OK, Essex County Superior Court Judge Mary Anne Sahagian has now awarded guardianship of 84-year-old Joseph Judd to his grandson, Vito Loiacono, as Loiacono had been seeking all along.
The judge told SeniorCare attorney Larry Varn of Pierce Atwood in Boston that the Gloucester-based nonprofit care service does not have "a horse in this race."
And Donnalee Leonardo, a court-appointed attorney who has looked into Judd's mental and physical state, found that the man who had to be rushed to Addison Gilbert Hospital in June 2010 with a near fatal glucose count while under SeniorCare's supervision is now "close to home, with lots more contact with his family now than before."
Indeed, she also found that Judd, who suffers from dimentia, among other ailments, but continues to recover from his brush with death at Seacoast Rehabilitation Center "would have wanted Vito Loiacono to be his guardian."
So why, pray tell, is SeniorCare continuing to actively contest Loiacono's request to become Judd's conservator — essentially, someone who would managed his grandfather's assets?
And why has SeniorCare declined to turn over Judd's health-care records — even to his own family?
Perhaps a better question in each of those cases is: How does SeniorCare have the right to stonewall Loiacono and other family members as it has.
Judd's family — and the community at large — deserve to know the truth about SeniorCare's care, and to have confidence in it. Right now, they can't — and only a thorough state probe can lift that cloud.
Full Editorial and Source:
Editorial: SeniorCare Case Cries Out for State Investigation
Saturday, September 3, 2011
Disbarred Atty Gets Two Years for Fraud
Steven P. Gartenberg, a disbarred lawyer who once had an office in Brentwood, was sentenced to two years in federal prison Friday for stealing more more than $300,000 from clients.
Gartenberg pleaded guilty in June to two counts of mail fraud. He admitted keeping more than $100,000 from a woman's estate that was supposed to go to the Kirkwood United Methodist Church, the Alzheimer's Association and three individuals and making more than $200,000 in unauthorized withdrawals from the bank account of a mentally disabled woman who was under his guardianship.
He also took money from two other clients, and later repaid them from a dead man's estate.
On Friday, Gartenberg apologized, saying, "This isn't like me. I feel much remorse for what I've done."
Under federal sentencing guidelines, Gartenberg faced 27 to 33 months in prison.
Ultimately, U.S. District Judge Rod Sippel sentenced Gartenberg to two years in prison and ordered him to repay $267,000. Most of that money will go to the Bar Plan Surety and Fidelity Company, professional liability coverage for lawyers, which paid for the guardianship victim. He also repaid a small amount himself, Margulis said.
Full Article and Source:
Disbarred Attorney Gets Two Years for Fraud
Gartenberg pleaded guilty in June to two counts of mail fraud. He admitted keeping more than $100,000 from a woman's estate that was supposed to go to the Kirkwood United Methodist Church, the Alzheimer's Association and three individuals and making more than $200,000 in unauthorized withdrawals from the bank account of a mentally disabled woman who was under his guardianship.
He also took money from two other clients, and later repaid them from a dead man's estate.
On Friday, Gartenberg apologized, saying, "This isn't like me. I feel much remorse for what I've done."
Under federal sentencing guidelines, Gartenberg faced 27 to 33 months in prison.
Ultimately, U.S. District Judge Rod Sippel sentenced Gartenberg to two years in prison and ordered him to repay $267,000. Most of that money will go to the Bar Plan Surety and Fidelity Company, professional liability coverage for lawyers, which paid for the guardianship victim. He also repaid a small amount himself, Margulis said.
Full Article and Source:
Disbarred Attorney Gets Two Years for Fraud
Kathleen's Demise, A Cautionary Tale
There’s much to learn about BC’s laws and eldercare system from the last years of Kathleen Palamarek’s life in a local nursing home—especially from the battles that were fought in her name between her children, care providers and the Vancouver Island Health Authority.
During Lois Sampson née Palamarek’s five-year struggle to help get her mother out of the nursing home, Kathleen became an icon to local seniors advocates. That’s why the Saanich Peninsula Health Association, Vancouver Island Association of Family Councils, Old Age Pensioners Organization local, and others have been blitzing politicians, media and public agencies with requests for an inquiry.
Full Article and Source:
Kathleen's Demise, A Cautionary Tale
See Also:
SeniorsAtRisk
During Lois Sampson née Palamarek’s five-year struggle to help get her mother out of the nursing home, Kathleen became an icon to local seniors advocates. That’s why the Saanich Peninsula Health Association, Vancouver Island Association of Family Councils, Old Age Pensioners Organization local, and others have been blitzing politicians, media and public agencies with requests for an inquiry.
