Wednesday, March 25, 2026

11-minute hearings, hidden conflicts: inside Oklahoma’s broken guardianship system


by By J.C. Hallman, Oklahoma Watch 

On the afternoon of Aug. 26, 2021, Ismail Safi brought his wife and six children to the Abbey Gate of Kabul International Airport. The Americans were leaving Afghanistan. Crowds of individuals who had worked for the Americans and their families lined up, despite threats of violence, to be screened for seats on a flight out of the country.

At approximately 5:50 p.m., as the family approached the gate, a suicide bomber detonated an explosive device. That blast and another nearby killed 13 Americans and hundreds of Afghans; the bombings became a political cudgel and a violent symbol of the messy end of the longest war in American history.

Ismail Safi’s family was separated in the blast, said Ghulam Nabi Safi, Ismail Safi’s brother. Three of the children were initially missing. Two turned up quickly. But S.S., an 8-year-old girl, appeared to have vanished.

She remained missing for several days. Then her family received a call.

S.S. was on her way to Oklahoma.

What happened next — how a traumatized Afghan child ended up in the custody of an evangelical family she had never met, and how a new guardianship judge with a peculiar background handled the fight by her uncle and biological parents to bring her home — is a story that exposes structural weaknesses at the heart of Oklahoma’s guardianship system: sealed records, shortened hearings, conflicts of interest, and judges working without adequate training or oversight.

It is not a story unique to child guardianships. Multiple attorneys, former judges and national experts who spoke with Oklahoma Watch — some on the condition of anonymity — described systemic problems in both the adult and child guardianship systems in Oklahoma. In the former case, the crisis will grow acute as Oklahoma’s population ages.

Attorneys familiar with Oklahoma’s guardianship proceedings lamented a system beholden to money, resulting in a growing avalanche of pro se cases — that is, individuals who had no other choice but to represent themselves in court.

Harvey Brownstone, a jurist and author who served in the Ontario Court of Justice for 26 years, expressed surprise at Oklahoma’s closed system.

“The system was not designed to be navigated by people who didn’t go to law school,” Brownstone said. “Courts should be open. We can still protect the privacy of the people, without sealing files.”

A Child Unaccompanied

Ghulam Nabi Safi was in a secure location when the bombs went off, having worked as a translator for the U.S. government at the U.S. Embassy. His clearance got him onto a plane; he arrived in the United States on Sept. 1, 2021.

S.S.’s parents were sent to Pakistan. Although they had been cleared for visas, administrative delays had prevented them from being admitted to the United States. Meanwhile, eight-year-old S.S., dazed by the blast, made it through the airport gates on her own.

She found the family of distant cousins, Mohammed and Azizah Hashemi, Safi said. The Hashemis were able to use S.S.’s association with someone who had worked for the Americans to board a plane, Safi said. S.S. arrived in the United States as an unaccompanied minor.

Mohammed Hashemi, reached at a home in Oklahoma City, offered a different account. He said that Ghulam Nabi Safi had approached him at the airport and asked the Hashemis to keep S.S. for 15 days, until Safi could arrive in the U.S. and claim her.

The Hashemis were sponsored in Oklahoma by Jason Garner, an oil and gas executive who is also an elder of Memorial Road Church of Christ and chairman of the board of trustees of Oklahoma Christian Academy. In 2025, Garner joined the board of directors of the Oklahoma City branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City.

Patrick Raglow, executive director of Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of Oklahoma City, recalled the shock of Oklahoma’s Afghan refugee crisis in September 2021. In the year prior to the fall of Kabul, Catholic Charities processed 26 total refugee arrivals. Then came a request from Gov. Kevin Stitt to assist 1,000 arrivals in Oklahoma City and 800 in Tulsa.

“Sometimes we got notice of 12 hours, sometimes it was two days,” Raglow said. “Sometimes it was after they arrived and the airport called and said, ‘Hey, who’s got this family?’”

Garner’s Memorial Road Church took on the largest number of Afghan families of any faith organization that partnered with Catholic Charities, according to a 2023 article in the Christian Chronicle, a publication for the worldwide Churches of Christ network. Raglow said he was aware that some partner organizations viewed the refugee influx as an opportunity.

“Some of them thought that this was a great opportunity to Christianize,” Raglow said.

The Christian Chronicle article documented Memorial Road’s outreach to Afghan refugees, including the Hashemis. The piece made clear that conversion was a goal of the church’s engagement.

‘We Are Going to Take Her

Safi spent months in Virginia working as an advisor for the Kuwaiti embassy and a translation services firm before he had the resources to travel to Oklahoma. When he could finally visit, his niece’s reaction was immediate.

“She was flying,” Safi said. “She was very happy.”

That visit brought Safi into direct conflict with Jason Garner. Safi said that S.S.’s biological parents, concerned that their daughter was not being raised in America according to their wishes, asked him to seek custody of S.S. When Garner learned that Safi intended to seek guardianship, the relationship turned hostile. Garner told Safi that he knew Oklahoma’s rules, and that Safi would not win guardianship because he lacked a wife and Oklahoma residency, Safi said.

Safi said he was not deterred, despite a disturbing incident in which Garner showed Safi his gun collection in a way that Safi interpreted as menacing.

Hashemi recalled Garner’s position clearly.

“Garner said that if someone comes from outside, and we don’t know who they are, then we are going to take [S.S.],” Hashemi said.

Hashemi said that he had insisted to Garner that any transfer of custody be handled through legal channels. He said his own knowledge of the subsequent court proceedings was minimal. At a hearing, he said, the judge asked only his name before issuing an order.

“The only thing the judge asked me was ‘What is your name?’” Hashemi said. “That’s it. And then they make an order, and they said that after this day that [S.S.] has to live with the Garner family.”

Janie Tapia, the Oklahoma City attorney who represented Garner, declined to comment. A.J. Ferate, Garner’s appellate attorney with Spencer Fane, also declined an interview request on behalf of his client.

A Chaotic Trial

Safi contacted Dallas-based attorney Sehla Ashai, who previously represented an Afghan couple who said that an American soldier effectively stole their baby after a raid by U.S. forces killed the infant’s family.

To represent S.S.’s biological parents, Dallas-based attorney Sehla Ashai contacted Mikael Bryant, general counsel of National Litigation Law Group and a member of Oklahoma’s Muslim community, for help. Bryant, along with Oklahoma City attorney Rob Hopkins, formed the legal team representing Ghulam Nabi Safi and S.S.’s parents.

