Friday, April 11, 2008

An Open Door

Guardians will find any crack in the crevice to get into our lives and our loved one's pocketbook; but oftentimes, we've unwittingly opened the door and invited them in ourselves, following a family feud. This is the phrase the guardians like to use - or "family squabble."

It could start because one family member feels slighted - discovering another will inherit more of the eventual estate. Theft by a family member is often actually involved. Or maybe one sibling is taking care of Mom and the others think that he/she is taking advantage of her or not treating her properly. Maybe the siblings have never gotten along. Worse, maybe one sibling is actually abusing Mom and she's in danger. Sometimes families call an APS-type agency to complain about each other. The problem escalates very quickly and often ends up in court, where the siblings expect the disagreement will be settled -- by a judge who will hear all sides. Each side may believe they're clearly right and the others are wrong.

The day you take the matter to court is the day you lose your loved one! Almost without exception, the judge will appoint a third-party guardian - regardless of whether advance directives (durable power of attorney, health proxy, wills, trusts, etc.) are in place or not.

The courts are known to be biased against the family. Why? Did you ever hear the word "patronage"? That means judges giving business to their buddies. And that's why bias is encouraged by the guardian ad litem and attorneys in the case. They are the ones who benefit monetarily if they can keep the disagreement going, leading to a forced guardianship/conservatorship. There's no real interest in the welfare or well being of your loved one; the judge will appoint a professional or public guardian, citing the long-standing family dispute as the end that justifies the means. In other words, the Ward is punished because his/her family "can't get along." And the guardian fans the flames to guarantee that there will be no settlement of the dispute, rationalizing and entrenching his/her function and continued existence.

If you can avoid going to court, you can avoid a forced guardianship or conservatorship. Try every possible means to mediate your dispute and come to terms without outside involvement.

What can happen if you fail to settle the family dispute? You will lose your loved one to strangers with the absolute right over life and death. Before that happens, your loved one will lose practically all civil rights, as well as all property - investments, life savings, personal possessions, family treasures - everything. Old family photographs may wind up in the trash can. And that's not the worst of it: you will lose all input into your loved one's care and the right to even know of his/her medical condition. You will be powerless to help your loved one when the guardian sends him/her to a nursing home. You may even be barred from visiting!

One of our NASGA members said it best, "If I would have known the real truth about guardianship, I would have mediated with my brother till the cows came home. But I did not know I had an option...."


StopGuardianAbuse.org

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