Full Article and Source:
Kathleen's Demise, A Cautionary Tale
See Also:
SeniorsAtRisk
Friday, September 2, 2011
'Pulling the Plug'
It is mind blogging how some people are so ready to suggest the plug should be pulled on others. What if the pluggee doesn’t want the plug pulled? Pull it anyway?
There you go. One more down. Who else can we get rid of?
The thought brings to mind a picture of an eager face with a vile grin and some drool running down the chin for good measure. “Oh look, that little old lady in Aisle 4 doesn’t have quality of life. I wouldn’t want to live that way, walking with a limp. Let’s get her. Boy, this legal murder is empowering. Look at me! I have power over life and death. Why didn’t we start doing this before now? Oh, good another one back by the frozen foods. Such a good day for plug pulling.”
Think it can’t ever happen?
Who would have thought we would ever be where we are today? Who would have thought we would be so ready to say that helpless people “aren’t in there”, and thus believe it is simply okay to starve and dehydrate them to death? Who would have thought, but that is where society has arrived at. Society is killing off the weakest without thought to those who have fallen victim to illness, injury, disability or age. It is outrageous at how cold and cruel our society has become.
It is easy to say someone has no hope, when no therapy or attempt has been made to help the person get better. It’s causing the problem and then having the problem be our supportive argument as to why not to take any positive actions.
[P]eople can’t always get better without the tools and treatment being made available to them.
They can’t wheel themselves down the hallway, if they don’t have a wheel chair to wheel.
They can’t do physical therapy if none is offered, nor anyone to tell them how.
They can’t take the necessary medications to cure their illness, if no medication is made available.
They can’t eat or drink if no food or water is provided.
They can’t look out the window if there is no window to look out of.
Simply put, people can’t get better if they aren’t allowed to get better, because all things that will (or might) make them better is denied them.
Full Article and Source:
Pulling the Plug
There you go. One more down. Who else can we get rid of?
The thought brings to mind a picture of an eager face with a vile grin and some drool running down the chin for good measure. “Oh look, that little old lady in Aisle 4 doesn’t have quality of life. I wouldn’t want to live that way, walking with a limp. Let’s get her. Boy, this legal murder is empowering. Look at me! I have power over life and death. Why didn’t we start doing this before now? Oh, good another one back by the frozen foods. Such a good day for plug pulling.”
Think it can’t ever happen?
Who would have thought we would ever be where we are today? Who would have thought we would be so ready to say that helpless people “aren’t in there”, and thus believe it is simply okay to starve and dehydrate them to death? Who would have thought, but that is where society has arrived at. Society is killing off the weakest without thought to those who have fallen victim to illness, injury, disability or age. It is outrageous at how cold and cruel our society has become.
It is easy to say someone has no hope, when no therapy or attempt has been made to help the person get better. It’s causing the problem and then having the problem be our supportive argument as to why not to take any positive actions.
[P]eople can’t always get better without the tools and treatment being made available to them.
They can’t wheel themselves down the hallway, if they don’t have a wheel chair to wheel.
They can’t do physical therapy if none is offered, nor anyone to tell them how.
They can’t take the necessary medications to cure their illness, if no medication is made available.
They can’t eat or drink if no food or water is provided.
They can’t look out the window if there is no window to look out of.
Simply put, people can’t get better if they aren’t allowed to get better, because all things that will (or might) make them better is denied them.
Full Article and Source:
Pulling the Plug
Thursday, September 1, 2011
A Heartbreaking Story of Elder Abuse
Until relatively recently, I was unaware of how rampant elder abuse is within the legal court system. It was not until my good friend started to share her story with me that my eyes were opened to something far more prevalent than I was cognizant of; at least on a conscious level.
I have been privileged to know Diane for over five years. During that span, she has never been anything but helpful, loving and compassionate to everyone. Doing what I do for a living generally makes me able to be a pretty good judge of character. Ironically, it is a judge and his decisions that prompted me to write this article. The choices and attitude he has expressed have been protected by legal statutes. While they might be legal, they are far from moral, ethical or compassionate.
This all began approximately two and a half years ago. Diane's mother had given her power of attorney and named her the healthcare proxy. Like many families, there were disagreements with the siblings. Diane was being told that her brother and sister wanted to sell their mother's home and place her in a nursing home. While this elderly woman, Dorothy, had some early dementia and knee problems, she was still a vibrant, cognizant person. She had no interest in being displaced so that those two could have her money. Diane's family suggested she file for legal guardianship to protect her home and to protect her mother's life as well. It seemed to make an abundance of sense.
To tell the events of what unfolded quickly is really an injustice to the elder abuse that has incurred since. The siblings contested the petition for guardianship. Instead of reaching a mediated agreement, the judge listening to the case decided he would be better at making decisions for everyone. He assigned a law guardian and a healthcare manager. It appears these three have worked together before. Diane was immediately removed from what her mother wanted; to have her take care of her needs if there was any reason for it. As it was, Dorothy would spend many weekends at Diane's house. It must be noted that Diane works from home and took care of her father in his last years. It would give Dorothy a change of scenery and much appreciated love and companionship. All of that was about to change.