Bryant described a custody trial that stretched across six months — a week’s worth of testimony — heard in the courtroom of Oklahoma County Special Judge Michelle “Shel” Harrington, a former divorce attorney who ascended to the bench just months before the fight over S.S. erupted.

Last September, Oklahoma Watch covered another of Harrington’s cases. Matthew Simonton successfully fought for his right to visit his mother, Estelle Simonton, who is under the guardianship of Adult Protective Services.

“I should have some rights as an American citizen,” Estelle Simonton said at the time. “It’s the law that is taking me away from my family, who I dearly love.”

Harrington subsequently issued a restraining order preventing the press from further interviewing Simonton.

For Andy Lester, chair of the Oklahoma Free Speech Committee, Harrington’s order encroached on the First Amendment.

“[This ruling] looks like a restriction on Ms. Simonton, but, as worded, it purports to bar all press,” Lester said at the time. “That is a step too far.”

From S.S.’s guardianship trial, Oklahoma Watch obtained audio recordings made by Azizah Hashemi in which she made graphic allegations about what would happen to S.S. in Garner’s custody. The recordings also included claims about her own role in transferring the child. A translation by Alqalam Nangarhar Translation Center documented the contents, and an independent Pashto translator retained by Oklahoma Watch confirmed the character of the recordings.

“The general tone of the audio recordings is taunting, aggressive, and centered on intimidation and revenge,” the second translator said in an email.

The recordings were one of numerous exhibits presented as evidence in Harrington’s courtroom, Bryant said.

“They had no argument,” Bryant said. “The only thing they ever said about Ghulam Nabi is that when all the families were in this room with Catholic Charities, and there’s a room full of adults arguing, [S.S.] seemed tense. And she was sitting next to her uncle. That was the only argument of substance they ever made.”

Theresa Flannery, senior director of social services at Catholic Charities, who attended the meeting Bryant described, said she recalled nothing that would have indicated S.S.’s preference for anyone. Flannery was called as a witness at trial but said that she could not recall what she had been asked.

The case ended with custody of S.S. awarded to Daniel and Amy Roberts — the youth and family pastor of Memorial Road Church of Christ and a vice president of admissions at Oklahoma Christian Academy, respectively. Neither responded to requests for comment.

Safi was granted limited visitation rights. Bryant said Harrington left open the possibility of returning S.S. to her parents if they arrived in the United States, but until then, S.S. would remain with the Roberts family.

“A full week of trial, and I still don’t understand how they were actually able to win that thing,” Bryant said.

Safi said that as of February, S.S.’s biological parents had relocated from Pakistan to Germany. Attorneys will soon file a motion in Harrington’s courtroom to have S.S. sent to Germany to be reunited with them.

Orders Entered
Without Following Rules

The case of S.S. is not an isolated example. Another case from Harrington’s courtroom in the adult system reveals how Oklahoma guardianship sometimes fails those it is meant to protect.

When she was five years old, Norma June Bowden performed a daring 12-foot ladder dive at the 1938 World’s Fair in Los Angeles.

Nearly a century later in Oklahoma City, 90 years old and widowed, Norma June Harris became the subject of a contentious guardianship battle among four of her children, represented in the main by two sons, Glenn Harris Jr., a wealthy insurance agent, and Hal Harris, a flight instructor.

Norma Harris was a feisty, independent-minded business owner who did not respond docilely when Glenn Harris first sought and was granted temporary guardianship over his mother’s estate, Hal Harris said.

“My brother is very domineering and controlling,” Hal Haris said. “He needs to be in control of everything or everyone will pay like hell.”

Norma Harris marched to the courthouse so she could tell the judge who originally heard the case that she did not need guardianship, Hal Harris said.

The judge revoked the temporary guardianship; no finding of incapacity was entered. Norma Harris promptly rewrote her 2010 will to exclude Glenn Harris.

Glenn Harris appealed, and managed to get the first judge disqualified. Harrington was then assigned to the case.

The first irregularity in the case, Hal Harris said, was Harrington’s order to assign a guardian ad litem, a court-appointed advocate, to Norma Harris’s case in the absence of any finding of incapacity.

“My mom was adamantly opposed to it,” Hal Harris said.

A civil case was filed alongside the guardianship case, making some of the proceedings public and drawing in more attorneys whose fees began to drain the estate over which the battle was being fought.

An attorney who worked on the case was struck by the number of judicial decisions that were made without any finding of incapacity. It was a fundamental denial of due process, the source said.

“All the significant orders just got entered without following the rules,” the source said.

Norma Harris died on May 4, 2025.

Glenn Harris continued the fight. Three sources familiar with the case expressed surprise that, in choosing among Norma Harris’ children for a special administrator of her estate, Harrington chose Glenn Harris, the son that Norma Harris had written out of her will.

After a November 2025 hearing, Glenn Harris called Oklahoma Watch to offer his unvarnished opinion of guardianship judges.

“They don’t know shit,” Glenn Harris said. “They don’t know the law. It’s mind-boggling.”

A dim view of Harrington was a rare point of agreement between the feuding Harris brothers.

“She is inept and incompetent, and she should not be a judge,” Hal Harris said.

Frustrated litigants may or may not be the best source to expound on the performance of guardianship judges. However, Diane Dimond, a seasoned investigative journalist who wrote numerous stories about the guardianship system nationwide before authoring a book on the subject, is highly qualified. Dimond singled out the secrecy of guardianship and conservatorship systems as central to their susceptibility to fraud and abuse.

She also pointed to the role of guardianship judges.

“There are so many threads to abusive and financially exploitative guardianships that it’s hard to grab on to one and say, ‘This is the problem,’” Dimond said. “But after hearing hundreds of stories, I came to realize that none of this would happen except for the judges.”

Dimond offered a singular piece of advice for anyone investigating the system.

“Always look at the background of these judges,” Dimond said.

Oh, For the Love of God

Since issuing her ruling against the press, Harrington’s online presence has begun to evaporate. Her LinkedIn page has been taken down, as has the website for the solo law firm she ran prior to becoming a judge. Harrington advertised herself as a “divorce attorney who doesn’t like divorce.”

By way of contrast, a side hustle as a humorist and public speaker that Harrington has sustained since at least 2016 has not disappeared.

A website, fatbottomfiftiesgetfierce.com, promotes two books that are collections of satiric neologisms. Despite Amazon rankings below 5 million, the website claims that the first book was a bestseller and the second a #1 bestseller. A corresponding Facebook group boasts of 487,000 followers and has continued to feature pithy daily axioms even after Harrington took on the role of special judge in December 2023.

