During a 27-year banking career, a Portsmouth
bank executive only once called state officials to report a possible
case of financial exploitation. The person she thought might be "taking
advantage of" an elderly and wealthy bank customer was Portsmouth police
Sgt. Aaron Goodwin.
That testimony was
offered by a senior executive for a downtown Portsmouth bank during a
sworn deposition on Feb. 11 in the Shaines and McEachern law office. The
deposition was taken as part of a dispute over the last will and trust
for the late Geraldine Webber, who changed her estate plans shortly
before her December 2012 death, so Goodwin would inherit her riverfront
home, stocks, bonds and Cadillac.
Multiple parties are alleging Goodwin exerted undue influence over Webber, who had been diagnosed with dementia.
During
her deposition last month, the Portsmouth banker said she and another
bank employee phoned the New Hampshire Bureau of Elderly & Adult
Services because they were "concerned" about possible "financial abuse"
of Webber by Goodwin. The banker said Webber had a checking account,
savings account, certificates of deposit worth about $350,000 and a safe
deposit box with unknown contents.
Webber's
"financial capacity" had diminished, said the banker, who explained that
Webber had lost the keys to her safe deposit box, forgot to cash
checks, lost checks and was carrying large amounts of cash.
Full Article & Source:
Banker feared exploitation of elderly woman
2 comments:
Is this NH bureau functional, or should it be replaced?
Replaced.
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