'There’s a growing pay gap in our country that is alarming both national and state officials, who say it raises a fundamental question of American justice.
No, Bucko, it’s not about the yawning, ever-growing chasm separating your sad paycheck from the heavy haul of the executive swells at corporate headquarters. Indeed, the “injustice worrying our leaders is literally about justices — as in state and federal judges. More and more of them are wailing that they’re grossly underpaid at about $150,000 a year.
One judge in New York says she’s so strapped she had to sell a summer home in the Hamptons. “I’m working to achieve justice for other people,” she complains, yet “I don’t feel that I’m experiencing justice.”
Let me pause a moment so you can reach for a hanky and sob with her about… well, the raw injustice of $150,000 judicial paychecks. It’s embarrassing, they sniff, to sit on the judge’s throne across from a big-firm lawyer who banks 10 times what you’re paid.
Good grief, get a grip! Maybe you haven’t noticed, your honor, but millions of people can’t get any kind of job, middle-class wages are evaporating, health coverage is a fantasy, and poverty is on the march.
Besides, as my friend Jim Harrington puts it, being a judge is a public service, and doing that job should not depend on how closely your pay “matches the extravagant earnings of attorneys at elite law firms.”
Jim is a lifelong public interest lawyer in Texas who makes maybe a third of what judges do, but he notes that this is more than most folks get.
Judges’ pay should be moderate, Harrington argues, because that puts them in the position to “understand the problems of the day-to-day life” of regular Americans who come into their courts seeking a small measure of justice.
Now that’s judiciously put.
Source:
Pity the Poor Judges
Wednesday, April 11, 2012
In Major Victory for Adult Protective Services Lawsuit Judge Allows Case to Move Forward
In the case alleging ongoing failures in Adult Protective Services brought by representatives of the elderly and disabled community, Judge Kupersmith ruled that can go forward in part, and rejected the state’s attempt to have the case thrown out. The Judge found that the plaintiffs raised serious concerns about whether Adult Protective Services is meeting the plain requirements of the law. Furthermore, Judge Kupersmith found that concerns about Adult Protective Services’ failure to do its duty to respond to allegations of abuse neglect and exploitation warrant review by the Court.
“This is a major victory for the Plaintiffs and for vulnerable Vermonters that are at risk of abuse, neglect or exploitation,” said Barbara Prine, Vermont Legal Aid, lead counsel for the Plaintiffs. “The Court sent a clear message that the allegations in this case deserve judicial scrutiny and that the State should not be allowed to rely on procedural technicalities to deny judicial review of the important issues raised by this lawsuit.”
While the case will move forward, the Judge did dismiss Plaintiffs on a second claim regarding the failure of the Department of Disabilities, Aging, and Independent Living to fix the problem in May of 2011, through the signed Corrective Action Plan. Although the Department had agreed to the terms of plan, the Court ruled that this was not an enforceable contract.
The Judge also did not allow the Plaintiffs to bring the case solely as citizens of Vermont. Instead, the judge ruled that Plaintiffs Disability Rights Vermont and Community of Vermont Elders will have 30 days to amend their original complaint to describe how the failure of Adult Protective Services impedes their ability to fulfill their organizational mission, and forces them to devote significant resources to identify and counteract APS’s deficiencies.
Full Article and Source:
In Major Victory for Adult Protective Services Lawsuit Judge Allows Case to Move Forward
“This is a major victory for the Plaintiffs and for vulnerable Vermonters that are at risk of abuse, neglect or exploitation,” said Barbara Prine, Vermont Legal Aid, lead counsel for the Plaintiffs. “The Court sent a clear message that the allegations in this case deserve judicial scrutiny and that the State should not be allowed to rely on procedural technicalities to deny judicial review of the important issues raised by this lawsuit.”
While the case will move forward, the Judge did dismiss Plaintiffs on a second claim regarding the failure of the Department of Disabilities, Aging, and Independent Living to fix the problem in May of 2011, through the signed Corrective Action Plan. Although the Department had agreed to the terms of plan, the Court ruled that this was not an enforceable contract.