Harrington uses a second Facebook group, Oh, For the Love of God!, with 83,000 followers, to offer similar daily tidbits with an explicit Christian theme.

During the months of the custody fight over Afghan refugee S.S., which resulted in the girl being given to an evangelical family despite the presence of a fit biological relative, Harrington put out hundreds of posts espousing bits of scripture.

An 11-Minute Hearing

A third case of Harrington’s, another child case, reveals that the underlying problems in the Oklahoma guardianship system do not begin or end in a single courtroom.

In 2014, Kristine and Dennis Rice were awarded co-guardianship of Dennis Rice’s granddaughter, K.R., then an infant. K.R.’s biological mother was in prison in Colorado; her biological father was unknown.

Kristine Rice raised K.R. as her own child for more than a decade.

The Rice marriage deteriorated. In 2018, a physical altercation resulted in Dennis Rice’s arrest; a police report photo documents an injury to Kristine Rice’s face. In 2021, K.R., then about 7 years old, wet herself during one of Dennis Rice’s outbursts of anger, Kristine Rice said. Kristine Rice left with K.R. and complex court battles began.

The first guardianship judge assigned to K.R.’s case, Special Judge Allen J. Welch, affirmed supervision orders limiting Dennis Rice’s visitation. Dennis Rice then disappeared from the proceedings from June 2023 to January 2025.

When he returned, Welch had retired. The case was transferred to Harrington, who immediately restored Dennis Rice’s visitation rights.

Oklahoma Watch obtained treatment reports from K.R.’s therapist that were available to Harrington and contained direct statements from the child.

In January 2025, K.R. described home with Kristine Rice as her only refuge: “Well, I feel like I don’t get a break from stuff happening in my life so school, my friends, and being at home helps distract me from everything else but now it’s like I can’t escape it at all.”

In March 2025, K.R. said she did not want overnight visits with Dennis Rice: “I definitely know that I don’t want to do any overnights with him though, unless I was somehow able to trust him again but I know his anger is still there.”

By April 2025, K.R. was expressing fear about the future: “I’m afraid of how he’ll treat me and I’m so scared that he will somehow get all the control and keep me from ever seeing my mom again.”

On Oct. 8, 2025, Kristine Rice filed a motion to have Harrington removed from the case. The following day, because of that motion, Oklahoma County Special Judge Karen Aguilar was brought in to conduct a hearing.

Kristine Rice’s attorney, Rob Hopkins, who was also on the team of attorneys representing the family of S.S., was out of state for medical reasons and participated only by phone. Technical difficulties impaired Hopkins’ ability to follow the proceedings. The hearing lasted 11 minutes. The transcript shows that Hopkins was given only a few minutes to argue his client’s position.

Despite the documented arrest for domestic abuse and the abbreviated hearing, Aguilar awarded sole custody of K.R. to Dennis Rice.

“She wasn’t going to give Ms. Rice a fair shake,” said Hopkins, describing Harrington’s position before the recusal motion was filed.

“Every time I go to court now, I lose more of her,” Kristine Rice said of K.R. “Every hearing strips her of rights. Every ruling pulls her further into a situation she begged me to protect her from.”

The story took another troubling turn in February, when Kristine Rice said she overheard, from outside Aguilar’s chambers, the judge telling Hopkins that she was recusing from the case. The reason: Courtney Schamel, K.R.’s court-appointed guardian ad litem, was also Aguilar’s personal attorney in Aguilar’s own divorce proceeding.

Court documents confirm that Schamel represents Aguilar. There was no explanation for why Aguilar did not disclose the conflict of interest at the time of the 11-minute hearing that determined K.R.’s fate.

In December 2025, Oklahoma County District Court Judge Amy Palumbo separately removed Harrington from K.R.’s case, citing the high probability of bias given the recusal motion Kristine Rice had filed.

The case has now been assigned to yet another judge. Dennis Rice, his attorney Lindsey Sherwood, and Schamel all declined to comment.

A System Under Strain

The systemic shortcomings in these three cases — compressed hearings, undisclosed conflicts of interest, sealed records that make outside scrutiny nearly impossible — reflect problems that experts say are widespread in American guardianship courts, and that Oklahoma is particularly ill-equipped to address.

Furthermore, the law has not kept pace with the scenarios that guardianship courts now encounter. Child guardianship cases in Oklahoma are presumptively closed, making them even harder to investigate than adult guardianship cases.

In adult guardianship cases, the financial stakes compound the problem.

The guardianship industry handles an estimated $50 billion in wards’ assets annually nationwide, according to Rick Black, founder of the Center for Estate Administration Reform, which has investigated more than 5,000 suspect adult guardianships since 2013.

“A system that is incapable of correcting its most outrageous defects is the definition of a broken system,” Black said. “Sadly, due to the influence and independence of this system’s managers and beneficiaries, executive and legislative branch leaders in each state have not taken appropriate action. In this regard, the checks and balances between the judicial, legislative, and executive branches are all failing vulnerable Oklahomans and their loved ones.”

Journalist Dimond continued to hold that the quality of guardianship judges is the linchpin on which all other problems with the guardianship system turn.

“People don’t understand,” Dimond said. “Judges in these cases can erase your will, your power of attorney, your health care proxy — they can even break your irrevocable trust.”

Attorneys familiar with Oklahoma’s guardianship system said the bench is unevenly prepared. Several lawyers said the system could be improved with training for new judges before they take office and continuing education as their careers proceed.

“If you get elevated to special judge and you’ve never practiced in probate or guardianship, it’s gonna be an uphill climb so you don’t get bamboozled by counsel who appear before you,” said one guardianship attorney who practices in multiple states.

Anthony Palmieri, former president of the National Guardianship Association and a long-time fraud investigator in the Florida guardianship system, said that most guardianship judges are sincere professionals but that bad actors exist.

“I’ve found cases in which the professional guardian was engaging in corruption with the judiciary,” Palmieri said.

Cost is its own obstacle. Attorneys said it is nearly impossible to fully litigate a guardianship case in Oklahoma for less than $100,000, a threshold that puts meaningful legal recourse out of reach for most families.

Canadian jurist Brownstone acknowledged the differences between his system and Oklahoma’s, and argued that transparency ought to serve as a form of accountability.

“I do think that would help people come to understand decisions by the same judge that are off the rails,” Brownstone said. “If the documents were public, more people would find out about these decisions and then they could get together and make an effort to get this person removed.”