Full Article and Source:
A Heartbreaking Story of Elder Abuse
See Also:
NASGA: Dorothy Wilson, NY Victim
I have been privileged to know Diane for over five years. During that span, she has never been anything but helpful, loving and compassionate to everyone. Doing what I do for a living generally makes me able to be a pretty good judge of character. Ironically, it is a judge and his decisions that prompted me to write this article. The choices and attitude he has expressed have been protected by legal statutes. While they might be legal, they are far from moral, ethical or compassionate.
This all began approximately two and a half years ago. Diane's mother had given her power of attorney and named her the healthcare proxy. Like many families, there were disagreements with the siblings. Diane was being told that her brother and sister wanted to sell their mother's home and place her in a nursing home. While this elderly woman, Dorothy, had some early dementia and knee problems, she was still a vibrant, cognizant person. She had no interest in being displaced so that those two could have her money. Diane's family suggested she file for legal guardianship to protect her home and to protect her mother's life as well. It seemed to make an abundance of sense.
To tell the events of what unfolded quickly is really an injustice to the elder abuse that has incurred since. The siblings contested the petition for guardianship. Instead of reaching a mediated agreement, the judge listening to the case decided he would be better at making decisions for everyone. He assigned a law guardian and a healthcare manager. It appears these three have worked together before. Diane was immediately removed from what her mother wanted; to have her take care of her needs if there was any reason for it. As it was, Dorothy would spend many weekends at Diane's house. It must be noted that Diane works from home and took care of her father in his last years. It would give Dorothy a change of scenery and much appreciated love and companionship. All of that was about to change.
Full Article and Source:
A Heartbreaking Story of Elder Abuse
See Also:
NASGA: Dorothy Wilson, NY Victim
Elder Rights and the Older Americans Act
Statement by Kathy Greenlee
Assistant Secretary, Administration on Aging
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
on Elder Rights and the Older Americans Act
before Special Committee on Aging United States Senate
Tuesday August 23, 2011
Thank you, Senator Blumenthal, for the opportunity to testify at this important hearing on elder justice. I appreciate the opportunity to share with you the Administration on Aging’s (AoA) commitment to this important issue and the role of the Older Americans Act (OAA) in helping to protect and serve victims of abuse, neglect, and exploitation. As a Federal advocate for older Americans and their concerns, AoA is dedicated to protecting the rights of older people and preventing their abuse, neglect, and exploitation.
Elder abuse is a substantial global public health and human rights problem. The World Health Organization has declared that elder abuse is a violation of one the most basic and fundamental human rights: to be safe and free of violence. In a recent nationally representative study, one in ten older Americans reported being abused or neglected in the past year, and that many of them experienced it in multiple forms.
For nearly forty years, AoA has provided continual Federal leadership in strengthening the elder justice programming designed to prevent and address elder abuse and these consequences through the OAA.
•The Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program was established in 1972 to represent the rights and advocate on behalf of older residents living in nursing homes, assisted living, and other residential settings.
•In 1987, a new objective to protect elderly from abuse, neglect, and exploitation was added to Title I of the Act. A separate authorization of funds for elderly abuse prevention services was also created under Title III Part G. This had previously been allowed, but appropriation authority not reserved.
•The National Center on Elder Abuse (NCEA) was created in 1988 as an information clearinghouse on abuse, neglect, and exploitation, including best practices in prevention and treatment, serving as a repository of research, and conducting demonstration projects to promote effective and coordinated responses to elder abuse, neglect, and exploitation.
•In 1992, the Title VII Elder Abuse, Neglect, and Exploitation Program was established to provide funding to support State and community-based elder justice networks that protect vulnerable seniors and provide them with critical information, and the NCEA received a permanent home in Title II.
•The 2006 Older Americans Act amendments added provisions in Title II for the assistant secretary on aging to designate a person for elder abuse prevention and services with the responsibility for development of plans for a coordinated, national elder justice system. In addition, Title VII’s “Elder Abuse, Neglect, and Exploitation Program” was renamed “Vulnerable Elder Rights Protection Services”, and broadened the authority for States to carry out a range of elder justice activities, such as financial literacy and elder shelters, and to initiate multidisciplinary elder justice activities.
•Most recently, the Elder Justice Act was passed and signed into law in 2010. The Elder Justice Act provides authority for additional attention in this area, including highlighting critical issues through citizen participatory advisory councils; enhancing APS programs and data; and improving the quality of care in nursing facilities through enhancements to the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program, establishing a system to report crimes in nursing homes, and assisting States to implement criminal background check programs for employees with direct access to patients.
