and Robyn Karashik
Full Article & Source:
Conservator for Waterbury man allegedly held captive wants to sue the state
News 12 Staff and Robyn Karashik
ByTim Caputo and Bianca Buono
Residents across four neighborhoods in Carson woke up to a law enforcement investigation into elder abuse on Wednesday. The operation was led by the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department, in partnership with the L.A. County Fire Department, the California Department of Justice and others.
Deputies served warrants at four homes starting around 6 a.m.
Tina De los Reyes lives next door to one of them. She says for years, she's seen several elderly patients living at the home, but no one caring for them. On Wednesday morning, she watched as one patient was rescued by first responders.
"I'm just concerned, because they're old lady like me. And then one time, me and my sister saw a guy fell down there," De los Reyes said.
On Enslow Drive, another home was marked with a notice barring occupancy. Neighbors there said they were relieved to see the police activity.
Investigators say they've been looking into the homes since Feb. 24, when they responded to a call for service at one of them. They found and rescued seven elderly patients that day, who they say were malnourished and neglected.
On Wednesday, they rescued three more.
Eyewitness News was there when deputies showed up at a home on W. 234th Place shortly before 7 a.m. An elderly man was sitting by himself outside on the lawn.
"We are definitely continuing the investigation to see if we can rescue more," said Lt. Quiana Penn from the LASD Carson Station.
Investigators arrested 80-year-old Gary Hogg and 72-year-old Alicia Hogg, accusing them of elder abuse and fraud.
Business records indicate Alicia's company is called Abundant Care Home Inc. Additional state records show both Alicia and Gary operate a nonprofit called Global Covenant Christian Churches.
"The care was not happening from what we could see, and they were also unlicensed. So they were not abiding by any California laws or county statutes," Penn said.
The victims who were rescued were treated and taken to more appropriate facilities to get the care and attention they need. Investigators believe there could be more victims out there, and anyone with information is encouraged to contact the LASD Carson Station.
Full Article & Source:
Carson couple arrested in elder abuse investigation; 10 victims rescued
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — A Lake Worth Beach woman accused of taking advantage of a declining elderly woman financially entered a plea in court.
According to court documents in Palm Beach County, Nerlande Charles, 42, pled guilty Tuesday to exploitation of an elderly person or disabled adult, fraudulent use of personal identification information of a dead victim and money laundering.
![]() |
Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office
|
Charles was sentenced to five years in state prison, credited with 295 days of time served in county jail and must pay court costs. After her prison sentence is completed, Charles will serve four years of probation.
The court ordered Charles not to have contact with the niece of the dead victim and no contact with the property or the family of the dead victim.
Charles was banned by the court from working as a home health aide, working inside another home, working to care for a disabled adult or elderly person, and she must obtain a job after her prison time is served.
Charles was working for the elderly victim in 2022 as a caretaker when she wrote checks and had the client, who was in mental decline, sign the checks.
Charles took a car from the victim and claimed the victim gave it to her as a “gift.” It was also discovered that Charles made unauthorized transactions on the victim’s account for over $300,000.
Charles also made transactions on the victim’s account before the victim died at age 81. The niece of the victim discovered the unauthorized transactions and informed the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office.
Full Article & Source:
Lake Worth Beach caretaker pleads guilty to exploiting elderly client
by Amanda Batchelor
Online jail records show Lyne Bien-Aime, 55, was booked into TGK just before 1 p.m. Tuesday.
According to a press release from the Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office, Bien-Aime looted finances from a 71-year-old retired nurse who lived in Miami Shores with her disabled adult daughter.
Prosecutors said prior to her death in 2022, the nurse, Marie Bertrand, suffered a major health episode that left her with a cognitive impairment and need for around-the-clock care.
Prosecutors said the victim met Bien-Aime “through associations with the victim’s church” and he later “misrepresented himself as the victim’s nephew when dealing with local medical authorities.”
“Bien-Aime contacted the victim’s sister and family, residing in New York, falsely claiming to be a medical doctor and promising to oversee her care,“ the press release stated.