The Judge also did not allow the Plaintiffs to bring the case solely as citizens of Vermont. Instead, the judge ruled that Plaintiffs Disability Rights Vermont and Community of Vermont Elders will have 30 days to amend their original complaint to describe how the failure of Adult Protective Services impedes their ability to fulfill their organizational mission, and forces them to devote significant resources to identify and counteract APS’s deficiencies.
Full Article and Source:
In Major Victory for Adult Protective Services Lawsuit Judge Allows Case to Move Forward
TN Legislature Enacts New Discipline System for Judges
After years of sometimes heated argument, the House sent to the governor Monday night compromise legislation that puts into place a new system for disciplining judges for misdeeds on the bench.
Final approval came on an 88-5 House vote without any debate. The Senate had approved SB2671 unanimously earlier.
Though the votes came with virtually no discussion, the debate over the past three years has included repeated charges that the present Court of the Judiciary ignored judicial misdeeds and operated in unwarranted secrecy. Former Knox County Criminal Court Judge Richard Baumgartner was offered by critics of the current system as a prime example of its shortcomings.
Source:
Legislature Enacts New Discipline System for Tenn. Judges
Final approval came on an 88-5 House vote without any debate. The Senate had approved SB2671 unanimously earlier.
Though the votes came with virtually no discussion, the debate over the past three years has included repeated charges that the present Court of the Judiciary ignored judicial misdeeds and operated in unwarranted secrecy. Former Knox County Criminal Court Judge Richard Baumgartner was offered by critics of the current system as a prime example of its shortcomings.
Source:
Legislature Enacts New Discipline System for Tenn. Judges
Court Upends 9-Year Fight on Housing Mentally Ill
A federal appeals court, ruling on procedural grounds, struck down on Friday a judge’s order that New York State transfer thousands of mentally ill adults in New York City from institutional group homes into their own homes and apartments. In doing so, the court brought a nine-year legal battle to an abrupt end without resolving the underlying issues of how the state cares for such patients.
Though the lower court judge had ruled the current system violated federal law by warehousing people with mental illness in far more restrictive conditions than necessary, the appellate panel said the nonprofit organization that began the litigation, Disability Advocates, did not have legal standing to sue.
The panel, comprising three judges of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, acknowledged that its decision essentially reset the long-running battle to its starting point.
“We are not unsympathetic to the concern that our disposition will delay the resolution of this controversy and impose substantial burdens and transaction costs on the parties, their counsel and the courts,” the opinion said.
Cliff Zucker, the executive director of Disability Advocates, who less than two years ago was celebrating the lower court’s order for immediate changes to the system, said he would now seek to reach a settlement with state officials. “We are hopeful that this administration has recognized that this is a problem that needs to be solved and we’ll be able to solve it without recommencing litigation,” he said.
Barring such a deal, it is also possible that the Justice Department, which intervened late in the case on behalf of the plaintiffs, could file a new lawsuit, Mr. Zucker said.
Disability Advocates brought the lawsuit in 2003 after a series of articles in The New York Times described a system in which residents were poorly monitored and barely cared for, left to swelter in the summer and sometimes subjected to needless medical treatment and operations for Medicaid reimbursement.
Full Article and Source:
Court Upends 9-Year Fight on Housing Mentally Ill
Though the lower court judge had ruled the current system violated federal law by warehousing people with mental illness in far more restrictive conditions than necessary, the appellate panel said the nonprofit organization that began the litigation, Disability Advocates, did not have legal standing to sue.
The panel, comprising three judges of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, acknowledged that its decision essentially reset the long-running battle to its starting point.
“We are not unsympathetic to the concern that our disposition will delay the resolution of this controversy and impose substantial burdens and transaction costs on the parties, their counsel and the courts,” the opinion said.
Cliff Zucker, the executive director of Disability Advocates, who less than two years ago was celebrating the lower court’s order for immediate changes to the system, said he would now seek to reach a settlement with state officials. “We are hopeful that this administration has recognized that this is a problem that needs to be solved and we’ll be able to solve it without recommencing litigation,” he said.