For Kristine Rice, the system’s failures are not abstract. She found a provision in Title 43 of Oklahoma statutes — the section governing marriage, not guardianship — that appears to directly contradict Aguilar’s order granting sole custody of K.R. to Dennis Rice. Section 109.3 specifies that, absent other evidence, custody should not be granted to anyone who has engaged in abusive or harassing behavior, and establishes a rebuttable presumption against such grants.

Kristine Rice’s fight will continue with another hearing before Oklahoma County Special Judge Martha Oakes on April 7. It has been more than five months since K.R. saw the only woman she ever knew as mother.

Editor’s Note: This story was updated on Mar. 19, 2026, to correct Ghulam Nabi Safi’s job description.  

Full Article & Source:
11-minute hearings, hidden conflicts: inside Oklahoma’s broken guardianship system 

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

California Fiduciary Accused of Stealing from Alzheimer's Patient's Trust

Angelique Friend allegedly used her position to hire her husband's company and pay herself over $165,000 while caring for the incapacitated woman. 


A California fiduciary named Angelique Friend is accused of stealing from the trust of an Alzheimer's patient, Patricia Mettler, whom she was put in charge of overseeing. Friend allegedly hired her husband's company, Towngate In-Home Services, to care for Mettler and paid the company over $1.1 million, while also paying herself over $165,000 from the trust. The lawsuit alleges Friend failed to disclose the conflict of interest to Mettler's attorney.

Why it matters

This case highlights the importance of oversight and accountability for those entrusted with managing the affairs of vulnerable individuals. Fiduciaries have a legal and ethical duty to act in the best interests of their clients, and this alleged abuse of power for personal gain raises concerns about the potential for elder financial exploitation.

The details

According to court documents, Mettler was in poor health with Alzheimer's when Friend was put in charge of her trust in 2021. Friend immediately hired Towngate In-Home Services, a company owned by her husband David Esquibias, to care for Mettler. Over the nearly four-year period, the estate paid Towngate $1.1 million, while Friend also paid herself over $165,000, totaling $1.275 million. The lawsuit alleges Friend failed to disclose the conflict of interest to Mettler's attorney.

  • Friend was put in charge of Mettler's trust in 2021.
  • Towngate In-Home Services cared for Mettler for nearly four years.

The players

Angelique Friend

A California fiduciary accused of stealing from the trust of an Alzheimer's patient, Patricia Mettler, whom she was put in charge of overseeing.

Patricia Mettler

An Alzheimer's patient in Southern California whose trust was allegedly mismanaged by Angelique Friend.

David Esquibias

Angelique Friend's husband, who owns the company Towngate In-Home Services that was paid over $1.1 million to care for Mettler.

What’s next

Relatives are asking for Friend to be removed as trustee and for the return of all assets 'improperly disbursed'. They are also asking for attorney fees to be paid.

The takeaway

This case highlights the need for stronger oversight and accountability measures to protect vulnerable individuals from financial exploitation by those entrusted with managing their affairs. It underscores the importance of fiduciaries upholding their legal and ethical duties to act in the best interests of their clients. 

Full Article & Source:
California Fiduciary Accused of Stealing from Alzheimer's Patient's Trust 

Tommy Hearns Under Conservatorship


A Michigan judge appointed Ronald Hearns as the sole guardian and conservator for his father, Tommy Hearns.

The ruling follows a series of emergency hearings in Oakland County prompted by concerns from Adult Protective Services regarding the 67-year-old’s vulnerability and potential financial exploitation by other family members. This ruling gives Ronald authority over his father’s personal and medical care, including where he lives and his healthcare decisions. Hearns, who was diagnosed with dementia, is currently living with Ronald.

This specifically grants Ronald control over his father’s finances and assets. The move was deemed necessary after reports surfaced of unauthorized GoFundMe campaigns and suspicious real estate transactions involving other relatives while Hearns’ health was in decline.

The Future

The guardianship comes as Hearns continues to navigate a challenging physical and cognitive recovery. In July 2025, Hearns underwent a successful hip replacement surgery to address a long-standing “bone-on-bone” condition. While the surgery was a success, his recovery has been complicated by the ongoing progression of dementia. Despite his health issues, Ronald Hearns noted that his father remains active and is still scheduled to make a public appearance at the Box Fan Expo in Las Vegas on May 2, 2026.

“My job with the conservator and the court is to make sure that nobody takes advantage of him and he is treated with dignity and respect that he so richly deserves,” Wolf Mueller (Ronald’s attorney) 

“Just keep praying for my dad and the family as we move forward in our lives. That’s my main goal, to make sure that he’s enjoying his life and nobody else can hurt him in any kind of way, financially, physically, or mentally,” Ronald

Full Article & Source:
Tommy Hearns Under Conservatorship 

Monday, March 23, 2026

Accused of Neglect: Connecticut conservator faces disbarment and lawsuits


by Alex Appel

Kristin Exner, a Connecticut lawyer and state-appointed conservator, made headlines last year when another attorney petitioned to have her disbarred. That petition followed two instances in which she sold houses owned by people whose estates she controlled to the co-owner of her real estate business. The houses were allegedly sold below market rate and then resold by her real estate company for a profit. 

The complaint was forwarded to a local grievance panel by the Statewide Bar Counsel’s Office on Feb. 26. In the meantime, Exner will not be appointed to manage new cases in the Milford-Orange Probate Court, according to court documents. 

In addition to that petition, court records show that three Connecticut nursing homes have accused Exner of neglecting eight people in conservatorships by failing to maintain their Medicaid benefits. These nursing homes have not received payments for care, one of Exner’s responsibilities as a conservator, allegedly shorting them almost $195,000, which they are seeking to recover via lawsuits.

Exner tells a different story. She calls these suits “baseless,” “frivolous,” and says they “have no merit.”  Court records show that the lawyer who filed the petition to have Exner disbarred has represented multiple people in suing Exner, and defended a woman who was ultimately removed from a conservatorship that Exner took over. 

This investigation provides an overview of the role of a conservator, a summary of the issues documented at the Norwalk-Wilton Probate Court, and the allegations made by nursing homes currently working their way through Connecticut’s judicial system.

An Appointed Power

conservator is someone appointed by a probate court judge to oversee the personal or financial affairs of an incapacitated adult who is deemed incapable of competently managing on their own. According to a report published by Connecticut’s Probate Court Administrator Workgroup, conservators are most often relatives; however, if a court determines that an adult needs a conservator but cannot find a relative or close friend who is fit to manage that adult’s affairs, a judge may appoint a third-party lawyer.

That’s where Exner’s role as a state-appointed conservator comes in. 