Full Testimony and Source:
Elder Rights and the Older Americans Act
See Also:
Senator Blumenthal's First Field Hearing as Senator
Assistant Secretary, Administration on Aging
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
on Elder Rights and the Older Americans Act
before Special Committee on Aging United States Senate
Tuesday August 23, 2011
Thank you, Senator Blumenthal, for the opportunity to testify at this important hearing on elder justice. I appreciate the opportunity to share with you the Administration on Aging’s (AoA) commitment to this important issue and the role of the Older Americans Act (OAA) in helping to protect and serve victims of abuse, neglect, and exploitation. As a Federal advocate for older Americans and their concerns, AoA is dedicated to protecting the rights of older people and preventing their abuse, neglect, and exploitation.
Elder abuse is a substantial global public health and human rights problem. The World Health Organization has declared that elder abuse is a violation of one the most basic and fundamental human rights: to be safe and free of violence. In a recent nationally representative study, one in ten older Americans reported being abused or neglected in the past year, and that many of them experienced it in multiple forms.
For nearly forty years, AoA has provided continual Federal leadership in strengthening the elder justice programming designed to prevent and address elder abuse and these consequences through the OAA.
•The Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program was established in 1972 to represent the rights and advocate on behalf of older residents living in nursing homes, assisted living, and other residential settings.
•In 1987, a new objective to protect elderly from abuse, neglect, and exploitation was added to Title I of the Act. A separate authorization of funds for elderly abuse prevention services was also created under Title III Part G. This had previously been allowed, but appropriation authority not reserved.
•The National Center on Elder Abuse (NCEA) was created in 1988 as an information clearinghouse on abuse, neglect, and exploitation, including best practices in prevention and treatment, serving as a repository of research, and conducting demonstration projects to promote effective and coordinated responses to elder abuse, neglect, and exploitation.
•In 1992, the Title VII Elder Abuse, Neglect, and Exploitation Program was established to provide funding to support State and community-based elder justice networks that protect vulnerable seniors and provide them with critical information, and the NCEA received a permanent home in Title II.
•The 2006 Older Americans Act amendments added provisions in Title II for the assistant secretary on aging to designate a person for elder abuse prevention and services with the responsibility for development of plans for a coordinated, national elder justice system. In addition, Title VII’s “Elder Abuse, Neglect, and Exploitation Program” was renamed “Vulnerable Elder Rights Protection Services”, and broadened the authority for States to carry out a range of elder justice activities, such as financial literacy and elder shelters, and to initiate multidisciplinary elder justice activities.
•Most recently, the Elder Justice Act was passed and signed into law in 2010. The Elder Justice Act provides authority for additional attention in this area, including highlighting critical issues through citizen participatory advisory councils; enhancing APS programs and data; and improving the quality of care in nursing facilities through enhancements to the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program, establishing a system to report crimes in nursing homes, and assisting States to implement criminal background check programs for employees with direct access to patients.
Full Testimony and Source:
Elder Rights and the Older Americans Act
See Also:
Senator Blumenthal's First Field Hearing as Senator
Wednesday, August 31, 2011
Ohio: Medicaid Won't be Used to Pay Guardians for Developmentally Disabled!
The Ohio Department of Developmental Disabilities stopped seeking Medicaid funding to pay for protective services for thousands of adults after state auditors questioned the agency’s accounting for more than $1.3 million in program costs.
To avoid any interruption in services for the mentally retarded and disabled, Director John Martin said he is using non-Medicaid tax dollars to cover the expense.
“These are vital services,” he said.
An audit released by the Department of Job and Family Services questions the 2009 and 2010 expenditures but does not seek repayment of the funds paid to Advocacy & Protective Services Inc.
“DODD did not provide adequate documentation to demonstrate the expenditures, used as a basis for claiming Medicaid reimbursement, were for actual and allowable services provided by APSI,” auditors wrote.
The Department of Job and Family Services oversees Medicaid, the health-care program for the poor and disabled funded through state and federal tax dollars. Department spokesman Benjamin Johnson said DODD will have an opportunity to submit a more-detailed accounting before any decision about repayment is made.
Advocacy & Protective Services (APSI) is a private, nonprofit organization based in Columbus that is under contract with the developmental-disabilities agency to serve as a court-appointed legal guardian and trustee for about 4,800 Ohioans with mental retardation or other developmental disabilities.
Auditors are concerned about Medicaid funds paid to the department after it sought reimbursement of APSI administrative expenses. Specifically, auditors noted that invoices showed only total costs paid APSI and did not include a breakdown for specific services.
Medicaid, auditors previously noted, will reimburse for administrative costs, within limits, if a detailed accounting is provided to show the expenditures were permissible. Such documentation must include a description of the services performed, hours and date worked, and a signature of an authorizing agent. In addition, 90 percent of the expenditures must go to direct services.