Barring such a deal, it is also possible that the Justice Department, which intervened late in the case on behalf of the plaintiffs, could file a new lawsuit, Mr. Zucker said.
Disability Advocates brought the lawsuit in 2003 after a series of articles in The New York Times described a system in which residents were poorly monitored and barely cared for, left to swelter in the summer and sometimes subjected to needless medical treatment and operations for Medicaid reimbursement.
Full Article and Source:
Court Upends 9-Year Fight on Housing Mentally Ill
KY: Women Ordered to Pay $118K Restitution
Two women from Hardin County paid $118,000 restitution and were sentenced for their roles in financial exploitation of an elderly woman from Clinton County.
Hazel F. Martin, 74, and Iris Hodge, 63, both of Radcliff, were sentenced in Hardin Circuit Court to serve weekends in jail for the next year for their roles in taking money from the accounts of Marie Farmer, who was at the time of the thefts hospitalized or living in a nursing home, according to a news release from the state attorney general's office.
Martin, who had power of attorney for Farmer, admitted that she had used her position to take more than $100,000 from Farmer's accounts. She pleaded guilty in August to four counts of knowing exploitation of an adult, over $300.
Hodge admitted she had facilitated the thefts by letting Martin deposit checks drawn on Farmer's accounts into her own account. She pleaded guilty to one count of receiving stolen property, under $10,000, and four counts of facilitation to exploitation of an adult, over $300.
Farmer died while the case was pending. Martin and Hodge paid full restitution to her family, the attorney general said.
Source:
Hardin County Women Pay $118,000 in Restitution for Exploitation
See Also:
Women Plead Guilty to Exploitation
Hazel F. Martin, 74, and Iris Hodge, 63, both of Radcliff, were sentenced in Hardin Circuit Court to serve weekends in jail for the next year for their roles in taking money from the accounts of Marie Farmer, who was at the time of the thefts hospitalized or living in a nursing home, according to a news release from the state attorney general's office.
Martin, who had power of attorney for Farmer, admitted that she had used her position to take more than $100,000 from Farmer's accounts. She pleaded guilty in August to four counts of knowing exploitation of an adult, over $300.
Hodge admitted she had facilitated the thefts by letting Martin deposit checks drawn on Farmer's accounts into her own account. She pleaded guilty to one count of receiving stolen property, under $10,000, and four counts of facilitation to exploitation of an adult, over $300.
Farmer died while the case was pending. Martin and Hodge paid full restitution to her family, the attorney general said.
Source:
Hardin County Women Pay $118,000 in Restitution for Exploitation
See Also:
Women Plead Guilty to Exploitation
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
The Case of Gary Harvey: An Unsolved Mystery
In January of 2006, Gary Harvey, of Horseheads, NY, fell down his basement steps. It was an accident that would forever change his life, the life of ...... his wife and even people who then didn't know him or Sara at the time. He suffered a traumatic brain injury. The world suffered the loss of his presence and the loss of innocence. Soon, trusting people would find themselves faced with the harsh reality they had thought to be mere extremists chatter.
The bubble burst. The fantasies dismantled. It was time to see the realities of how it really works, or can really work. (Some get waivers from the new mindset rules or procedure -- many don't -- Gary Harvey was one of the don'ts.)
From what it appears, an attorney that was suppose to represent Sara (and therefore Gary) bailed just before the hearing. One would think this would call for one of those continuances that can be given out and often is. Instead, Sara stood alone before the court and with challengers who were well versed in the way the court and system works. She hadn't a chance. Gary became a ward and it wasn't Sara that was to be the guardian.
Long story short...
Six years and bit later, here we are and there Gary is.
Guardianship abuses can even involve the courts and system once setup to protect the vulnerable but that have become too powerful and without true accountability.
Sara has spent hours upon hours trying to find a way to get her husband home, where he would want to be, yet she is treated as the bad guy by the system. This makes sense how?
The system peoples petitioned the court to kill off Gary by starving and dehydrating him to death. With this in mind, they feel what need to protect Gary and from what? What is it that they think Sara could possibly do to her husband that is far worse than starving and dehydrating him to death?