Exner is one of hundreds of lawyers in the state whom judges appoint to manage conservatorships. Like other lawyers in this line of work, she is either paid by the conserved person via their financial assets or through a state fund. As is required by law, if she is working for a person with an estate, she charges an hourly rate for the work she does to manage the conservatorship and then submits the invoices to a probate judge for approval. Once the invoices are cleared, she can receive payment. 

If a person is indigent, Exner receives compensation through the Probate Court Administrative Fund, which has taxpayer money that is appropriated to the Judicial Department. In those instances, there is a flat rate of $90 a month, with an additional one-time payment of $1,300 to handle Medicaid applications, which her case files indicate is substantially less than what she charges in her private practice. 

Conservatorship can be controversial in Connecticut and across the country. In the past few years, there have been highly publicized instances of conservators abusing their power. 

There are even some high profile celebrities that were placed under conservatorships, including Britney Spears, whose parents allegedly forced her to have an IUD and prohibited her from getting married, former Beach Boys member Brian Wilson whose conservator Eugene Landy who gave him unnecessary psychiatric medication and had him monitored 24-7, and former NFL quarterback Michael Oher, the player who inspired “The Blind Side,” who claimed that his conservators lied to him to get him to sign away his rights by claiming he was being adopted. In all of these cases, the conservators extracted millions of dollars from the conserved people over the course of many years. 

But most instances of conservatorship abuse do not involve millionaires or celebrities. 

There are an estimated 1.5 million adults and $273 billion under the control of guardians or conservators in the United States.

“The extent of elder abuse by guardians [and conservatorship] nationally is unknown due to limited data on key factors related to elder abuse by a guardian, such as the numbers of guardians serving older adults, older adults in guardianships, and cases of elder abuse by a guardian,” a 2016 report from the federal Government Accountability Office (GAO) found. 

The lack of transparency and comprehensive understanding is, in part, due to a lack of comprehensive documentation of the various types of elder abuse committed by different types of guardians, including conservators. However, the GAO researchers did find indications that financial abuse is the most common form of elder abuse in guardianship. 

No one has accused Exner of abusing any of her conservatees, but she is facing multiple charges of negligence. Additionally, she is accused of selling two houses that were a part of estates she managed, including one that was in a conservatorship, to a man with whom she co-owned a real estate company.

Exner declined to comment on the house sales because they were a part of ongoing litigation. 

The Norwalk-Wilton Probate Court District

Inside Investigator reviewed the files for 16 open conservatorships Exner manages in the Norwalk-Wilton Probate Court District. This is not a comprehensive list of her conservatorship cases, and Exner did not respond to a question about how many conservatorships she is managing in total. 

Filings show that Exner charges $250 per hour for her services when she is managing someone who has an estate, and one of her paralegals charges $150 an hour. For one of the conserved people she is managing—a 72-year-old man with depression, benign prostatic hyperplasia, and who thinks he has dementia, even though his medical evaluations do not indicate that—her law firm was paid $13,800 for services rendered in a two-year period between April 2023 and May 2025.

That man’s files contain an email exchange between him and Exner during her annual check-in, and the notes from that check-in. According to those documents, both he and Exner are happy with the conservatorship arrangement. 

Some of her other cases are more complex.

Sometimes she made decisions that the conserved individual did not like. 

For example, Exner sold the house of one of the conserved persons under her care, against that woman’s wishes. The house in question had plumbing and structural issues, which the woman could not afford to fix, according to Exner’s report. Even though the woman was financially supporting her two adult sons, who lived in the house, prior to becoming conserved she had not paid her bills for months leading up to the sale. Finally, the home was facing foreclosure. Exner was appointed as the conservator, paid the bills, and by the time Exner sold the house, the woman had already moved in with her granddaughter.

Almost all of the people identified by Inside Investigator whose affairs Exner managed needed help managing their healthcare. All but three people under her care in the Norwalk-Wilton district suffered from dementia or severe mental illness when they were assigned a conservator. 

Of the three conserved people who Exner managed without dementia or documented mental illness, one of them was a brain-dead homeless man who was brought to Norwalk Hospital after he was discovered unconscious in a bush. He was on a ventilator for several weeks but was not responding to treatment. The staff at the Hospital could not find a living relative, nor any documentation that stated whether or not he wanted to be resuscitated. Hospital officials petitioned the court to appoint a conservator, who wound up being Exner, then advised Exner to tell them to take him off life support. She did.

The second was a woman who did not have any documented mental illnesses, but she was flagged for conservatorship when she refused medical treatment at a hospital. Exner was appointed to her case to get her medical treatment. According to filings in her conservatorship case, the Department of Children and Families (DCF) opened a case into that woman’s child because of suspected domestic violence. A Motion for Advice submitted by Exner states, “the Conservator has a reasonable belief of domestic violence and abuse in the home against (her), and that she is not capable of making decisions for her safety and well being.” 

The last person was a 79-year-old woman of sound mind who petitioned the court to voluntarily enter a conservatorship last year because she needed help re-applying for Medicaid. 

Even though Medicaid is legally guaranteed for people below a certain income threshold, it can be difficult to obtain. 

In 2012, a group of 5,000 Connecticut residents sued the Department of Social Services (DSS) for taking too long to process Medicaid applications. State law required most Medicaid applications to be processed within 45 days, but thousands of people had to wait longer. The class-action lawsuit was settled in 2014, and as a part of the settlement, the state had to commit to hiring 109 more people to help process applications and to process at least 92% of Medicaid and short-term care applications within the statutory timeframe by 2016. The state was given a two-year extension to meet that deadline, but fell behind. In 2018, only 85% of applications were processed on time.

Things turned around shortly after. By 2022, 98% of Medicaid applications were being processed within 24 hours of submission. However, submitting the application is only one step in the process. To get Medicaid for assisted living, a person needs to submit financial documents from the previous five years to prove they qualify for help. It can take months to gather the paperwork needed to apply for Medicaid.

While attorney fees vary, typically, the type of lawyer who practices elder law charges between $200 and $250 per hour.

The consequences for not obtaining Medicaid can be dire. 

There are only six reasons that a nursing home can evict a patient, and non-payment is one of them. A home is required to give residents 30 days’ notice before eviction, and a resident or their representative can appeal. These appeal processes can drag on for months, but at the end of the day, state officials cannot force a nursing home to continue to care for a nonpaying resident. 

The lawsuits against Exner show that homes will keep a resident despite months, and sometimes years, of non-payment. If a resident has a pending application for Medicaid, a nursing home legally cannot evict them. However, during this time, debt can accumulate. 

