Saturday, November 7, 2009

Daniel Gross: The Fight Continues

From the grave, Daniel Gross is still shaking up Connecticut's probate court system.

Gross, readers of my newspaper columns will recall, was the elderly Long Island man imprisoned in a Waterbury nursing home by a probate court judge for 10 months beginning in 2005, after falling ill while visiting his daughter.

After an outraged superior court judge freed Gross in 2006, he eventually returned to his New York home. He died in November of 2008, free.

The Gross case eventually led to changes that spurred the legislature's decision this year to radically downsize the courts from 117 to 54. Significantly, judges in the future will have to be lawyers who will have to undergo more training and work longer and more regular hours.

Now, a federal appeals court has taken up one of the remaining probate court outrages - conservators who overstep their authority and whether they are immune from lawsuits.

It's about time.

In Gross's case, a court-appointed conservator - who was supposed to be looking after his best interests - forcibly kept the elderly man in a nursing home. A court-appointed lawyer disregarded Gross's wishes to return home to Long Island.

Gross has been dead for two years, but a long-simmering lawsuit by his daughter has resulted in what could be a significant decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals, Second Circuit.

The Second Circuit judges have asked Connecticut's top court to "explain the role and function" of both court appointed lawyers and conservators.

Probate judges tell me that these court-appointed "agents" must be immune from lawsuits or else they will never be able to find lawyers willing to take these jobs. I can understand that.

But I also remember a heartbroken old man who wanted to go home but was unable to leave a nursing home because a couple of lawyers thought they knew better.

Full Article and Source:
Daniel Gross v. Probate: The Fight Continues

6 comments:

  1. Thank you, Rick Green, for continuing to shine a bright light on the problems of guardianship and probate courts.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Standing ovation to Dee King for giving her father a voice and the respect he deserves. Daniel Gross is smiling Dee, don't give up - give these crooks hell on earth.

    Thanks to Rick Green for educating society what is waiting for them.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Nobody tells a story like Rick Green.

    Thanks for not forgetting about Daniel Gross and the other victims of conservatorship via the CT probate courts.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Yes, Dee, wisernow is right -- don't give up. Your Dad is proud of what you've done in his name.

    ReplyDelete
  5. hey Dee i agree stand up for whats right you are on the right side of right these evildoers need to be held accountable there are more of us than there of them how we put up with this stuff keeps me up night go girl!

    ReplyDelete
  6. Guardianship / conservatorship vicitms will always remember the name of Daniel Gross.

    ReplyDelete