denied the attempt by Schiavo’s brother and mother — Bobby and Mary Schindler — and an advocacy group, the Terri Schiavo Life & Hope Network.
Schiavo died March 31, 2005, 15 years after she sustained severe brain damage because of a cardiac arrest at age 26. Her husband, Michael Schiavo, sought permission in 1998 to remove her feeding tube, drawing fierce opposition from her brother and parents.
The case drew national attention and sparked lengthy legal fights and debates in the Florida Legislature and Congress, with Gov. Jeb Bush helping lead efforts to prevent the removal of the feeding tube. Courts allowed the removal, ultimately resulting in Terri Schiavo’s death.
Wednesday’s opinion rejected an attempt by the Schindlers and the advocacy group to open records in a guardianship case. Michael Schiavo was his wife’s guardian after her incapacitation.
The opinion said Bobby Schindler and the group sought to intervene in the long-closed case as a step toward opening the records. It said Mary Schindler did not need to intervene because she had been a party to the case. But it upheld a circuit judge’s decision denying their requests.
In part, the opinion cited a state law aimed at keeping guardianship records confidential. Chief Judge Matthew Lucas wrote that the “fact that Ms. Schiavo passed away many years ago” did not “diminish the importance of the confidentiality the legislature afforded her guardianship records.”
“Finally, and perhaps most glaringly, none of the appellants [the Schindlers and the group] have ever explained why they waited nearly two decades after Ms. Schiavo’s death before filing a motion to unseal her guardianship records,” the opinion, joined by Judges Stevan Northcutt and Craig Villanti, said. “Their failure to address that pertinent question would seem fatal to their argument that good cause justified unsealing these confidential documents.”
Similarly, the opinion said Bobby Schindler and the group did not provide adequate reasons for intervening, saying their only justification “is that they wish to see what is in the sealed guardianship records so that they can, perhaps, use whatever they might find in their public advocacy. We agree with the circuit court that that is an insufficient basis to permit intervention in a case that ended more than twenty years ago.”
In a January news release on the group’s website, Bobby Schindler said the appeal was “about transparency, constitutional rights, and the pursuit of truth.”
“These documents may contain information that could alter the historical understanding of Terri’s case,” he said in a prepared statement. “There is no valid justification for continued secrecy after two decades.”
Bobby Schindler is president of the group, which says on its website that it has “advocated for and assisted thousands of medically vulnerable patients and families” since its founding in 2005.
Full Article & Source:
Terri Schiavo Guardianship Records to Remain Confidential, Court Rules - State Affairs
See Also:
Terri Schiavo
When Bruce Knopf needed someone to oversee his brother Vinyasi’s special needs trust in 2012, he said, he turned to Donna Bogdanovich because she was licensed by California.
As a professional fiduciary, Bogdanovich was paid to manage Vinyasi’s money.
But over time, she stopped paying the bills, and the consequences piled up. His car broke down. He faced eviction. “There were times I went without food,” said Vinyasi, who legally goes by one name.
So he turned to the Professional Fiduciaries Bureau, the place Californians are supposed to rely on in situations like these. Vinyasi filed a complaint in June 2019, alleging that Bogdanovich had not paid his rent and was “habitually” late paying his other bills.
The bureau didn’t take action against her at the time, and Vinyasi said he eventually became homeless.
It turns out that Vinyasi wasn’t alone. The bureau started getting complaints about Bogdanovich just months after the agency awarded her a license, giving her the authority to control the finances and lives of vulnerable people deemed unable to take care of themselves.
Over the years, the bureau fined her multiple times for not providing records during an investigation and operating with an expired license. In fact, about a year before Vinyasi’s complaint, someone warned the bureau that Bogdanovich was transferring money between client accounts, but the complaint didn’t go far. The bureau closed the complaint because it didn’t have contact information for the alleged victim. Bogdanovich maintained power over Vinyasi’s life.