Sometimes, this debt can be paid retroactively from portions of the person’s estate. One of the nursing homes that is suing Exner is trying to access the estate of a deceased man whose conservatorship she managed. Since she was his legal representative in life, she is automatically listed as a defendant, even though she is no longer managing his estate. That man has a daughter, who is also being sued.

In the worst-case scenario, a resident is evicted. 

One of Exner’s conservatees was evicted from a nursing home in 2023, before she managed his case. The man, who had severe medical conditions, was homeless for a period of time and lived in various hospitals until Exner found a home where he could live. This conservatee was determined to be not of sound mind and couldn’t make decisions for himself.

Less than a year ago, Exner became a conservator of that 79-year-old woman who was of sound mind. When Inside Investigator reviewed the court records in mid-February, it was not clear if Exner had yet successfully helped the woman reapply for Medicaid. The records also did not contain any invoices.  The conserved person continued to live at the nursing home she resided in when she voluntarily asked to be placed under a conservatorship, Wilton Meadows Nursing & Rehabilitation in Wilton, until Feb. 9, according to a social worker at the center. She left the nursing home to live with her family.

The social worker said that Exner and her office were “nothing but excellent and responsive,” and “we had no issues or problems working with them.” 

But not every nursing home has had positive experiences with Exner. 

Nursing Home Allegations

Nursing Home Allegations

Inside Investigator found four lawsuits filed by nursing homes against Exner in the state of Connecticut. Three of them, which were all filed in 2023, are still ongoing. Those three each contain allegations that Exner neglected people under her care by mismanaging their Medicaid payments and applications. 

The three active lawsuits came from the Waterbury Center for Nursing & Rehabilitation, the West Haven Center for Nursing & Rehabilitation, and the Southport Center for Nursing & Rehabilitation. Together, these lawsuits allege Exner improperly managed Medicaid applications and payments made to eight senior citizens. 

All three lawsuits were filed by attorney Taruna Garg at Harris Beach Murtha Attorneys at Law. Each lawsuit starts with a list of 19 identical lines outlining the responsibilities Exner had to ensure the people in her care had Medicaid, and why that was important. Then, it repeats those 19 lines when it outlines each “count” of negligence it accuses Exner of. In each lawsuit, there is one count per resident in Exner’s care.

“In connection with her appointment as conservator of the estate of the wards referenced herein,” each lawsuit states, “Exner has been granted both the duty and authority to enroll in, apply for, and claim benefits from federal or state benefit programs, including Medicaid. At all relevant times herein, Exner knew or should have known that public assistance would be required to cover the monthly cost of services provided by Plaintiff for the care, comfort, and maintenance of her wards, including lodging and meals. Exner was obligated to perform her duties within a reasonable time given the circumstances of each ward… Exner has failed to fulfill her statutory obligations to timely apply for and obtain benefits, among other actions, on behalf of her ward.”

Exner categorically denies these claims.

“Those allegations were part of frivolous lawsuits that have either been withdrawn or are in the process of being withdrawn, and are factually false,” Exner said in an email. “In every instance where I am appointed conservator, my sole priority is the welfare of the person to whom I have been appointed.”

Some of the claims made by the nursing homes have already been withdrawn. Each complaint was amended multiple times. All Centers removed Exner’s former employer, Gallo & Associates, LLC, as a defendant, modified language in the complaints, and made additional revisions to remove counts of neglect.

The Waterbury Center revised its initial complaint twice, in addition to removing Gallo & Associates as a defendant. It struck three counts of negligence and revised the alleged dollar amounts lost in one case. The nursing home initially calculated that a patient owed $112,000 in debt, but increased the estimated debt to $139,000.

The West Haven Center also made two revisions that each removed a single count of alleged neglect. The Southport Center also submitted two revisions that withdrew two counts of neglect. 

When withdrawing one count of neglect, the Southport center also withdrew an allegation that Exner transferred $100,000 from a resident’s bank account to her employer, and that she charged improper rates. 

Garg filed a separate lawsuit for each nursing home before combining the three into one lawsuit.

Online judicial records show that Garg filed for three extensions to provide evidence of these claims, and Exner applied for one extension of time to plead. Garg attempted to get a default decision against Exner for “failure to plead,” but that was rejected. 

Garg did not respond to questions.

“I have no comment on those cases,” Garg said.

But there are other records in the Norwalk probate files that indicate persistent problems with Exner.

In 2023, the Business Office Manager at the Southport Center for Nursing and Rehabilitation, Marcia Henry, emailed the probate court, asking Exner to be removed as the conservator of a resident mentioned in the lawsuit, although the allegation of neglect was later withdrawn. The email stated, “I have attempted to reach out to Attorney Exner on numerous occasions via calls to her office in which I would speak to [a] representative who would transfer to her voicemail with no return call. I have sent numerous emails with no response. (The resident Medicaid application) has been down since 07/19/2013 due to lack of supportive documents such as bank statements and [updated] gross pension benefits needed from the conservator. This is a serious matter now that the resident has no medical insurance coverage and owes the facility money.”

When asked about this email, Exner said, “[He] remains a client for whom I am serving as conservator, and we remain in regular contact. I was not familiar with those claims, but I can tell you based on my knowledge of the case that they are baseless.”

Exner has also had other issues with nursing homes. 

Another facility, the Mary Wade Home in New Haven, is suing Exner and the daughter of a deceased former resident, whose conservatorship Exner managed. The Mary Wade Home is accusing Exner of failing to get Medicaid for the conserved person and claimed that he owed them over $80,000 by the time he died. The Mary Wade Home filed the lawsuit to try to get some money from his estate, according to court filings.

The petition for discovery states that Exner was applying for Medicaid on behalf of the conservatee when he was admitted to the home, but that application was later denied. The complaint states that staff at the Mary Wade Home tried to collect payment for the year that he lived there, but no payments were sent. 

Exner say these claims are “incorrect.”

“His Medicaid application was not denied,” she wrote in an email. “As with all of my clients in which I am appointed conservator, my sole goal is to maintain their dignity, keep them safe and try and help them make their lives more livable. That was the case here as well.”

The Ludlow Center for Health and Rehabilitation also sued Exner, accusing her of failing to apply for Medicaid on behalf of a resident and, consequently, not paying the nursing home for their services. The home won a default judgment because she failed to plead. 

Garg has represented at least one other nursing home in a case against a different conservator, the Connecticut Judicial Branch’s online portal shows. In the lawsuit, the Plaintiff won a default judgment because the conservators failed to plead.

