Sunday, July 26, 2009

Siphoning Off Millions

2001 - Court-appointed lawyers are siphoning off millions of dollars in fees from the assets of helpless elderly New Yorkers they are sworn to protect.

Nine years after a legislative overhaul of the state's guardianship laws, reforms meant to protect the assets of the elderly have had the unintended effect of creating a money trough for well-connected attorneys.

Since 1993, New York-area attorneys have been paid at least $63 million in fees from the assets of mostly elderly people whose money they were assigned to protect, according to a Daily News computer analysis of data provided by the state.

A News investigation into the guardianship system has found:

* Case after case of elderly wards whose life savings have been whittled away. Some lawyers are charging $300 an hour or more to perform routine functions, such as going over bank statements.

* A small cadre of lawyers - party loyalists, former judges and partners in the firms of some of the city's most powerful politicians - who receive the overwhelming majority of lucrative guardianship cases.

* Attorneys and judges who routinely ignore court rules designed to limit the number of guardianship-related appointments to no more than one per year that pays $5,000 or more.

* Judges and lawyers who do not report all guardianship appointments and legal fees to the state's Office of Court Administration. Court officials acknowledge many fees go unreported, a problem they say they are trying to correct.

* Few lawyers who are willing to take on the cases of those elderly people, often in nursing homes and without court-appointed guardians or family, with little or no assets.

Full Article and Source:
SENIOR TAKEN FOR MILLIONS Lawyers rack up fat fees as guardians to the helpless

3 comments:

  1. This is a good article that shows the plundering of the elderly and disabled has been going on - successfully - for years.

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  2. And what's changed since 2001?

    You probably think I'm going to say, "Nothing" but you'd be wrong.

    What's changed is the pirates have gotten better at it.

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  3. You're 100% right, Anonymous 2, they're just getting better at it.

    I am glad NASGA exists to expose the corruption and work for reform.

    ReplyDelete