Years later, even after police stepped in and arrested her on charges of stealing $2.5 million of her clients’ funds, Bogdanovich maintained total control over Vinyasi’s finances for nearly 10 more months before she resigned.
Two decades ago, the California Legislature designed the Professional Fiduciaries Bureau after a Los Angeles Times investigation showed judges were not preventing abuse and insider dealing. The state gave the bureau the responsibility to license fiduciaries, enforce the law and uphold ethical standards.
An ongoing investigation by CalMatters, based on a review of probate court records, agency documents and interviews with scores of affected families, found that the agency has failed to fulfill its vital promise to protect Californians, even as the state’s population ages.
It hasn’t stopped conflicts prohibited by its own code of conduct or outrageous behavior by California fiduciaries, frustrating desperate families trying to protect their loved ones and hold on to their family wealth.
The information it maintains on fiduciaries is often kept secret or is sometimes inaccurate, giving the people who rely on the industry little information about who they should — and shouldn’t — trust. The agency operates largely on an honor system, leaving it to fiduciaries to report publicly whether they’ve been removed from a case for misconduct.
The bureau itself has puttered along with no leader and a few employees. Gov. Gavin Newsom hasn’t filled its open chief position for a year and a half. In fact, it has just one employee at the moment, because two of its other three positions are also vacant, an agency spokesperson told CalMatters. The bureau oversees nearly 900 licensed fiduciaries; it said it also gets support from its parent agency, the Department of Consumer Affairs.
In 2025, the agency received 174 complaints. The bureau can fine and cite fiduciaries for violations such as late annual statements and inaccurate information relatively quickly. In 2025, the bureau took 58 days, on average, to issue a citation.
However, seriously punishing a fiduciary usually takes longer. That same year, the bureau took, on average, more than two years from the time of a complaint to suspend, revoke or surrender a license.
The bureau has revoked the licenses of five fiduciaries since 2022, according to the agency’s annual reports.
“Why put up a false front that they’re there to serve a purpose? They don’t serve any purpose,” Vinyasi said. “Even if you couldn’t fix the problems, at least erase the lie that they’re there to do something, because they don’t do anything.”
CalMatters tried to speak with someone at the agency for over a year for this series, but the Department of Consumer Affairs would not make anyone available for an interview, citing its open director job.
Newsom’s spokesperson, Izzy Gardon, said in an email that the governor is “actively recruiting to fill the position.”
Bogdanovich’s scheme didn’t unravel until a victim went to the Los Angeles Police Department in 2022.
All told, she pleaded no contest to taking more than $160,000 from Vinyasi and over $1 million from her other clients, court records show, continuing to funnel their money to her accounts even after the bureau placed her on probation.
At the bureau’s request, the court suspended Bogdanovich’s license weeks after she was arrested, while the agency waited for a hearing to revoke her license. The suspension didn’t remove her from any of her appointments.
The bureau’s records indicated that Bogdanovich was managing 24 open cases and $2.8 million in assets while she sat in jail, a bureau investigator told the court in a March 2024 letter. The state eventually revoked Bogdanovich’s license four months after her arrest.
In response to questions, agency spokesperson Monica Vargas said in an email that “the Bureau must do its due diligence to gather facts and collect evidence to take action against a license.”
Bogdanovich eventually was sentenced to four years in jail and four under supervision. She did not respond to CalMatters’ request for an interview.
For years, as the bureau investigated Bogdanovich, she avoided serious punishment simply by not cooperating, according to the bureau.
At the time, the agency didn’t have the authority to revoke a license for refusing to respond to an investigation.
The Legislature closed that loophole in 2023. At the same time, the bureau got the Legislature to further restrict the information it can share with the public.
The bureau cannot share publicly:
Instead of receiving details that would show a fiduciary’s past issues, the public can only see a document that’s essentially a wall of black ink, with only yes-or-no boxes that may or may not be accurately checked.