Martin said APSI is paid a set fee to cover administrative expenses and there are no itemized invoices.
“DODD provided documentation of payroll and operation expenses that we believe demonstrate the costs were necessary and reasonable to provide required protective services to individuals with developmental disabilities,” the developmental-disabilities agency wrote in a response included in the audit.
The department also noted that APSI guardians are paid an average of $17.19 an hour, and the cost per individual served is about $1,079 a year.
“We feel confident that DODD is getting a good value for this critical service.”
Source:
Medicaid Won't be Used to Pay Guardians for Developmentally Disabled
See Also:
Medicaid Dispute: Ohio State Audit Faults APSI (Advocacy & Protective Services, Inc.) With Spending of $1.3 mil
To avoid any interruption in services for the mentally retarded and disabled, Director John Martin said he is using non-Medicaid tax dollars to cover the expense.
“These are vital services,” he said.
An audit released by the Department of Job and Family Services questions the 2009 and 2010 expenditures but does not seek repayment of the funds paid to Advocacy & Protective Services Inc.
“DODD did not provide adequate documentation to demonstrate the expenditures, used as a basis for claiming Medicaid reimbursement, were for actual and allowable services provided by APSI,” auditors wrote.
The Department of Job and Family Services oversees Medicaid, the health-care program for the poor and disabled funded through state and federal tax dollars. Department spokesman Benjamin Johnson said DODD will have an opportunity to submit a more-detailed accounting before any decision about repayment is made.
Advocacy & Protective Services (APSI) is a private, nonprofit organization based in Columbus that is under contract with the developmental-disabilities agency to serve as a court-appointed legal guardian and trustee for about 4,800 Ohioans with mental retardation or other developmental disabilities.
Auditors are concerned about Medicaid funds paid to the department after it sought reimbursement of APSI administrative expenses. Specifically, auditors noted that invoices showed only total costs paid APSI and did not include a breakdown for specific services.
Medicaid, auditors previously noted, will reimburse for administrative costs, within limits, if a detailed accounting is provided to show the expenditures were permissible. Such documentation must include a description of the services performed, hours and date worked, and a signature of an authorizing agent. In addition, 90 percent of the expenditures must go to direct services.
Martin said APSI is paid a set fee to cover administrative expenses and there are no itemized invoices.
“DODD provided documentation of payroll and operation expenses that we believe demonstrate the costs were necessary and reasonable to provide required protective services to individuals with developmental disabilities,” the developmental-disabilities agency wrote in a response included in the audit.
The department also noted that APSI guardians are paid an average of $17.19 an hour, and the cost per individual served is about $1,079 a year.
“We feel confident that DODD is getting a good value for this critical service.”
Source:
Medicaid Won't be Used to Pay Guardians for Developmentally Disabled
See Also:
Medicaid Dispute: Ohio State Audit Faults APSI (Advocacy & Protective Services, Inc.) With Spending of $1.3 mil
Lawyer Acting as Guardian Disbarred for Helping Ward Will $5M Estate to His Wife
Despite a hitherto unblemished disciplinary record over a 30-year legal career, a New York attorney appointed as a guardian to an incapacitated person has been disbarred for helping her prepare a will in favor of his wife.
John M. Aversa was appointed in July 2009, and the next month his ward got a settlement of over $5 million in a personal injury suit, recounts the Fourth Judicial Department of the New York Supreme Court Appellate Division in an opinion earlier this month.
A court told Aversa to retain independent counsel to help the woman prepare a will. Instead he prepared the will himself without bringing in independent counsel or evaluating the woman's testimentary capacity. It named Aversa as the executor and his wife, under her maiden name, as the beneficiary. Two members of his immediate family were witnesses.
Besides committing what the court described as serious misconduct for personal gain, Aversa also "demonstrated a shocking lack of candor in this proceeding," the court wrote, "by belatedly presenting to the Grievance Committee a document designed to conceal his misconduct and by providing explanations for his conduct that lack credibility."
Aversa had claimed that the will was drafted in an effort to distribute his ward's assets to charity, as she wished, via his wife. He presented an unsigned, undated will addendum giving instructions to that effect after he was asked to resign as guardian, the opinion says.
Source:
Lawyer Acting as Guardian Disbarred for Helping Ward Will $5M Estate to His Wife
Read the Supreme Court Opinion
John M. Aversa was appointed in July 2009, and the next month his ward got a settlement of over $5 million in a personal injury suit, recounts the Fourth Judicial Department of the New York Supreme Court Appellate Division in an opinion earlier this month.
