Monday, September 29, 2008

The King of Probate

Phoenix New Times; Geriatric Park: A Mesa lawyer devours the fortunes of helpless old people in his care; September 1993; by Paul Rubin.




􀂄 Weber Mackey • Private Fiduciary

􀂄 Wayne Legg • Attorney

􀂄 25 Cases, 1.2 million in losses

􀂄 Civil Recovery on bonds of at least 80% by the Public Fiduciary

􀂄 News Articles revealed weakness in Court monitoring

􀂄 Wayne Legg convicted of criminal offense after second trial

􀂄 Resulting reform: Legislation in 1994 to register private fiduciaries

􀂄 Personal lobby by Probate Judge for new legislation

􀂄 Initial draft of regulations exempted Public Fiduciaries

􀂄 No exemption for trust departments

􀂄 Problem: No funding for legislation

Articles:

Legg and Mackey had access to Delores Reichwein's money because in the late 1980s, the Reichweins had joined the 500,000 elderly Americans who are "wards" of a court. Because of advanced age or other incapacity, wards are compelled to turn their financial affairs over to a guardian-conservator, usually a family member or a court-appointed private fiduciary. Wards are among society's most vulnerable citizens.
AS HELPLESS AS CHILDREN - A PROMINENT MESA LAWYER AND HIS FLUNKY WERE SUPPOSED TO PROTECT THE ELDERLY IN THEIR CARE. INSTEAD, THEY PLUNDERED THE OLD PEOPLE'S ASSETS

Abuses by attorneys and private fiduciaries such as Wayne Legg, Webber Mackey and others have led to proposed changes in how the Maricopa County Probate Court operates.
THE FORGOTTEN COURT

A New Times investigation of Legg and Mackey, published in September (As Helpless As Children"), uncovered a pattern of fiscal abuses that cost Cinthia Gannett's deceased grandmother, Grace Gannett, and more than two dozen East Valley senior citizens and their heirs untold dollars and grief.
HEIR OF OPTIMISM - RELATIVES OF SENIORS WHOSE ESTATES WERE PLUNDERED HOPE FOR JUSTICE

The multicount felony arrests of Legg and Mackey marked a high point in the AG's oft-trumpeted war against elder abuse. But endless pretrial delays in the criminal case left family and friends of the victims frustrated and confused. And that was before the death last week of the 79-year-old defendant Mackey, universally considered to be Legg's subordinate in the lucrative scheme.
Death of a Defendant - 21 months after being charged with looting the estates of elderly Arizonans, one defendant dies. The other awaits trial

Bonding companies are expected to cut checks totaling about $800,000 to the heirs of 14 estates that were plundered by Mesa attorney Wayne Elmer Legg and his sidekick, Webber Mackey. The pair ran those estates and others into the ground while siphoning off enormous fees for themselves over a period of several years.
PROBAYE'S REPROBATES - SOME PLUNDERED ESTATES WIN COMPENSATION, BUT CRIMINAL CASE FACES DELAYS

Prosecutors from the Arizona Attorney General's Office portrayed Legg as a vulture who stole more than $1 million from senior citizens in a scheme hatched with the late Webber Mackey, a private fiduciary who died in 1995 before facing his own criminal trial.
Barrister Behind Bars - Former "King of Probate" faces long prison term for ripping off elderly

"Wayne Legg was after my friend's $5 million just as he was after those other people's money," said Lindberg, who neither sought nor received any of Davis' estate. "Right at the end, Ellen knew that Legg was not to be trusted, and she thought she'd done something wrong by dealing with him. It was pathetic. He was like an animal, just dying to suck her bank account dry. I wanted to be in the courtroom to watch for my friend."
A Lawyer on Trial - Wayne Legg, a prominent attorney charged with stealing from elderly clients, faces his accusers

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

1993? And where are we now, 15 years later?

What are the legislooters doing about this scam called "guardianship"?

Anonymous said...

"Wards are among society's most vulnerable citizens."

Has anything changed? NO!

* Wards lose all of their rights
* No oversite
* No accountability
* No enforcement of laws or court orders
* No punishment for false statements to the court
* No review and/or auditing of guardian case files for misconduct, for fraudulent billing and for missing documents mandated by law...and much more.

Court appointed guardians routinely continue to work for their best interest and against the best interest of the WARD.

Many fiduciaries continue to drain and deplete the estates of their wards for their personal profit, leaving the ward impoverished, forced to apply for medicaid and rely on charity.

IF and WHEN a guardian, professional guardian or lawyer is discovered to be "overbilling", embezzling money, the usual song and dance from the fiduciary to the court: the agent of the court will say it was an "error" a mistake, when in fact the truth is in INTENT: FRAUDULENT BILLING....EMBEZZLEMENT approved by the court.

And, keep in mind these guardians for profit want more money; they want YOUR money; they have their eyes on...US....YOU and ME!

Now, isn't that a warm, fuzzy and comforting thought while sacrificing to save our money, planning for our golden years, only to find out others can and will illegally profit IF and WHEN you become a victim with no rights, a ward of the state?

Another very important fact to consider:
some states, including the state of ILLINOIS, an adult is a prime target of the guardianship racket and can become a WARD if declared: INCOMPETENT AND/OR ...PHYSICALLY DISABLED.

Anonymous said...

This article is a real find! "Geriatic Park" and "devouring the fortunes" - perfect descriptions for what happened then and continues today.

It's 15 years later, and victims and their families have embarked an important journey. Now, we've got NASGA and there is hope that 15years from now, much reform will be accomplished and the vulnerable won't have to suffer the loss of life and liberty.

Anonymous said...

Thankk you for the information so I can plan my future while I can.

I think the best thing I can do for myself to be certain that a crook won't end up with one cent of my hard earned money is to sell my house, rent a cheap basement apartment (a dump) and start spending as much money as fast as I can right now on visiting my friends all over the globe and having fun and even take up bingo, drinking and gambling and whatever money is leftover, I will send it to my grandchildren to have fun.

This will guarantee my safety, security and sweet dreams that I won't end up like these poor people and my money won't end up in the pocket of a crook, a guardian.

Sweet dreams!

Anonymous said...

You certainly have the right idea, Barb.

If you have nothing and can make them no money, you're worth nothing to them. And that's a wonderful thing!