Carole Herman, an advocate who helped start the bureau, said the Legislature should take a look at it. “They’re insufficiently staffed and funded,” Herman said. “Nobody is really monitoring like they should.”
She thought the bureau would provide strong oversight. “But that’s not how it turned out,” she said.
If you read Leyla Zabih’s annual statements, you’d have no idea she resigned as a conservator after a family objected to her spending and then didn’t follow a court-approved settlement agreement.
Nancy Encarnacion’s family and Adult Protective Services had worked together to move the 83-year-old to assisted living in 2019 because she and her husband couldn’t afford 24-hour home care.
Later that year, Zabih petitioned the court to be Encarnacion’s conservator, saying that Contra Costa County Adult Protective Services had notified her that Encarnacion wasn’t capable of taking care of herself.
Zabih told the court that Encarnacion was at risk of being kicked out of the facility if she didn’t have a conservator to manage her care and finances. Probate law requires that family members be notified when someone files for a temporary conservatorship, but Zabih requested an exemption, citing medical and financial emergencies.Encarnacion herself wasn’t outright against the conservatorship, but she didn’t want Zabih in charge after finding her to be “rude and bossy,” Encarnacion’s attorney told the court.
A judge approved Zabih’s petitions. Encarnacion’s relatives, on the East Coast, said they were taken aback by how quickly they lost control of Encarnacion’s life.
After the family complained about Zabih hiring an unlicensed contractor to remodel Encarnacion’s home, court records show Zabih denied it. She portrayed the family as meddling, saying “the steady stream of negative and critical input we receive from Nancy’s extended family has become extremely counterproductive.”
A few months later she conceded the family was correct about the unlicensed contractor, court records show.
The family grew concerned after learning that Zabih sold Encarnacion’s Chevron stock at a significant loss, paid for 24-hour care while Encarnacion lived in a care home that provided nursing services, and fell behind on paying the rent to the facility, according to an objection that family members filed with the court.
Barreling towards an expensive legal fight, the two sides agreed to a settlement:
Zabih would file a final accounting of Encarnacion’s money and resign.
The elderly woman’s niece would take over and not report Zabih to the
bureau.
Even though the bureau’s rules prohibit licensed fiduciaries from entering into agreements that limit someone’s ability to file a complaint, Judge Susanne M. Fenstermacher approved the settlement in November 2020. Zabih resigned, and Encarnacion died about a month later.
In 2022, court records show, Zabih was not adhering to the agreement. She had not filed a final ledger of Encarnacion’s money, forcing the case back to court.
The court found that Zabih was “in breach” of the settlement agreement and ordered her to explain why the court shouldn’t report her to the bureau for “failure to account and failure to comply with a Court-approved settlement agreement,” a temporary judge wrote in November 2022.
Zabih requested $9,000 in addition to $13,000 she’d already received in compensation.
The family objected and alleged that Zabih employed one of the registered nurses it used for Encarnacion’s care and didn’t disclose the relationship. The court record does not reflect that Zabih responded to the objection, and she did not respond to CalMatters’ question about it.
Fenstermacher did not approve Zabih’s accounting of Encarnacion’s money and denied Zabih’s request for additional pay, saying in an order that “the compensation requested did not benefit the conservatee or her estate.”
The
family also asked Fenstermacher to report Zabih to the bureau for
“failure to properly account, provide receipts and invoices, disclose
affiliate relationships with caregivers/agents she hired, and comply
with the terms of a Court-approved settlement agreement,” according to
the order. But Fenstermacher scribbled out that entire paragraph in the final order.
“I feel like Leyla Zabih should not be a professional fiduciary,” said the family’s attorney, Cara Lankford, in an interview.
As all of this unfolded, Zabih’s annual statements to the bureau made no mention of it.
When asked on her 2021 annual statement if she’d resigned or settled in a case where a complaint had been filed, she checked “no” in response to both questions.