Authorities said Bien-Aime then isolated Bertrand and manipulated her for his own gain, including by having her sign a number of legal documents, giving him power of attorney over her, leading to him emptying various bank accounts containing her life savings and also fraudulently transferring her Miami Shores home into his name.
Prosecutors said Bien-Aime also secretly held the victim at his own home instead of allowing her to live out her final days at her residence.
According to prosecutors, Bertrand’s savings were meant to safeguard her daughter’s future after her own death.
Bertrand died on Dec. 16, 2022.
“I believe he killed my sister,” Bertrand’s brother, Vagner Valbrun, said of Bien-Aime. “He (has) to pay for what he did because my sister died.”
Prosecutors said the victim’s daughter, fortunately, was taken to New York by relatives during her mother’s health crisis and she has remained there with relatives after Bertrand’s death.
Bien-Aime has been charged with the following first-degree felonies:
He also faces one count of unlawful filing of false documents or records against real or personal property -- a third-degree felony.
As of Wednesday morning, Bien-Aime was being held at TGK on an $85,000 bond.
Full Article & Source:
Elderly exploitation suspect transferred to Miami-Dade jail after being arrested in Broward
California lawmakers created the Professional Fiduciaries Bureau to
monitor self-dealing in the industry. Twenty years later, the bureau’s
inaction in one case shows how conflicts of interest can continue for
years with little consequence. by Byrhonda Lyons
It was a successful year for Angelique Friend. The entrepreneur was at the pinnacle of her profession in Ventura County. State records show she was overseeing $20 million of her clients’ assets and directing a sizable chunk of that money back into her own household.
As the 2022 holiday season approached, Friend celebrated in style and shared the snapshots on her company’s Facebook page.
She smiled for a photo with Kim Kardashian and Kylie Jenner at a star-studded fundraiser. She stood in front of a white Christmas tree, adorned with white ornaments and bright white lights, shoulder-to-shoulder in matching sleepwear with Kathy Hilton as the socialite launched a holiday pajama line.
It was like a scene from “The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills.” But Friend is not reality TV royalty. She made a name for herself in a less glamorous corner of California: Ventura County Probate Court.
Friend operated a unique system. Besides being paid for her services, she often chose her husband, David Esquibias, to be her lawyer. Then, when her clients needed in-home support, she hired Townsgate In-Home Services to provide their care. Friend knew Townsgate well: Esquibias founded it the year they married.
Friend’s elderly clients often footed the bill for all three services, at least until they could no longer afford or use in-home health care. Then, with the court’s approval, Friend moved them to less-expensive care facilities and sold their homes, court records show. For years, Friend and Esquibias often disclosed their connections to the court, and Judge Roger Lund approved the payments, even though court rules and the California Professional Fiduciary Bureau’s code of conduct generally prohibit such conflicts.
Court records show the couple brought in about $3 million from 2019 to 2025 from clients in the six cases CalMatters reviewed; $2.7 million went to Townsgate. Friend has other clients whose cases don’t require public accounting in court and are not similarly reviewable by the public.
The arrangement was so brazen that court staffers whispered about it, and other attorneys found it troubling.
“Being able to have your own little referral source coming out of the court system. Wow. That should not be allowed,” said Lisa MacCarley, a Los Angeles-area probate attorney who was a prominent advocate for reform during Britney Spears’s conservatorship battle.
Friend wouldn’t agree to an interview for this story. Esquibias did not respond to CalMatters’ questions involving Townsgate.
In a letter to CalMatters, Friend said that she fully complied with state laws that require her to disclose her connection to Townsgate, get court approval and make sure the services are in the best interest of her clients.
“I approach every conservatorship with heightened diligence, careful oversight, and full transparency,” Friend wrote in her letter. “My work is designed to withstand scrutiny and ensure the highest standards of care, as consistently confirmed by the Court and the Bureau.”
But state licensing records indicate she was more involved with Townsgate than she represented to the court. And CalMatters found at least two instances in which she did not disclose to the court that her husband owned Townsgate, at least three cases where Judge Lund called her out for hiring the company without prior court approval, and one case, records show, where she hired Townsgate months before the company was even licensed to provide in-home health care services.