A court told Aversa to retain independent counsel to help the woman prepare a will. Instead he prepared the will himself without bringing in independent counsel or evaluating the woman's testimentary capacity. It named Aversa as the executor and his wife, under her maiden name, as the beneficiary. Two members of his immediate family were witnesses.
Besides committing what the court described as serious misconduct for personal gain, Aversa also "demonstrated a shocking lack of candor in this proceeding," the court wrote, "by belatedly presenting to the Grievance Committee a document designed to conceal his misconduct and by providing explanations for his conduct that lack credibility."
Aversa had claimed that the will was drafted in an effort to distribute his ward's assets to charity, as she wished, via his wife. He presented an unsigned, undated will addendum giving instructions to that effect after he was asked to resign as guardian, the opinion says.
Source:
Lawyer Acting as Guardian Disbarred for Helping Ward Will $5M Estate to His Wife
Read the Supreme Court Opinion
TX Lawyer Charged for Paying Judge for Ruling
An Austin attorney has been federally indicted concerning his alleged role in a Texas court corruption scheme in which a former state district judge and two other lawyers have already taken pleas.
Marc Garrett Rosenthal, 49, is accused in a 13-count indictment unsealed yesterday of paying ex-Judge Abel Corral Limas for favorable rulings, as well as bribing witnesses, conspiring to file state and federal personal injury cases relying on false testimony and directing others to pay nonlawyers for referrals of cases to his firm, according to the Associated Press.
Rosenthal faces charges of conspiracy to violate the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations statute, witness-tampering and fraud charges, among others, reports the Brownsville Herald. (The American-Statesman provides a full rundown.)
The Herald says Rosenthal is also accused of arranging for others to manipulate the Cameron County District Court case assignment system, so that cases went to the courts they preferred.
Full Article and Source:
Another Attorney Charged in Racketeering Case Allegedly Paid Texas Judge for Ruling
Marc Garrett Rosenthal, 49, is accused in a 13-count indictment unsealed yesterday of paying ex-Judge Abel Corral Limas for favorable rulings, as well as bribing witnesses, conspiring to file state and federal personal injury cases relying on false testimony and directing others to pay nonlawyers for referrals of cases to his firm, according to the Associated Press.
Rosenthal faces charges of conspiracy to violate the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations statute, witness-tampering and fraud charges, among others, reports the Brownsville Herald. (The American-Statesman provides a full rundown.)
The Herald says Rosenthal is also accused of arranging for others to manipulate the Cameron County District Court case assignment system, so that cases went to the courts they preferred.
Full Article and Source:
Another Attorney Charged in Racketeering Case Allegedly Paid Texas Judge for Ruling
Tuesday, August 30, 2011
Please Help Me Find My Mother!
My Mother has been victimized by relatives and then a court appointed guardian.
I spoke to my Mother last on July 13, 2011.
No one will help me locate my Mother. The Sheriff's department cannot since she is under guardianship. The guardian has my numbers blocked.
I have no idea what to do, or whether my Mother is alive or dead. Please help me find my Mother.
Source:
NASGA: Jacqueline K. Scott Profile
I spoke to my Mother last on July 13, 2011.
No one will help me locate my Mother. The Sheriff's department cannot since she is under guardianship. The guardian has my numbers blocked.
I have no idea what to do, or whether my Mother is alive or dead. Please help me find my Mother.
Source:
NASGA: Jacqueline K. Scott Profile
4th Nurse Admits Patient Abuse
Another nurse admitted to charges that she did not provide proper care for an incapacitated patient at the Northwoods Rehabilitation Center in Schaghticoke two years ago.
Licensed practical nurse Lisa Sousie of Troy appeared before Rensselaer County Judge Andrew Ceresia and pleaded guilty to two counts of attempted first-degree falsification of business records, a misdemeanor.
Sousie will be sentenced Oct. 12 to three years of probation, suspension of her nursing license, and she must cooperate and provide testimony in any potential upcoming trial in the case, according to the state Attorney General's Office.
Sousie was one of nine nurses and aides at the facility named in a 175-count indictment charging them with neglecting a 53-year-old patient identified as "SB" during six weeks in March and April 2009.
Investigators set up a hidden camera in the patient's room. What they saw led to the March 31, 2010, charges of not properly caring for the patient and faking records to make it appear they did.
Full Article and Source:
Fourth Nurse Admits Patient Abuse
Licensed practical nurse Lisa Sousie of Troy appeared before Rensselaer County Judge Andrew Ceresia and pleaded guilty to two counts of attempted first-degree falsification of business records, a misdemeanor.
Sousie will be sentenced Oct. 12 to three years of probation, suspension of her nursing license, and she must cooperate and provide testimony in any potential upcoming trial in the case, according to the state Attorney General's Office.
Sousie was one of nine nurses and aides at the facility named in a 175-count indictment charging them with neglecting a 53-year-old patient identified as "SB" during six weeks in March and April 2009.
