We interrupt the sad story of Marie Long – where fully a dozen lawyers were in court this week , gearing up to fight the old lady's attempt to get some of her money back – to bring you the tale of another person protected by probate court.
This one, an 81-year-old man who is on the hook for $500,000 in legal fees – more than half of that for a lawyer who spent most of his time fighting the old guy's wishes.
Some of you may recall R.B. Sleeth, whose battle with his son over his desire to marry his girlfriend ate up more than a year of his life, including 10 weeks in a lockdown Alzheimer's unit -- never mind that he didn't have Alzheimer's.
R.B.'s battle began in December 2007, when his son Mark stopped his wedding to Marge Foley and petitioned to become his father's guardian and conservator. Mark contended that Marge, then 73, was a gold digger and that his father had long ago asked Mark to assume control should he become mentally incapacitated.
Marge and R.B. battled Mark through 2008, culminating in R.B.'s 10-week stay in a lockdown unit. Marge claimed that R.B. was being overmedicated and that Mark was trying to cut her out of R.B.'s life, against his wishes. Mark claimed that Marge was freeloading and taking advantage of his father's fragile condition.
In December 2008, Commissioner Richard Nothwehr sided with Mark, lauding his “love and affection for R.B.” but removed him as guardian anyway, saying that keeping R.B. and Marge apart wasn't in R.B.'s best interest. Mark retained control of his father's finances.
In February 2009, Jane Anne Geisler, an independent guardian, was brought in and R.B. was weaned from an array of medications, including a powerful anti-psychotic. One month later, he was sprung from assisted living, married Marge and returned to his Paradise Valley home to find the house a mess, his utilities cut off due to non payment of bills and his $1.4 million net worth reduced to “virtually zero,” court records say.
In October, the guardianship was terminated as doctors pronounced R.B. “mentally and physically stable”. It seems R.B. never had dementia, just an overabundance of medication.
By then, court records show that Mark had already relinquished control of R.B.'s money amid discoveries that the older man had a stack of unpaid bills and his long-term care insurance had lapsed. One of the conditions of Mark's stepping aside: no talking to the media (read: me) about what was going on.
I understand why, especially after seeing some of the 2008 and 2009 e-mails that have recently come to light in court records.
The nasty ones from Mark about how he despised his father – not exactly the picture of “love and affection for R.B”, as described by Commissioner Nothwehr.
And the ones from Scott Ferris, the attorney for Mark while he was R.B.'s guardian, trustee and conservator. I particularly like the one Ferris sent to Mark and others the day after I wrote about R.B.'s plight in December 2008 – a few weeks before Mark was removed as guardian.
“After considerable thought yesterday and today, I am more convinced that the best approach to the current financial circumstances is to liquidate everything in the Conservatorship and the Trust irrespective of the status of the current market for any asset,” Ferris wrote. “Use such proceeds to pay all Estate expenses and reimbursement, with the remainder … for all future expenses related to R.B. – period. If that means he is insolvent and must apply to ALTCS, it's not like you did not warn of such circumstances …”
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$500,000 Later, an Old Man Wins His Freedom From Probate
I don't remember this story, but I am glad Laurie Roberts is on it.
ReplyDelete$500K to "buy" his freedom? It's shocking!
Organized crime and they get away with it because the court says hey, this is ok.
ReplyDeleteThank you Laurie Roberts for showing us the insanity of guardianship - it s a racket abused and abused = big business and these money suckers have their eyes on ..... YOU and ME.
What are YOU going to do about this?
It's case after case after case in AZ. Team Probate is alive and well there!
ReplyDeleteLaurie Roberts, I like your style of writing and your spunk!
ReplyDeleteThank you for everything you're doing to set things right in AZ.
this is the craziest set up scheme its a money grab folks under the cozy name of guardianship what rotten sick way of mugging people like paying someone to steal your money while the vultures throw you in a pit somewhere better to give it away while you still have time i would rather burn it all if i can't spend it all thats my last wish
ReplyDeleteThe gentleman deserves to live his life the way he wants and no one had the right to pilfer his money in the courts.
ReplyDeleteSo very sad. I am sorry for this man and I will pray for him and all victims.
ReplyDeleteOver medication is the name of their game! These poor victims are isolated and medicated while their estates are stolen!
ReplyDeleteThis happened to my mother in Florida. The Sunshine State has Court Appointed Guardians and Fiduciaries who do the same thing!
You would think at 81 yrs old the guy would know what he wants and what his preferred life style is as long as he is competent! This guardianship business is a huge racket!
ReplyDeleteIn my own mothers case... I'm positive that she would have rather had my sister taking a couple thousand here and there vs. being held prisoner, isolated and forced anti psychotic drugs by a professional thief/guardian in Volusia County Florida!
Why are the judges, sworn to uphold the law, approving these cases?
ReplyDeleteBecause there's nobody watching - except Laurie Roberts and other brave writers who like her, "Tell it like it is"!!
What will it take to motivate the powers-that-be to do something to stop the stealing from their citizens!
Sue said; What are YOU going to do
about it? That means us, not them, because they apparently don't want to stop the stealing!