By their nature, the cases that reach conservatorship are often complex and messy. Some people end up there because they’ve been taken advantage of by family, friends or previous caregivers. Others fight their children’s attempts to make decisions for them, or have needs too great for their family members to bear. Some have no children and no one else to take care of them. So the court steps in.
With a judge’s approval, conservators exert vast control over their clients’ lives. They decide who provides them health care and where. They choose how their money is spent. They sell their clients’ assets to pay bills. They can control visitation and communication with family members, setting up the potential for high-stakes and high-emotion confrontations and amplifying the importance of avoiding even the appearance of a conflict of interest.
The state agency created 20 years ago to monitor self-dealing in the industry, the Professional Fiduciaries Bureau, does not report taking any action against Friend for the conflicts.
California lawmakers formed the bureau after a Los Angeles Times investigation exposed self-dealing by conservators and a failure of judges to stop it. Friend’s ability to send millions of dollars in business to her husband’s company highlights how the system continues to rely on individual judges and, even with the bureau in place, conflicts of interest can continue for years with little consequence.
Part of the Department of Consumer Affairs, the bureau forbids real or perceived conflicts of interest explicitly in its rules, saying that fiduciaries must “not engage in any activity where there is the reasonable appearance of a conflict of interest … or reasonably could be perceived as self-serving.”
Friend said she disclosed the connection to the bureau. “The Bureau has renewed my license every year without restriction and has never found that I violated fiduciary ethical standards or any governing law,” Friend wrote.
When CalMatters requested Friend’s reports from the bureau, it provided documents thick with black redaction lines. In 2023, the state Legislature significantly restricted what information the bureau can share with the public.
CalMatters attempted to speak with officials at the bureau for a year. However, they would only respond to emailed questions. The bureau spokesperson, Monica Vargas, declined to say whether Friend complied with its conflict-of-interest rules.
“The court is in a better position to ascertain the performance of the fiduciary and determine whether the various services are in the best interest of the conserved person,” Vargas wrote.
Separate from state regulations, California court rules forbid conflicts broadly, saying that a conservator “must not engage his or her family members to provide services to the conservatee for a profit or fee when other alternatives are reasonably available.” However, the rules allow judges to approve such arrangements if they determine that it’s in the best interest of the conservatee and it’s disclosed.
In tentative rulings, Judge Lund at times expressed concerns about Friend’s conflict of interest. However, those rulings are not final and only show what the judge is thinking. It’s unclear what happened in court because Ventura County stopped requiring transcripts for probate court in 2022.
Lund’s final court orders never mention Townsgate or demand that Friend stop using the company. All of the orders approved their payments. Without official transcripts, it’s impossible to know whether or how Lund addressed the conflicts in court.
The court record doesn’t reflect any of the conservatees’ attorneys objecting to the conflict of interest.
One court transcript from 2022 obtained by CalMatters details what happened when one family challenged Friend’s conflict. “The representation to the Court as I recall is that they … tend to price themselves at or slightly below the market to avoid any problems,” Lund said. “And that is sufficient for the Court.”
Lund and court leaders declined to comment for this story. Weeks after CalMatters sent court officials questions about the approvals, the presiding judge for Ventura County Superior Court announced that he was reassigning Lund, moving him to family court. The move came as a shock to many in the local legal community. In a February hearing, the new judge, Gilbert Romero, expressed skepticism that he could approve Friend’s arrangements with her husband. He told her that “the rule of court says very clearly” that a conservator should avoid “any conflicts or any appearance of conflict.”
Before that, families of the conservatees often raised their concerns with the court and filed complaints with the bureau, to no avail.
“She’s making a lot of money, her and her husband,” said Poppy Helgren. Friend cared for Helgren’s father, Lester Moore, for years. After Friend moved him to a residential care facility, Moore died from extreme constipation that was deemed the result of inadequate care, records show.Carole Herman, a leading eldercare advocate, is one of the first people Californians call when they have a problem with a court-appointed fiduciary. In 2023, she filed a complaint with the Professional Fiduciaries Bureau about Friend’s connection to Townsgate.