Investigators set up a hidden camera in the patient's room. What they saw led to the March 31, 2010, charges of not properly caring for the patient and faking records to make it appear they did.
Full Article and Source:
Fourth Nurse Admits Patient Abuse
3rd Nurse Pleads Guilty
A third health care worker has admitted she did not properly care for an incapacitated patient at the Northwoods Rehabilitation Center in Schaghticoke in 2009.
Licensed practical nurse Leslie Mayo, 54, of Watervliet pleaded guilty before Judge Andrew Ceresia to one felony count of first-degree falsifying business records in March 2009. "I was working the overnight shift and did not check on the patient but signed a record that I did, and I did not put ointment on the patient," Mayo admitted.
"The ointment had not been applied, even though the records show that it was?" Ceresia asked.
"Yes," Mayo said.
Mayo will be sentenced Oct. 12 to five years' probation and must surrender her nursing license.
Mayo was one of nine nurses and aides at the facility named in a 175-count state attorney general's indictment charging them with neglecting a 53-year-old patient identified as "SB" during six weeks in March and April 2009.
Full Article and Source:
LPN Makes Guilty Plea
Licensed practical nurse Leslie Mayo, 54, of Watervliet pleaded guilty before Judge Andrew Ceresia to one felony count of first-degree falsifying business records in March 2009. "I was working the overnight shift and did not check on the patient but signed a record that I did, and I did not put ointment on the patient," Mayo admitted.
"The ointment had not been applied, even though the records show that it was?" Ceresia asked.
"Yes," Mayo said.
Mayo will be sentenced Oct. 12 to five years' probation and must surrender her nursing license.
Mayo was one of nine nurses and aides at the facility named in a 175-count state attorney general's indictment charging them with neglecting a 53-year-old patient identified as "SB" during six weeks in March and April 2009.
Full Article and Source:
LPN Makes Guilty Plea
Monday, August 29, 2011
Dolores C. Bedin: October 24, 1924 - August 23, 2011
A sad update to a story we first brought you in December regarding an elderly Rockford woman who fought for her right to remain in the hospital.
We've learned 86-year-old Dolores Bedin passed away this morning. She had been fighting pancreatic cancer. We first introduced you to Dolores when Northwestern Memorial Hospital tried to get her daughter Janet's Power of Attorney revoked so it could kick Dolores out of the hospital.
She had been there two months and felt too sick to leave. Janet blames Northwestern for sharing her mom's cat scan results five months late and feels more could have been done to slow down the cancer. Dolores grew increasingly ill over the last eight months. But her daughter says her mind remained sharp and will always be remembered as the "Italian Crocodile."
Source and Video:
Rockford Woman Who Fought Hospital Loses Battle to Cancer
See Also:
A Growing Trend of Medicine
We've learned 86-year-old Dolores Bedin passed away this morning. She had been fighting pancreatic cancer. We first introduced you to Dolores when Northwestern Memorial Hospital tried to get her daughter Janet's Power of Attorney revoked so it could kick Dolores out of the hospital.
She had been there two months and felt too sick to leave. Janet blames Northwestern for sharing her mom's cat scan results five months late and feels more could have been done to slow down the cancer. Dolores grew increasingly ill over the last eight months. But her daughter says her mind remained sharp and will always be remembered as the "Italian Crocodile."
Source and Video:
Rockford Woman Who Fought Hospital Loses Battle to Cancer
See Also:
A Growing Trend of Medicine
North Shore 'Live' - Cooper's Corner: Elder Abuse in the Hospital, Part 2
Janet Bedin returns for part 2 in her struggle with Northwestern Hospital and their careless disregard for her mother.
Source:
North Shore 'Live' - Cooper's Corner: Elder Abuse in the Hospital, Part 2
Note: Northshore "Live" Cooper's Corner Host Bev Cooper has dedicated these programs to those who are victims of Cook County Probate Court. Live broadcasts are aired in Highland Park on channel 19 Wednesday at 7:30 PM.
See Also:
North Shore "Live" - Cooper's Corner: Elder Abuse in the Hospital, Part 1
Source:
North Shore 'Live' - Cooper's Corner: Elder Abuse in the Hospital, Part 2
Note: Northshore "Live" Cooper's Corner Host Bev Cooper has dedicated these programs to those who are victims of Cook County Probate Court. Live broadcasts are aired in Highland Park on channel 19 Wednesday at 7:30 PM.
See Also:
North Shore "Live" - Cooper's Corner: Elder Abuse in the Hospital, Part 1
Sunday, August 28, 2011
He Served 10 Presidents but Died Alone in Squalor
Theodoric C. James Jr. was clearly in trouble. He wasn’t showering anymore. He wore the same ragged clothing day after day. Rats rummaged through the weeds and mounds of trash in his yard. He started going to the bathroom in buckets on his front porch.
