Dorothy and Leon Bloom |
In their beloved house overlooking Roberts Bay, a couple who came from Atlanta to enjoy boating, the opera, dinner parties and “30 years of play and fun” in their retirement are now struggling with the late-life health issues that afflict so many in Southwest Florida's longevity boom.
It's a challenge they had
prepared for more diligently than most people, with documents that
specified their wishes about medical and financial decisions.
So the last thing they expected at this point in their story was a brush with Florida's complex guardianship law.
Leon
Bloom, 96, the founder of an international swimming pool chemical
company, is by all accounts a sociable and generous man — the kind who
inspires steadfast loyalty among his friends, his family, and the trio
of caregivers who now see to his needs around the clock.
He
is also the focus of an unusual elder guardianship case that pitted his
longtime friend and attorney, former state Sen. Bob Johnson, against
his wife of 41 years, Dorothy Bloom.
The
Blooms' friendship with the Johnsons was almost as old as their
marriage. The two families celebrated holidays together, and the couples
went on cruises to Alaska and the Caribbean.
Several
times, Johnson revised Leon Bloom's trust document — which leaves most
of his fortune to charity on his death — and in 1998 Johnson became the
successor trustee, to act in his friend's place if necessary.
Full Article & Source:
A civil dispute over guardianship
3 comments:
I am beginning to think lawyers and professionals of any kind are not to be trusted in any estate planning.
YOU ARE CORRECT THEY ARE ALL CROOKS!
It's so sad and makes me want to cry. Old age is scarier than ever before.
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