Perhaps none of this is a matter of caring well for Gary or protecting him from potential outside harm. Perhaps, instead, the need for the system people to hold on to Gary is something we should all wonder about and demand an answer to.
Simply put... why can't he go home to live or die? It doesn't make sense that he can't! It simply doesn't!
Full Article and Source:
The Case of Gary Harvey: An Unsolved Mystery
See Also:
Help Bring Gary Home
The bubble burst. The fantasies dismantled. It was time to see the realities of how it really works, or can really work. (Some get waivers from the new mindset rules or procedure -- many don't -- Gary Harvey was one of the don'ts.)
From what it appears, an attorney that was suppose to represent Sara (and therefore Gary) bailed just before the hearing. One would think this would call for one of those continuances that can be given out and often is. Instead, Sara stood alone before the court and with challengers who were well versed in the way the court and system works. She hadn't a chance. Gary became a ward and it wasn't Sara that was to be the guardian.
Long story short...
Six years and bit later, here we are and there Gary is.
Guardianship abuses can even involve the courts and system once setup to protect the vulnerable but that have become too powerful and without true accountability.
Sara has spent hours upon hours trying to find a way to get her husband home, where he would want to be, yet she is treated as the bad guy by the system. This makes sense how?
The system peoples petitioned the court to kill off Gary by starving and dehydrating him to death. With this in mind, they feel what need to protect Gary and from what? What is it that they think Sara could possibly do to her husband that is far worse than starving and dehydrating him to death?
Perhaps none of this is a matter of caring well for Gary or protecting him from potential outside harm. Perhaps, instead, the need for the system people to hold on to Gary is something we should all wonder about and demand an answer to.
Simply put... why can't he go home to live or die? It doesn't make sense that he can't! It simply doesn't!
Full Article and Source:
The Case of Gary Harvey: An Unsolved Mystery
See Also:
Help Bring Gary Home
Man Accused of Stealing Over $379K From Elderly Great Aunt
The Dauphin County Elder Abuse Task Force announced an arrest in one of its largest cases since it formed in 2004. Investigators say Kevin Marcy stole $379,132.62 from his 89 year old great aunt, a retired teacher. He was her only relative, lived with her and had her power of attorney. Authorities say Marcy cashed his great aunt's pension and social security checks. The woman is suffering from Alzheimer's. Marcy is being charged with theft.
"I'd put this up there as one of the higher cases of theft regardless of who the victim was in the last several years that I've seen in Dauphin County from a pure monetary perspective," says Dauphin County District Attorney Ed Marsico.
Full Article and Source:
One of the Largest Cases of Financial Abuse in Dauphin County
"I'd put this up there as one of the higher cases of theft regardless of who the victim was in the last several years that I've seen in Dauphin County from a pure monetary perspective," says Dauphin County District Attorney Ed Marsico.
Full Article and Source:
One of the Largest Cases of Financial Abuse in Dauphin County
Monday, April 9, 2012
'Eccentric Multimillionaires Living in Poverty'
It’s a Santa Barbara story out of a Charles Dickens novel: an eccentric brother and sister living a life of poverty for decades while turning their backs on an English estate worth millions.
It’s been one of the most novel, complicated, long-running cases in Santa Barbara Superior Court conservatorship history, piling up thousands of pages of documents — and thousands of dollars of legal fees on both sides of the Atlantic.
Before John died last June at 85, his Cornwall property was locked in the centuries-old “entail” system, whereby the eldest male heir inherited everything. It was one of the last of England’s entailed estates.
That meant that upon his death, it would have gone to a California cousin, John Westropp Figg-Hoblyn, leaving his sisters, Margaret and Anne Auld, out in the cold.
And that is where Margaret, now 78, has been living off and on in recent years. Attorneys and courts here and in England made legal history by managing to end the entail by creating a will before John Paget’s death. As a result, the estate, now estimated at $4,760,310 and under court administration in England, will go to Margaret and Anne. John Westropp, who unsuccessfully contested the action, gets $200,000.
Margaret (like John Paget, a Stanford University graduate) “has a long history of homelessness and tent-living,” and a few months ago, she “was discovered in a starved and disheveled state,” according to a county conservator’s report.