His neighbor Alex Dobbins was afraid that something terrible was going to happen. They had been friends since their days at Howard University and had lived in adjoining rowhouses in the 16th Street Heights section of Northwest Washington for 37 years.
But this was not the man he had known. The man who had served in the White House for almost 50 years, under every president from Kennedy to Obama. The man who read and catalogued many of the documents that flow through the Oval Office: memos to the president, letters, pieces of legislation, nomination packets, even classified material that required him to have a security clearance.
This man was inexplicably living in squalor, seemingly without electricity or running water, and hiding under a hooded overcoat and multiple layers of clothing no matter how hot it got. He wasn’t just a public nuisance but, Dobbins feared, a danger to himself.
For more than two years, Dobbins and James’s family members in Mississippi repeatedly called every city office they could think of — the Department of Mental Health, Adult Protective Services, his council member, the mayor — hoping to get James help and prevent the worst.
Then, on Aug. 1, after the punishing heat wave that pushed the heat index to 112, Dobbins woke up worried because he hadn’t seen his friend in two days. He knocked on the door loudly with a baseball bat. There was no answer.
Full Article and Source:
He Served 10 Presidents, But Died Alone in Squalor: What Happened to Theodoric C. James?
His neighbor Alex Dobbins was afraid that something terrible was going to happen. They had been friends since their days at Howard University and had lived in adjoining rowhouses in the 16th Street Heights section of Northwest Washington for 37 years.
But this was not the man he had known. The man who had served in the White House for almost 50 years, under every president from Kennedy to Obama. The man who read and catalogued many of the documents that flow through the Oval Office: memos to the president, letters, pieces of legislation, nomination packets, even classified material that required him to have a security clearance.
This man was inexplicably living in squalor, seemingly without electricity or running water, and hiding under a hooded overcoat and multiple layers of clothing no matter how hot it got. He wasn’t just a public nuisance but, Dobbins feared, a danger to himself.
For more than two years, Dobbins and James’s family members in Mississippi repeatedly called every city office they could think of — the Department of Mental Health, Adult Protective Services, his council member, the mayor — hoping to get James help and prevent the worst.
Then, on Aug. 1, after the punishing heat wave that pushed the heat index to 112, Dobbins woke up worried because he hadn’t seen his friend in two days. He knocked on the door loudly with a baseball bat. There was no answer.
Full Article and Source:
He Served 10 Presidents, But Died Alone in Squalor: What Happened to Theodoric C. James?
Plea Deal in $30K Theft
Deborah Thompson, wife of Saratoga County Supervisor Frank Thompson, R-Milton, pleaded guilty Wednesday in County Court to attempted grand larceny and agreed to repay her 84-year-old victim nearly $30,000.
Thompson, 62, was charged with grand larceny, but accepted a plea bargain that includes a recommended sentence of five years on probation. Her lawyer, F. Stanton Ackerman, said Thompson will sell her house to pay the restitution. He called the agreement a "fair outcome."
Acting Saratoga County Judge Karen Drago set sentencing for Deborah Thompson for 2 p.m. Nov. 16.
Full Article and Source:
Plea Deal in $30G Theft
Thompson, 62, was charged with grand larceny, but accepted a plea bargain that includes a recommended sentence of five years on probation. Her lawyer, F. Stanton Ackerman, said Thompson will sell her house to pay the restitution. He called the agreement a "fair outcome."
Acting Saratoga County Judge Karen Drago set sentencing for Deborah Thompson for 2 p.m. Nov. 16.
Full Article and Source:
Plea Deal in $30G Theft
Elderly Man Robbed by Caregiver
A home care worker was arrested for stealing thousands of dollars from the elderly man she cared for.
Investigators stated they were contacted by an 82-year old man living alone in his East Memphis home on July 7th after he found his checking account to be grossly overdrawn. They determined that his caregiver, who had been caring for the victim for 10 months, had stolen nearly $14,000 from him by writing checks to herself on his account.
32-year old Trenese Wilson, who was employed through Home Instead Senior Care, was charged with 28 counts of Forgery, as well as Theft of Property and Financial Exploitation of a Vulnerable Adult.
Source:
Elderly Man Robbed by Caregiver
Investigators stated they were contacted by an 82-year old man living alone in his East Memphis home on July 7th after he found his checking account to be grossly overdrawn. They determined that his caregiver, who had been caring for the victim for 10 months, had stolen nearly $14,000 from him by writing checks to herself on his account.
32-year old Trenese Wilson, who was employed through Home Instead Senior Care, was charged with 28 counts of Forgery, as well as Theft of Property and Financial Exploitation of a Vulnerable Adult.
Source:
Elderly Man Robbed by Caregiver