Billions are stolen from the elderly and infirm across the country each year. Here's how to stop it
As
volunteers work through case files, looking for missing reports or red
flags pointing to possible improprieties, they're also entering
information into a new statewide database.
Until now, New Jersey
has never tracked guardianship cases. Some county surrogates don't even
know how many of their cases are still active.
Rabner believes the total number of active guardianships statewide may be in the tens of thousands, but no one is sure.
While prior experience with accounting or the courts is a plus, it's not required to join the program.
"To
be sure, we need to enlist (and) train yet more volunteers to be able
to continue and review these reports on a sustained basis," Rabner told
the conference attendees.
"But make no mistake, the very fact that
this program now exists in New Jersey will cause people to think twice
before they might even consider to take a step to take advantage of
those they've promised to help," he added.
Uekert, for one,
believes New Jersey is taking a practical approach. She spoke at the
elder abuse conference in Stockton and came away impressed by New
Jersey's commitment to do a better job policing guardians.
"Ideally
you would have a cadre of trained professionals (reviewing guardianship
case files) but the courts generally don't have the funds to have those
types of personnel," says Uekert, principal court research consultant
for the National Center for State Courts, based in Williamsburg,
Virginia.
"Volunteers," she believes, "would be better than nothing."
But at least one other expert is strongly opposed to the idea.
"It's just another way of trivializing the problem by saying, 'We can handle this with volunteers,' " says Minnesota law professor A. Kimberley Dayton.
"It's
about money, a lack of resources. Until that's fixed, none of this is
going to be fixed," she says. "It's just going to keep on going and
going."
In Atlantic County, where Lieberman was based, two
volunteer monitors have helped the county surrogate review more than 330
cases so far.
But by the time the volunteers began their work last year, the damage was already done.
I'm so disappointed this is the end of the series, I can't tell you. Thank you Shannon Mullen for a most professional and informative report. Please, please consider writing a book!
I'm just finding the series and will read it all, but judging by this article, it's going to be well worth reading. Thank you NASGA. I just found you too.
Thank you Judge Rabner!
ReplyDeleteI'm so disappointed this is the end of the series, I can't tell you. Thank you Shannon Mullen for a most professional and informative report. Please, please consider writing a book!
ReplyDeleteI'm just finding the series and will read it all, but judging by this article, it's going to be well worth reading. Thank you NASGA. I just found you too.
ReplyDeleteI learned alot from these reports. Thank you.
ReplyDelete