She was being evicted from her latest place, and the next stop was out on the street, conservators said. So they stepped in. Now, she’s a multimillionaire, on paper at least.
Although part of the property, considered prime farm land, has been sold to benefit the estate, much of it is still tied up, awaiting sales, according to a conservator report.
Full Article and Source:
Eccentric Multimillionaires Living in Poverty
See Also:
John Figg Hoblyn, California Victim
It’s been one of the most novel, complicated, long-running cases in Santa Barbara Superior Court conservatorship history, piling up thousands of pages of documents — and thousands of dollars of legal fees on both sides of the Atlantic.
Before John died last June at 85, his Cornwall property was locked in the centuries-old “entail” system, whereby the eldest male heir inherited everything. It was one of the last of England’s entailed estates.
That meant that upon his death, it would have gone to a California cousin, John Westropp Figg-Hoblyn, leaving his sisters, Margaret and Anne Auld, out in the cold.
And that is where Margaret, now 78, has been living off and on in recent years. Attorneys and courts here and in England made legal history by managing to end the entail by creating a will before John Paget’s death. As a result, the estate, now estimated at $4,760,310 and under court administration in England, will go to Margaret and Anne. John Westropp, who unsuccessfully contested the action, gets $200,000.
Margaret (like John Paget, a Stanford University graduate) “has a long history of homelessness and tent-living,” and a few months ago, she “was discovered in a starved and disheveled state,” according to a county conservator’s report.
She was being evicted from her latest place, and the next stop was out on the street, conservators said. So they stepped in. Now, she’s a multimillionaire, on paper at least.
Although part of the property, considered prime farm land, has been sold to benefit the estate, much of it is still tied up, awaiting sales, according to a conservator report.
Full Article and Source:
Eccentric Multimillionaires Living in Poverty
See Also:
John Figg Hoblyn, California Victim
TX: Biggest Medicare Fraud in History Busted in February, Says Feds
Federal officials say they have taken down the largest Medicare fraud scheme investigators have ever discovered: a $375 million dollar home healthcare scam operating in the Dallas, Texas area.
The alleged "mastermind" of the fraud, Dr. Jacques Roy, is charged with certifying hundreds of fraudulent claims for Medicare reimbursement, and pocketing millions in payments for services not needed, or never delivered. Prosecutors say the 54-year-old Dr. Roy, who was arrested today and could be sentenced to life in prison, operated a "boiler room" to churn out thousands of phony Medicare claims and recruited homeless people as fake patients
"Today, the Medicare Fraud Strike Force is taking aim at the largest alleged home health fraud scheme ever committed," said Assistant Attorney General Lanny Breuer. "According to the indictment, Dr. Roy and his co-conspirators, for years, ran a well-oiled fraudulent enterprise in the Dallas area, making millions by recruiting thousands of patients for unnecessary services, and billing Medicare for those services."
Full Article and Source:
Biggest Medicare Fraud in History Busted, Says Feds
See Also:
NASGA's Open Letter to Congress: The Fleecing of Medicaid and the Taxpayer
The alleged "mastermind" of the fraud, Dr. Jacques Roy, is charged with certifying hundreds of fraudulent claims for Medicare reimbursement, and pocketing millions in payments for services not needed, or never delivered. Prosecutors say the 54-year-old Dr. Roy, who was arrested today and could be sentenced to life in prison, operated a "boiler room" to churn out thousands of phony Medicare claims and recruited homeless people as fake patients
"Today, the Medicare Fraud Strike Force is taking aim at the largest alleged home health fraud scheme ever committed," said Assistant Attorney General Lanny Breuer. "According to the indictment, Dr. Roy and his co-conspirators, for years, ran a well-oiled fraudulent enterprise in the Dallas area, making millions by recruiting thousands of patients for unnecessary services, and billing Medicare for those services."