The bureau hasn’t reported any response to the complaint, and Vargas would not discuss any pending complaints or investigations, calling them confidential.
“I am totally disappointed and devastated because I worked really hard to get that bureau started, and they have no teeth,” Herman said.
Lester Moore joined the U.S. Navy at age 17. After he was discharged, Moore moved to California, where he went on to work in the airline industry. Moore grew up during the Great Depression, and over his lifetime, he and his wife amassed more than 450 acres of land in his home state of Arkansas, more than a quarter of a million dollars in company stock, and hundreds of thousands of dollars in investments and savings.
Moore ended up in a court-mandated conservatorship after he was diagnosed with dementia and his attorney was accused of professional misconduct. Friend was appointed the conservator in 2012.
For years, Friend relied on a local company to provide Moore’s caregiving services. She ended that relationship and put Townsgate in charge in April 2019, according to court filings. At that point, Townsgate didn’t have a license to provide in-home health care services, according to state records. Home care organizations that operate without a license can be fined $900 a day.
Later that year, Friend married Esquibias, according to her marriage license.
In 2019 and 2020, Moore paid Townsgate $145,000 for care, documents filed with the court show, but the records do not show that Friend disclosed her connection to Townsgate.
Then, in February 2020, Friend moved Moore to residential care and sold his home a few months later. Helgren was immediately concerned about her father’s care at the facility.
“I had put in complaints everywhere about them,” Helgren said.
A year later, Moore died from septic shock from bowel obstruction and fecal impaction. A state investigation found Moore’s death was due to the facility not following Moore’s physician’s orders and its “failure to monitor” Moore’s condition, according to the state report. The facility has since closed.
Some of the others:
Robert Baskin, an attorney whose law firm represented at least two of Friend’s clients who paid Townsgate, said he didn’t see anything wrong with the arrangement as long as it was disclosed and approved by the court.
“I don’t think that it is a conflict for a conservator to hire an affiliated agency like Townsgate,” Baskin said. “They did an outstanding job at a reduced hourly rate.”
He said conservatorships can naturally pit fiduciaries against family members. “You get a lot of people complaining because they are looking at their ultimate inheritance,” Baskin said.
He also had his own financial connection to Friend, property records show. In 2018, his family trust lent her $1 million. The repayment terms of the agreement were not included. Baskin declined to comment on the loan. “I’m not going to comment on my own business dealings. I’ve loaned many people money.”
In her letter, Friend told CalMatters that her “personal finances are entirely appropriate and, apart from what is a matter of public record, private.”
Before becoming a licensed fiduciary, Angelique Friend worked as a business analyst for Countrywide Financial, according to her LinkedIn profile. She got her fiduciary license in 2009 and built her business.
Licensed fiduciaries such as Friend manage affairs for seniors, people with disabilities and children. Fiduciaries can also be appointed by courts to administer estates when someone dies.
In 2017, an appeals court
criticized Friend for her role in delivering an inheritance to two
brothers who had been disinherited in their mother’s will. Friend argued
that because the beneficiary, her grandson, was already dead when his
grandmother died, the assets should be distributed as if she died
without a will.
The Court of Appeal noted that the woman did have
a will; she expressly disinherited her two sons and awarded all the
assets to her grandchild.
Full Article & Source:
She directed $2.7 million from her elderly clients to her husband’s company. The judge approved every penny
TYLER, Texas (KLTV) - A former Tyler banker charged with stealing money from an elderly woman is behind bars once again after police say he stole thousands of dollars from another woman’s bank account before and after she died.
James Dale Turner, 34, of Tyler, was held Tuesday at the Smith County Jail on a $25,000 bond for a warrant charging him with exploitation of the elderly.
In October 2025, a corporate employee at Regions Bank reported Turner to Tyler police after an executor of a Tyler woman’s estate contacted the bank to request account statements, according to an affidavit.
The bank manager recalled requesting a “no post” on the account because of a suspicious transaction: the purchase of a cashier’s check issued by Turner, who was fired from the bank earlier in the year for a similar fraud scheme, according to an affidavit.
