A Brooklyn family says they had no idea what they were getting into when they agreed to let an agency take control over an elderly relative. Now, the family is fighting to get control back. This is an issue faced by an increasing number of families. Older relatives who can no longer take care of themselves, who should become their guardian?
Eighty-three-year-old Leola McAllister now lives in a sparsely furnished Brooklyn apartment. She's paying $1200 a month in rent, even though she owns a three-family home in Bed-Sty that she lived in for 30 years.
When the daughter and two aunts couldn't agree on who should become guardian, the family says they were referred to an attorney who recommended a court-appointed guardian, a non-profit agency called the Vera Institute, which has offices in the courthouse in downtown Brooklyn. "They convinced us, along with our lawyer and judge that they were the perfect people to take over that way we wouldn't be family conflicted."
But Mrs. McAllister's family says they became alarmed when the agency moved her out of the home she had shared with Tammy and placed her in a sterile apartment, and then started spending thousands on 24-hour home-health care aides - $66,000 in 2007 alone, plus more than $14,000 for rent. "Their whole aim was to get the property, sell it, and put her in a nursing home."
Full Article and Source:
The Eyewitness News Investigators-It's a controversy over a court-appointed guardian
Video Source: Losing Guardianship
Eighty-three-year-old Leola McAllister now lives in a sparsely furnished Brooklyn apartment. She's paying $1200 a month in rent, even though she owns a three-family home in Bed-Sty that she lived in for 30 years.
When the daughter and two aunts couldn't agree on who should become guardian, the family says they were referred to an attorney who recommended a court-appointed guardian, a non-profit agency called the Vera Institute, which has offices in the courthouse in downtown Brooklyn. "They convinced us, along with our lawyer and judge that they were the perfect people to take over that way we wouldn't be family conflicted."
But Mrs. McAllister's family says they became alarmed when the agency moved her out of the home she had shared with Tammy and placed her in a sterile apartment, and then started spending thousands on 24-hour home-health care aides - $66,000 in 2007 alone, plus more than $14,000 for rent. "Their whole aim was to get the property, sell it, and put her in a nursing home."
Full Article and Source:
The Eyewitness News Investigators-It's a controversy over a court-appointed guardian
Video Source: Losing Guardianship