Full Article and Source:
Biggest Medicare Fraud in History Busted, Says Feds
See Also:
NASGA's Open Letter to Congress: The Fleecing of Medicaid and the Taxpayer
Quincy Woman Gets Probation and Ordered to Pay $32K Restitution
A Quincy woman found guilty of financially exploiting her stepmother was ordered Monday to pay $32,266 in restitution and serve four years probation.
Barbara Chenoweth, 67, was indicted in 2009 of felony exploitation of an elderly person after investigators said she wrote checks from her stepmother's bank account after selling the woman's house. Her stepmother lives in an area nursing home, and Chenoweth had financial power of attorney when the checks were written, investigators said.
Chenoweth was found guilty a year ago by Judge William Mays after a bench trial. She was eligible for up to 15 years in prison, but Assistant State's Attorney Anita Rodriguez asked for probation, saying the issues were restitution and Chenoweth's medical issues.
Public Defender Todd Nelson said Chenoweth, who wore a neck brace in court, is scheduled to have major back surgery soon.
"The goal is to restore the victim as much as possible and to make her whole," Rodriguez said. "But the difficulty in this case is that no matter what we do, there's no way to make the victim whole."
Mays stayed 180 days of jail time for Chenoweth, who was accused of draining her stepmother's account.
"I don't think you went into it to take the money," the judge said to Chenoweth. "It was an opportunity that presented itself to you, and you used that opportunity."
Full Article and Source:
Quincy Woman, 67, Gets Probation for Financially Exploiting Stepmother
Barbara Chenoweth, 67, was indicted in 2009 of felony exploitation of an elderly person after investigators said she wrote checks from her stepmother's bank account after selling the woman's house. Her stepmother lives in an area nursing home, and Chenoweth had financial power of attorney when the checks were written, investigators said.
Chenoweth was found guilty a year ago by Judge William Mays after a bench trial. She was eligible for up to 15 years in prison, but Assistant State's Attorney Anita Rodriguez asked for probation, saying the issues were restitution and Chenoweth's medical issues.
Public Defender Todd Nelson said Chenoweth, who wore a neck brace in court, is scheduled to have major back surgery soon.
"The goal is to restore the victim as much as possible and to make her whole," Rodriguez said. "But the difficulty in this case is that no matter what we do, there's no way to make the victim whole."
Mays stayed 180 days of jail time for Chenoweth, who was accused of draining her stepmother's account.
"I don't think you went into it to take the money," the judge said to Chenoweth. "It was an opportunity that presented itself to you, and you used that opportunity."
Full Article and Source:
Quincy Woman, 67, Gets Probation for Financially Exploiting Stepmother
Sunday, April 8, 2012
Dr. Richard Fine from 2010 and 2011
Full Disclosure Network presents a four-minute preview of hour long interview recorded in the L A County Central Men's jail with political prisoner Richard I Fine who has never been charged or conviced of a crime but has been held in solitary, "Coercive Confinement" for over a year. Dr. Fine holds a PhD in International Law and was an anti-trust attorney with the DOJ in Washington D.C. before he was ordered to jail in civil contempt of court. Listen to him describe the corruption in L A County and the Justice System is a threat to our American Democratic process and to the nation. Then he reveals his simple solution to ridding the corruption from our government.
Source:
YouTube: California Justice System on Brink of Collapse
Void Court Orders and judgments result when a Judge does not have jurisdiction to be able to enter the order. In Judge Yaffe's case it was to due to taking $850,000 in payments from the County of Los Angeles, a party to the case. Under CCP Section 473 (d) a motion can be brought at any time to set aside the void judgment or order. So far four other Judges have been disqualified from sitting on Fine's Motion to Null and Void Judge Yaffe's Orders. They are Ann Jones, Robert O'Brien, Elihu Berle, and Carolyn B. Kuhl.
Source:
Why Disqualified Judges Orders are Null and Void
Source:
YouTube: California Justice System on Brink of Collapse
Void Court Orders and judgments result when a Judge does not have jurisdiction to be able to enter the order. In Judge Yaffe's case it was to due to taking $850,000 in payments from the County of Los Angeles, a party to the case. Under CCP Section 473 (d) a motion can be brought at any time to set aside the void judgment or order. So far four other Judges have been disqualified from sitting on Fine's Motion to Null and Void Judge Yaffe's Orders. They are Ann Jones, Robert O'Brien, Elihu Berle, and Carolyn B. Kuhl.