Damon Kirschbaum, the lawyer who filed for Exner to be disbarred, has had multiple run-ins with Exner. This includes one lawsuit where he represented a woman who was removed from a case that Exner took over. The former conservator, Rachel Menti, was initially designed by the conserved person himself. But she was removed when his family made numerous allegations of misconduct against her, and she was caught lying about her relationship with him to the staff at a hospital. Menti, who had no familial relationship to the man, told staff at a hospital that she was his daughter. 

Conclusion

None of the nursing homes who have sued Exner for negligence evicted the residents they claim owe them money. 

According to the most up-to-date court documents, the Southport nursing home calculates its current losses at around $36,454.85. The nursing homes in West Haven and Waterbury calculate their losses at around $20,000 and $139,000, respectively. 

The nursing homes’ court filings each accuse Exner of trying to remove residents from their care in response to their complaints.

Each of the three active lawsuits against Exner simultaneously claims that “harm and losses are anticipated to continue accruing” if the residents remain in their care, and that Exner is “retaliating” against them by moving residents out of the facilities “in an effort to cause additional harm.” Inside Investigator was not able to confirm the current addresses of the four residents listed in the lawsuit. 

Last year, Exner tried to persuade the Connecticut General Assembly to give conservators qualified immunity “for actions taken in good faith and in accordance with court orders,” according to a testimony she submitted. 

A Trial Management Conference for the three lawsuits filed by Garg is scheduled for the morning of November 10, 2026. If a settlement is not reached, the case will move to a jury trial. A jury selection date has already been set for November 19, 2026.

One of the lawsuits filed by Kirschbaum, in which his client is accusing Exner of mismanaging his mother’s estate when she was his conservator and selling her house to her business partner, has a hearing scheduled for the morning of Monday, March 23.

“This is an ongoing case and therefore I am unable to comment,” Exner said in an email. 

Full Article & Source:
Accused of Neglect: Connecticut conservator faces disbarment and lawsuits 

Sunday, March 22, 2026

NC House committee hears testimony on guardianship difficulties

by Andrew Pomeranz


North Carolina’s involuntary mental health commitment system is under significant strain, increasingly overwhelming jails, hospital emergency rooms, and law enforcement, according to multiple lawmakers and experts involved in committee hearings. Lawmakers are now revisiting state laws as concerns intensify over gaps in the mental health system that affect public safety.

The House Select Committee on Involuntary Commitment and Public Safety has focused its recent meetings on evaluating both mental health system capacity and the legal processes for committing, treating, or releasing individuals.

After the killing of Charlotte resident Iryna Zarutska, lawmakers passed Iryna’s Law last year. The law imposed stricter pretrial release limits and expanded the role of mental health assessments in certain cases, further constraining the system.

Since Iryna’s Law passed, the legislature has escalated its focus on whether current policies adequately address the needs of individuals with severe mental illness and public safety concerns.

Continuing this examination, faculty from the UNC School of Government presented a case study at a March 18 committee meeting, illustrating how current laws operate in practice.

The example centered on a 36-year-old woman, Paula, experiencing homelessness who has been diagnosed with schizophrenia and a substance use disorder. 

In the case study, a court determined three years ago that Paula was incompetent. As a result, she lost the authority to make decisions about her property, health care, and finances. With no assets, Paula is currently under the guardianship of the county Department of Social Services. In the past six months, she has undergone two involuntary commitments, but there has been no sustained improvement, highlighting gaps in outcomes for individuals like Paula.

“What happens when that court adjudicated Paula as incompetent is they took away her authority to make decisions for herself that can be related to her property or her person, her health care, her finances,” associate professor Meredith Smith said. “They removed her authority to make decisions from her, and they gave it to someone else.”

Paula’s family — or another connected individual — can then file a motion seeking guardianship due to concerns about Paula’s living conditions. If approved, responsibility for Paula would shift from the county to her family member.

Associate Professor Mark Botts noted that while family guardianship can sometimes be a better outcome for the individual, that is not always the case.

“Maybe the guardian is doing all they can do, maybe they’re not. But even when they’re doing all they can do, there are limits, because you need Paula’s cooperation,” Botts said.

The discussion underscores a recurring problem: Individuals often cycle through involuntary commitment without lasting improvement. This has prompted lawmakers to question how to strengthen the system’s ability to intervene when someone with a mental illness poses a risk. 

Botts said the issue is more complicated than that.

Under Iryna’s Law, magistrates must consider whether there is reasonable cause to believe someone is dangerous, mentally ill, or poses a risk to others when deciding on pretrial release. If these conditions are met, the magistrate can issue an order to begin involuntary commitment.

However, as Botts noted, this does not guarantee the patient will complete the process or receive treatment.

“That doesn’t mean that they necessarily get to an inpatient facility. That doesn’t mean they will necessarily get treatment,” Botts said. “Even if they do get to the facility and get inpatient treatment, at some point, they’re going to be discharged.”

As the committee continues its work, lawmakers are expected to consider whether adjustments to commitment standards, guardianship authority, or system capacity are necessary to support the goals of Iryna’s Law. 

Full Article & Source:
NC House committee hears testimony on guardianship difficulties 

Honoring People’s Autonomy Through Supported Decision-Making


Dear Friends and Colleagues,

I was honored to join AIM Services in Saratoga to celebrate the official launch of facilitated Supported Decision-Making in New York State. At its core, Supported Decision-Making honors people’s ability to control their own lives by giving them the freedom to make decisions without the stigma of relying on support.

The road to Supported Decision-Making, as a less restrictive alternative to guardianship, has been a long one. New York’s Supported Decision-Making began ten years ago as a pilot program, led by Supported Decision-Making New York (SDMNY) and CUNY Hunter College, and funded by the Council on Developmental Disabilities. In 2021, OPWDD dedicated funding to extend and expand the pilot program, including the process of facilitating as an effective way to assist people in creating sustainable Supported Decision-Making Agreements.

In 2022 Governor Kathy Hochul signed Supported Decision-Making legislation into law, making it available to anyone in New York State and laying the groundwork for this monumental accomplishment.  Now, Supported Decision-Making expands even further. With the launch of paid facilitation, every New Yorker with a developmental disability who wants to choose this option will be able to do so as AIM Services assumes its role as the designated statewide coordinator of Supported Decision-Making Facilitation. AIM has already begun working with people to create Supported Decision-Making agreements and to develop a structured, replicable model for use across New York State.