When CalMatters asked Zabih why she didn’t tell the bureau about her resignation, she said, “I plead the Fifth.”
She stood by the care she gave Encarnacion. “I miss Nancy,” she said.
The agency said it relies on its fiduciaries to be transparent.
“Licensees attest to the information they’ve submitted is truthful and accurate,” Vargas said. “If the Bureau becomes aware of information provided that was not accurate, it will open an investigation.”
Encarnacion’s family eventually filed two complaints against Zabih, for hiring an unlicensed contractor and not following the court-ordered agreement.
The bureau cited her in 2023 and 2024
for not filing timely annual statements and operating with an expired
license. The citations do not mention her failure to report the
settlement or her resignation.
In an interview, Zabih blamed her
late annual statement on covid-19, saying she was busy “out holding your
parents’ and grandparents’ hands during the pandemic.”
While late annual statements are often deemed a minor citation, cases reviewed by CalMatters show that fiduciaries who face disciplinary action for more serious offenses often have a previous record of filing late, inaccurate and incomplete annual statements.
Take Iris Hecker, for instance. She had submitted late annual statements to the bureau for nearly a decade.
But the bureau didn’t start investigating until someone complained about how she handled a case in 2022.
That year, Hecker approached Betty Stagnaro while she was in a nursing home receiving rehabilitation for back pain, according to an account Hecker gave to the bureau. Stagnaro, who was 93, had dementia.
Hecker told the state that the nursing home administrator and a private care manager found the friend whom Stagnaro had designated to make her medical decisions “very difficult to work with” and asked Hecker to take over. She said the home wasn’t being paid for Stagnaro’s stay.
Hecker had Stagnaro sign documents to make the switch from the friend.
Unlike conservatorships, which are public and are overseen by a judge, agreements like these are typically private and don’t automatically have court oversight.
However, there were multiple issues with the documents that Stagnaro signed, according to the bureau’s investigation. A patient advocate or ombudsman was not present to witness the signature at the nursing home, as they are supposed to be under state law.
Hecker also didn’t have anyone assess whether Stagnaro was fit enough to sign documents, investigators found.
But the signature put Hecker in charge of Stagnaro’s finances and health care.
Within three months, Hecker sold the elderly woman’s condo and got rid of her personal belongings. She also isolated Stagnaro from her friends while hiring people to provide her with companionship. She later admitted to lying to a bank to create a trust account for Stagnaro, even though the woman didn’t have a trust, according to the bureau’s investigation.
In addition, Hecker paid herself $65,000 in advance fees and admitted to the bureau that the amounts she withdrew from Stagnaro’s accounts as advance payments were “excessive,” according to the bureau’s investigation. She also submitted inaccurate invoices, charged Stagnaro for duplicate services, and billed Stagnaro for her time dealing with an investigation the San Mateo Police Department and the county ombudsman were conducting over her handling of Stagnaro’s case, according to the bureau.
Hecker provided “no credible support for the fees she collected against the advance payments,” the bureau found.
Around the same time, the bureau audited Hecker’s license and discovered that, in addition to her late statements, she had previously worked with an expired license for over a year, according to bureau records. The bureau fined her $5,000.
Hecker told CalMatters that “there was no impropriety.” She said she
believes the bureau is important because “there’s a lot of abuse.”
Hecker said that she was “too tired to fight” the bureau’s accusations,
and she agreed to surrender her license at the end of 2024.
But
that didn’t stop her from working as an unlicensed fiduciary, which
someone can do under very limited circumstances, according to state law.
Even
though the settlement required her to resign from her positions and
confirm her resignation with the bureau, it’s unclear whether she ever
did. Those records are not public, and the bureau would not answer
questions about Hecker.
Last month Hecker signed a document selling her now-deceased client’s San Francisco home for $2.25 million.
When asked about it, Hecker said, “I’m not practicing, I’m just finishing.”