Source:
Why Disqualified Judges Orders are Null and Void
Britney Spears' Fiance to Share in Her Conservatorship
First comes the engagement, then comes...conservatorship?
Singer Britney Spears' father, Jamie Spears, who holds conservatorship over his daughter and her fortune, has asked a court to add future son-in-law Jason Trawick as a co-conservator, People reports.
Trawick, 40, Britney's former agent, asked her to marry him in December in Las Vegas. He will be Husband No. 3 for Brit, 30, who has been under the legal control of her father since 2008 when she suffered a psychological breakdown.
Trawick will help look after Spears' general well-being - is she eating properly, getting medical care and so forth - not her finances, People reports.
Full Article and Source:
Britney Spears' Finance to Share Conservatorship Over Her
Singer Britney Spears' father, Jamie Spears, who holds conservatorship over his daughter and her fortune, has asked a court to add future son-in-law Jason Trawick as a co-conservator, People reports.
Trawick, 40, Britney's former agent, asked her to marry him in December in Las Vegas. He will be Husband No. 3 for Brit, 30, who has been under the legal control of her father since 2008 when she suffered a psychological breakdown.
Trawick will help look after Spears' general well-being - is she eating properly, getting medical care and so forth - not her finances, People reports.
Full Article and Source:
Britney Spears' Finance to Share Conservatorship Over Her
TX: Effort to Bankrupt Autistic Student's Family Continues
The allegation is pure, mean-spirited revenge. It's how critics describe the Alief Independent School District’s nearly six-year, six-figure legal war against the immigrant parents of special-needs student Chuka Chibuogwu.
"For what purpose? They can't get any money from them," Alief taxpayer Bob Hermann said.
Hermann said he's followed the ongoing effort to bankrupt the Chibuogwus with mounting anger and utter frustration.
"Some adult should step in and say, ‘This is just wrong. Let’s just drop it and forget about it’," he said.
The facts: Way back in 2007, Chuka's parents objected to the way the district was educating their autistic son and fought for changes. The district said "no."
When the Chibuogwu's dropped their battle and pulled their son out of school, then Alief Superintendent Louis Stoerner and attorney Erik Nichols concocted a strategy for retribution, accusing Chuka's parents and their advisors of harassment and demanding the family pay the district's legal expenses.
"There is an honesty issue here and a harassment issue here and I think the parents have been harassed," insisted Jimmy Kilpatrick, a special-education advocate who represented the Chibuogwus.
But for attorney Nichols, the Chibuogwu case was an opportunity to test the tactics he had promoted in a legal seminar entitled "Show Me the Money" - a how to guide for extracting cash penalties from parents who challenge their public schools.
Full Article and Source:
Alief's Revenge: Effort to Bankrupt Autistic Student's Family Continues
"For what purpose? They can't get any money from them," Alief taxpayer Bob Hermann said.
Hermann said he's followed the ongoing effort to bankrupt the Chibuogwus with mounting anger and utter frustration.
"Some adult should step in and say, ‘This is just wrong. Let’s just drop it and forget about it’," he said.
The facts: Way back in 2007, Chuka's parents objected to the way the district was educating their autistic son and fought for changes. The district said "no."
When the Chibuogwu's dropped their battle and pulled their son out of school, then Alief Superintendent Louis Stoerner and attorney Erik Nichols concocted a strategy for retribution, accusing Chuka's parents and their advisors of harassment and demanding the family pay the district's legal expenses.
"There is an honesty issue here and a harassment issue here and I think the parents have been harassed," insisted Jimmy Kilpatrick, a special-education advocate who represented the Chibuogwus.
But for attorney Nichols, the Chibuogwu case was an opportunity to test the tactics he had promoted in a legal seminar entitled "Show Me the Money" - a how to guide for extracting cash penalties from parents who challenge their public schools.
Full Article and Source:
Alief's Revenge: Effort to Bankrupt Autistic Student's Family Continues
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