As we continue our celebration of Developmental Disabilities Awareness Month, we are grateful for the self-advocates who dare to ask for more for themselves and who inspire us every day to continue pushing for autonomy, inclusion, and a life of dignity.

I am so proud of the work of everyone who had a hand in making this program a reality and I am excited to see more stories from people like Trina, who are making Supported Decision-Making work for them!

Sincerely, 

Willow Baer
Commissioner

Source:
Honoring People’s Autonomy Through Supported Decision-Making  

Saturday, March 21, 2026

Maine has known for decades that its probate system needs improvement. Now is the time to do it.

by Opinion Contributor


John Brautigam is executive director of Legal Services for Maine Elders. James Haddow is a Maine attorney in private practice who has handled contested guardianships and other probate matters for decades.

Probate court judges address some of the most personal and consequential legal matters for Mainers: Who can make life choices for you if you cannot, who can manage your money, and what happens to a family home after a death. Most of us hope never to need to have a judge answer such questions. Many of us will.

Consider an older Mainer whose memory is failing. One child is trying to keep her safe at home. Another worries that bills are going unpaid and that she is being pressured to sign documents she does not understand. A guardianship case is filed so the court can decide whether someone should be appointed to make decisions on her behalf. In a system built for speedy, consistent, and impartial justice, the court would promptly schedule a hearing, appoint counsel to represent her if appropriate, and the probate judge would make a clear unbiased decision that protects her rights while addressing her urgent needs.

Unfortunately, while such decisions may be clear, there is no guarantee that they are free from judicial bias.

Maine still runs probate as it did in 1855: as 16 separate county courts, each with its own probate judge. Probate judgeships are generally part-time and filled by county-based elections. All other Maine judges are appointed subject to a vigorous screening process that involves a public legislative hearing and state Senate confirmation. And they also receive required judicial training that is not available to probate judges.

Probate judges are also exempt from the judicial ethical rules that prohibit all other judges from practicing law. Even when everyone involved acts in good faith, this structure can create the appearance of bias or conflicts and can undermine public confidence in judicial decisions. The roles of attorney and judge are vastly different and inconsistent: one must fulfill a duty to clients, and the other is strictly bound to serve the public interest.

Guardianship and conservatorship cases are especially high stakes. They can take away a person’s authority over where they live, what care they receive, and how their money is spent. In many cases, respondents appear without counsel, even when appointment may be required or available.

Maine has known for decades that the probate structure needs modernization. In 1967, Maine voters approved a constitutional amendment that directed the Legislature to replace the county-based probate system with a different system with full-time judges. Multiple studies and commissions have returned to the same conclusion: probate adjudication should be brought into the state judicial branch, with full-time judges, consistent procedures, and the administrative support that comes with being part of a unified court system.

This does not mean scrapping what works. Registers of probate perform important local functions and over the years probate code changes have given them increased powers. They now may fully process informal cases like the probate of an uncontested will without need of a judge’s involvement. Reform should preserve those roles.

The change that matters most addresses who decides cases that determine rights and responsibilities. Probate judging should operate like other judging in Maine: full-time, accountable, and insulated from the pressures that come with elections and private practice.

We are two attorneys who understand the high stakes of probate matters from different vantage points: legal aid and private practice. We have seen families arrive in crisis, confused by process and frightened by delay. We have also seen how a well-run hearing, with clear rules and meaningful representation, can protect a vulnerable person while reducing conflict among relatives. Updating this structure is desperately needed to ensure a fair, timely, and consistent process.

A bill this session, LD 1766, would move probate adjudication into the judicial branch and create full-time judgeships. This change is long overdue. Maine’s probate courts should be modern courts, not a patchwork where lawyers serve as judges in their spare time.

Equal justice under the law is not a slogan. In probate, it is the difference between dignity and chaos for people at the most vulnerable moments of their lives. 

Full Article & Source:
Maine has known for decades that its probate system needs improvement. Now is the time to do it.

Farwell Man Charged with Embezzling over $400,000 from 82-Year-Old

LANSING – Yesterday, Phillip Lee Sprague, 62, of Farwell, was arraigned in front of Magistrate Steven R. Worpell, Jr. of the 80th District Court in Harrison on one count of Embezzlement by an Agent $100,000 or More, a 20-year felony, and two counts of Embezzlement by an Agent $50,000 or More but Less Than $100,000, each a 15-year felony, announced Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel. It is alleged that Sprague embezzled from an 82-year-old victim who had sustained a traumatic brain injury.

Sprague allegedly obtained more than $400,000 of assets from the victim. Of that, more than $300,000 was reportedly obtained through changes the victim made to his Will and Trust to benefit the defendant instead of the victim’s children and grandchildren.

“While the majority of caregivers support adults in their care, my office will not tolerate those who steal from the very people they are meant to protect from such exploitation,” said Attorney General Nessel. “We remain committed to seeking justice for vulnerable victims and their families.”

A Probable Cause Conference has not yet been set.

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Please note: For all criminal proceedings, a criminal charge is merely an allegation. The defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty. The Department does not provide booking photos.

Source:
Farwell Man Charged with Embezzling over $400,000 from 82-Year-Old 

Friday, March 20, 2026

Detroit judge among four charged with exploiting vulnerable adults

(The Center Square) – Four Michiganders, including a sitting judge, have been charged by the U.S. Department of Justice with embezzlement-related charges.

All four are residents of Detroit and allegedly conspired to steal hundreds of thousands of dollars from incapacitated individuals.

United States Attorney Jerome F. Gorgon, Jr. made the announcement recently, which U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi applauded over the weekend.

“No one is above the law – judges included,” Bondi said. “Using the power of the bench to allegedly take advantage of vulnerable people is a particularly vile crime. Thank you to our great prosecutors in Eastern Michigan.”

Nancy Williams, Avery Bradley, Andrea Bradley-Baskin and Dwight Rashad were all charged in a federal indictment. The indictment came as part of an investigation by the FBI and the IRS. 

Full Article & Source:
Detroit judge among four charged with exploiting vulnerable adults 

See Also:
Feds Turn Up Heat On Detroit Judge As Guardianship Scandal Widens

Feds: Stealing from dead gave judge a luxe life in auto exec's home

Detroit judge, 3 others charged in alleged scheme to steal thousands from vulnerable and incapacitated people

Press Release: Sitting Judge and Three Others Charged with Scheme to Steal Hundreds of Thousands of Dollars from Vulnerable and Incapacitated Wards 

Detroit News: Detroit Judge Teamed With 2 Criminals to Help Buy And Sell Homes of the Vulnerable

FBI probe of Detroit probate court could lead to indictment