Full Article & Source:
‘A false front’: The California agency failing to stop conservatorship abuses
LAGRANGE, Ga. — A man has turned himself in to police to face charges in connection with a fight that caused a 67-year-old man to be airlifted to a hospital.
LaGrange PD said they responded at about 8:15 p.m. March 29 to 121 Turner St. and found L.B. Hubbard with serious face and head injuries.
Hubbard was airlifted to a Columbus area hospital.
Witnesses described a man who they said attacked Hubbard, even punching and stomping his head while he was on the ground.
On April 9, Larry Cotton, 42, turned himself in to LaGrange PD without incident.
He faces charges of aggravated assault, aggravated battery and elder abuse.
Full Article & Source:
Man turns himself in to face elder abuse, aggravated assault charges
A southern Indiana judge has been chosen for the job, and Floyd Circuit Court Judge Justin Brown said the work is personal.
“My mother has been, you know, she got diagnosed with dementia at 55. So she's been under that, and it's progressed Alzheimer's. So she's one of those people that's in a situation that I would be there to try to help the family with,” Brown said.
Brown said guardianship cases can be traumatic and intimidating to navigate.
“Guardianship cases are inherently traumatic for a lot of people. I mean, think about—you're taking away someone's fundamental right to govern themselves, their own body, because they lack the ability, whether it be from mental condition, from infirmity or from age, when you're talking about a child,” Brown said.
Katie Morgan, executive director of Vulnerable Adult Care Advocates, said a statewide approach is needed.
“I am thrilled to see that we are going to have a statewide task force because uniformity is definitely needed,” Morgan said. “I think it's going to help us, and it will help more of the state be more mission-driven toward guardianship and making sure that people are cared for."
Lauren Broderick, executive director of Court Appointed Special Advocates, said the work matters for children, too.
“The state is recognizing some of the gaps or things that need to be improved upon, or streamlining services for children who have open child welfare cases. And addressing guardianship is all part of that,” Broderick said.
Brown said he wants the process to be less intimidating and ultimately better-suited to serving Hoosiers.
“If you can take away some of that trauma from them, it makes them it makes people more likely to step up to say, 'hey, I've got you,'” Brown said.
The task force was created by a bill Gov. Mike Braun signed into law in March. It passed with bipartisan support in both chambers.
Brown’s term begins in July and runs through December 2027.
Full Article & Source:
Floyd circuit judge to join statewide task force to revise codes for guardianship cases
WILMINGTON, N.C. (WECT) - A video taken by a Wilmington man has gone viral on social media.
Jonathan Pigford said the video shows his elderly neighbor wandering alone and showing signs of neglect. Many people wondered if the situation had reached the level of abuse or neglect.
Sean Dwyer is program manager for adult services at New Hanover County’s Department of Social Services. While he could not speak directly about the viral video, he said that cases like this are tricky to navigate.
Dwyer says that the key to getting someone the help they may need often starts with making a call.
“If it’s just streaming out there for you and other people, and everyone’s talking about it, but no one’s reported it to the entity that needs to be out there to look at it, all it does is delay that person’s care,” Dwyer said.
“I would just encourage them to report. These days, we have lots of different platforms to share information. In the end, we are still the entity that needs that information,” he said.
Dwyer said that knowing the signs of elder abuse before calling is important. It can help the responding agency determine whether it’s abuse or neglect.
“When someone tells us, oh, they’re being abused, a lot of people use it as kind of a blanket term. For us, it’s a caretaker is abusing someone,” Dwyer said. “When it comes to neglect, there’s actually two versions of neglect. We have caretaker neglect and self-neglect.”
Self-neglect (most common):
Caretaker neglect:
Dwyer stated that regardless of whether the signs are clear, an investigation cannot begin until an official report is filed.
“We’re asking if you see enough concern and you’re worried, please do make a report,” Dwyer said.
If you suspect elder abuse, call 910-798-3500.
Full Article & Source:
Viral video prompts questions about elder abuse reporting