The wife of an elderly Federal Way millionaire is accused of bilking his life savings while neglecting his deteriorating health.
King County prosecutors have charged Juliana Cratsenberg, 56, with felony theft for allegedly stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars from the real estate mogul during their four-year relationship. She is to be arraigned Thursday, when she will enter a plea.
Cratsenberg and her 86-year-old husband, Andrew Cratsenberg Sr., are still married, but his sons have obtained a restraining order against Juliana Cratsenberg, also known as Young Min Song, barring her from contacting her husband until the case is resolved.
Attempts by The News Tribune to reach Juliana Cratsenberg and Andrew Cratsenberg's sons were unsuccessful.
According to court documents filed by prosecutors, the sons have tried since 2008 to wrestle control of their father and his fortune from his wife, who met the elder Cratsenberg about the time he was widowed and diagnosed with dementia. The papers do not say how the couple met.
"Juliana Cratsenberg gained Andy's trust and love, isolated him from his family, controlled his movements, controlled his finances, eventually caused him to rely completely upon her for all of his daily needs, and, ultimately, physically and verbally abused him," according to the charging documents.
The court records show:
The couple kept their relationship secret from Cratsenberg’s two sons for the first month, until their father announced she was moving in with him and they were discussing marriage, which would be her fourth.
Juliana Cratsenberg took to wearing the jewelry of her husband’s deceased wife, had him pay off her debts and persuaded him to financially care for her two adult children, who she later tried to have him adopt so they'd be included in his will.
She bought herself a $50,000 wedding ring and a $24,000 Lexus SUV, used her husband’s credit card to buy $86,000 worth of purchases and spent hundreds of thousands to buy her children a house in Tacoma and pay for their college tuition.
She got involved with Cratsenberg's two businesses and made poor decisions that lost him a lot of money, prompting his sons to fight for guardianship in 2009.
As part of the process, a doctor performed a court-ordered assessment of Cratsenberg in March 2009 and concluded he had "little insight into (his) diminished capacity."
Andrew Cratsenberg denied in the assessment that Juliana Cratsenberg lived with him or that their relationship was serious.
Days later, she applied for a marriage license. Ten minutes after the required three-day waiting period ran out, the couple said "I do" before a retired judge with no family present.
Andrew Cratsenberg’s sons discovered the nuptials after a friend of their father’s called them a week later. The sons immediately filed for a protection order that would declare their father a vulnerable adult and set up a trust to block his wife from his personal and business bank accounts.
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Woman accused of fleecing elderly Federal Way millionaire
It's stories like this that the so-called pros use to justify guardianship. What a shame.
ReplyDeleteSo true. And that one sounded like a real pro.
ReplyDeleteYou need to get in touch. There are some very well known people with this same problem and I don't just mean Randy Quaid. email: madame_karnak@yahoo.com Subject: guardian abuse.
ReplyDeleteYou seem to have a lot of energy. They have a lot of contacts.