Bank records reviewed by police showed dozens of transactions amounting to more than $17,000 during a seven-month period, which occurred before and after the woman died on Feb. 10, 2025, according to the affidavit.
When police contacted Turner about the claims, the former banker admitted to issuing cashier’s checks and depositing them into his personal account at a different bank, according to the affidavit.
Turner did not remember how much money he stole from the woman’s account and said he was not aware of her death, according to the affidavit.
He was arrested Monday and released shortly before noon Tuesday, according to jail records.
During a September 2025 arrest for similar charges, Turner said he was going through bankruptcy and was on the verge of homelessness as he was moving out of his mother-in-law’s house.
In a formal statement, Regions Bank spokesperson Ashley Foster wrote that the woman’s estate had been paid back.
“We appreciate the diligence of law enforcement and the quick thinking of our associates when suspicious activity is detected,” she said in a statement. “The estate in this case has been made whole, and we will continue to cooperate with investigators if there is a need for additional bank assistance.”
Charged with a third-degree felony, Turner could face two to 10 years in prison and up to a $10,000 fine if convicted.Full Article & Source:
Tyler man charged with stealing money from dead woman’s bank account
by Sierra Bolger
In 2023, Lynn Fiedler founded Journey to Justice, a nonprofit dedicated to protecting older adults who can’t protect themselves from abuse, neglect, exploitation and abandonment.
Fiedler, a former school teacher and elder abuse advocate, visited nurses, CNAs, RNs and healthcare workers at Greenwood Village (Independent Living, Memory Care, and Nursing Care) on Tuesday to educate caregivers on dementia and elder abuse.
Fiedler explained different types of abuse, such as physical, emotional, sexual, financial and social media abuse.
Fiedler shared her mother’s story of abuse, stating that an 18-year-old female and a 17-year-old male healthcare workers at Heritage Springs Memory Care center near Lewisburg took naked photos and videos and posted them to their Snapchat accounts.
Fiedler and Kim Rigel of Journey to Justice detailed the abuse that the healthcare workers inflicted on Fiedler’s mother and 16 others.
While completely or partially naked, the patients were recorded, laughed at and some were even made to wear signs around their necks with explicit and foul language written on them, according to Fiedler.
Journey to Justice later developed training sessions for healthcare professionals and the public to deepen understanding of dementia and the challenges it presents.
Fiedler works to improve the lives of nursing home residents and patients through visiting schools, colleges, and healthcare facilities to raise awareness, focusing on preventing abuse and supporting victims.
“Other ways the elderly are abused is with neglect, which can include not bathing, feeding or even socializing with the patient. Seclusion is a form of abuse in which a caregiver will isolate a resident because they may be aggravated or annoyed with them, and there are other ways to handle this,” said Fiedler.
Fiedler and Rigel highlighted the importance of reporting elder abuse.
“I am very passionate about this,” said Fiedler.
Fiedler shared that healthcare workers cannot be fired for reporting abuse, and it is very important to stand up for the elderly.
“If you as a human being can be sitting here right now working in this facility and see abuse and do not feel in your soul to report that, you need to get up and walk out that door because you do not belong in healthcare,” said Fiedler.
Fiedler didn’t stop there; her organization aims to change laws to protect others.
The non-profit organization Journey to Justice has fought to change laws and create new ones, including introducing new bills in Harrisburg with the support of current organization members and the work of Sen. Lynda Culver, R-Pa.
Journey to Justice aims to pass “Alice’s Law” to create a registry for those who abuse older adults in Pennsylvania.
Until then, Journey to Justice supports the elderly by donating tools such as “dementia clocks” to improve residents’ quality of life as part of the Outreach Beneficiary Program.
This program provides items to facilities to make the lives of the older population happier and safer by providing digital calendar day clocks to facilities as well as simple music players designed specifically for dementia patients. The music players are programmable with music themes and are one-touch for easy, independent use.
The nonprofit also funds live music programs with local artists for facilities, expanding its reach even further.
Full Article & Source:
Nonprofit founder advocates against elder abuse
By Julie Calhoun, Jayme Berezdivin
Authorities said 55-year-old Lyne Bien-Aime allegedly stole the life savings of 71-year-old Mary Bertrand as well as her house in Miami Shores.
The Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office announced the arrest of Bien-Aime on Tuesday, who faces multiple felonies, including exploitation of an elderly or disabled person.
Authorities said that Ben-Aime was arrested in Broward County, and will be tried in Miami-Dade.
According to prosecutors, Bien-Aime stole more than $300,000 from Betrand, who lived in Miami Shores with her disabled adult daughter.
“In this case, the defendant knew exactly what he was doing; he was going to take advantage, and he did, of these two vulnerable adults,” said Miami-Dade County State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle. “And he will have to stand in court and be held accountable.”
The victim’s brother shared his joy at Aimie’s arrest.
“So glad, because my family was asked for that, prayed for that, because she deserved justice,” said Vagnre Velbrun. “He complained and said, ‘The house is not good, she can’t come back to the house.'”
Authorities alleged that Bien-Aime was an acquaintance of Bertrand through the church and took advantage of her after a major health episode left her with cognitive impairment and needing around-the-clock care.
Prosecutors said that he lied to her family, claimed that he was a doctor, and isolated her to gain access to her finances.
They also said that the money and property were intended to secure her daughter’s future.
“He went straight to the bank, and we dropped all money, he don’t leave a dollar for my niece,” said Velbrun.
Bien-Aime is also accused of having Bertrand sign over power of attorney to transfer half of the deed of her home to himself while she was in a rehabilitation facility.
“He pretended to be a family member, he pretended to be a doctor, these are all false representations that he made to hospitals, to banks,” said Rundle. “And of course he turned on her, he betrayed her, and he stole from her.”
Prosecutors say this false sense of trust allowed Bien-Aime to drain accounts and transfer money to her home into his name.
They added that Bertrand was kept from spending her final days in her home, instead kept her in his home until she passed away in 2022.
“When she finally passed, within hours he wrote a check to himself on her bank account,” said Rundle.
Velbrun said justice had finally arrived after four years.
“Only justice have to get him what he deserves, because he’s doing a terrible thing,” he said.
A court hearing took place on Tuesday. Bien-Aime did not appear, but his attorneys showed up on his behalf and objected to his arrest.
Another hearing is set for March 9.
Full Article & Source:
Man charged with exploitation of elderly woman in Miami Shores; victim’s family speaks out
By Grace Koennecke
LOGAN COUNTY, W.Va. (WSAZ) - A woman from Logan County is facing multiple charges, including financial exploitation of the elderly/incapacitated adult, according to a criminal complaint.
On February 13, a complaint was received from the Logan County Sheriff’s Office about a ResCare Community Living worker stealing money from a resident.
Deputies stated they talked with the executive director of ResCare. The executive director stated the resident was currently admitted into the Mildred Mitchell Bateman Hospital and had been there since around December 20, 2025.
The criminal complaint states after further investigation, deputies found that the resident’s bank card had been used on multiple occasions by the ResCare worker.
Deputies also found that since December 20, 2025, various transactions had been made on the resident’s card between Walmart, Kroger, Dollar Tree and Speedway, totaling under $2,000 in fraudulent transactions that can be proven at this time.
According to the criminal complaint, the ResCare worker purchased items not consistent with the well-being of the resident and was observed obtaining money from the transactions as cash back on multiple occasions.
Deputies were able to obtain E-Witness Evidence from the locations where the ResCare worker was seen using a green in color card that was consistent with the dates and times of the purchases on the resident’s card.
Deputies stated they found a transaction the ResCare worker made at Walmart where she used her phone to pay and the charge went onto the resident’s card.
The criminal complaint states deputies also discovered that the resident received a weekly allowance provided by ResCare, totaling $10 on a check.
The ResCare worker, Brooke Vance, was arrested and charged with financial exploitation of the elderly/incapacitated adult, forgery & uttering, fraudulent use of an access device, grand larceny, obtaining money by false pretenses, and fraudulent schemes.
Vance is currently out on bond.
Her preliminary hearing is scheduled for March 5 at 10:30 a.m.
Full Article & Source:
ResCare worker facing multiple charges for using resident’s bank card