As the 71st session of the General Assembly of the United Nations
begins this week to discuss international issues that affect the lives
of millions throughout the world, the United States needs to step up its
commitment to safeguard human rights and promote the rule of law in its
own backyard — specifically, escalating abuse in the U.S. Elder
Guardianship system.
It’s legal, but is it right?
Imagine you’ve worked hard all of your life and suddenly you are
deemed incapacitated and are stripped of your dignity and basic
individual rights. You have been abducted from your home, isolated from
your family, and “placed” somewhere to be medicated while your assets
are being pillaged. The authorities that should be protecting you are
the ones committing these heinous acts. It sounds like Nazi Germany, but
this is happening in the United States today.
The victims are seniors. The partners in crime are financial predators and agents of the Elder Guardianship system
— attorneys, professional guardians, medical experts, and others who
are paid out of the senior’s assets. There are some good judges but many
are overworked and some are actively aiding the exploitation. Anyone
can file to deem you incapacitated. The entire process from filing an
incapacity petition to plenary guardianship where all rights are removed
can happen within days. Yet, once you’re caught in the web, it’s almost
impossible to break free... AND you are forced to pay your abusers in
the process.
A 2013 AARP report
gave a “best guess” estimate of the number of adults under guardianship
nationally at 1.5 million. Idaho and Minnesota are the only states that
track the amount of money being controlled by guardians or
conservators; the combined total for just two states is over $1 billion. Guardianship is supposed to protect older citizens. However, what happens when the system is broken? A 2010 federal study
by the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) identified hundreds
of allegations of physical abuse, neglect and financial exploitation by
guardians in 45 states and the District of Columbia between 1990 and
2010. In 20 cases, the GAO found that guardians stole or improperly
obtained $5.4 million in assets from 158 incapacitated victims.
The Abduction of Lillie
Tuesday,
September 6, 2016 was Lillie’s 88th birthday and her family didn’t know
where she was. A week earlier, on August 30, the court-appointed
Emergency Temporary Guardian abducted her from a doctor’s office while
her niece was in the other room filling out papers. Although Lillie was
happy and safe in her Palm Coast home of twenty years, the guardian
“placed” her into assisted living and refused to tell her family the
location. Lillie was not in danger and there was no emergency situation
or other credible justification of such extreme and deceptive action. Video of Lillie
from July 30, 2016 — just a month before — shows a vibrant
African-American woman enjoying her home and family, and vocal about her
financial affairs and this case. In fact, she does not seem
incapacitated at all.
Since the case
started in 2012, three good doctor’s reports that could have given
Lillie her rights back went stale through a legal shell game of
loopholes, frivolous objections and unethical behavior. Now, while she
is sequestered and possibly sedated, they are pushing hard for plenary
guardianship, which would take away her last two remaining rights: the
right to vote (she is a registered Democrat excited about voting for
Hillary Clinton) and the right to choose with whom she socializes. Over a
dozen attorneys and others have been invoicing against Lillie’s assets,
while the temporary guardian has not paid Lillie’s basic bills or given
her a penny of her own money for food or personal living
expenses. The temporary guardian has been neglecting her fiduciary
responsibilities and violating standards of practice, but Lillie’s
sister and over 50 nieces and nephews are the ones being shut out.
The sudden
manner by which Lillie was involuntarily placed in an anonymous location
and isolated from her family and support system was likely traumatizing
to her particularly given her past victimization. The initial
evaluation for incapacity happened in 2012 when she was held captive for
eight months at the home of a family friend. She eventually called 911
and escaped. Now, after five years of systemic abuse, Lillie is being
violated again — this time by the temporary guardian who is supposed to
be her advocate. Getting old is not a crime, yet Lillie is being treated like a criminal. Tonight, she is somewhere alone in assisted living probably wondering why her family has abandoned her.
Captors use social isolation
to torture prisoners of war. Social isolation of otherwise healthy,
well-functioning individuals eventually results in psychological and
physical disintegration, and even death. Nevertheless, the Emergency
Motions filed in court to get Lillie returned to her home and family
have been ignored.
Florida’s “Liquidate, Isolate, Medicate”
In Florida, there are 5 million people age 60 and older
and that demographic is expected to account for most of the state’s
population growth in the next 15 years. Yet, seniors who have come to
this retirement haven are actively being deprived of life, liberty and
property without due process of law. The guardianship system oversteps
constitutional rights and goes against the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment that forbids states from discriminating invidiously against some of their citizens.
Professional guardianship is considered a “growth business,” with the number increasing from 12 registered professional guardians in 2003 to 456 in 2015, according to the Florida Department of Elder Affairs. The abuse is so rampant that the process itself has been called “Liquidate, Isolate, Medicate.” With 40 hours of training
and a modest background check, a professional guardian can start
earning $85 an hour and have control over a ward’s property, finances,
medical decisions, housing and social relationships. In other words, the
guardian has the ability to: liquidate your assets by selling your home, car, etc.; isolate you from your family as guardian of “your person;” and put you in a nursing home to medicate you until you die. All of this is supposed to be in your “best interest.” An ABC13 Investigates report dubbed it “The Grey Prison.”
For example, 89-year-old Marie, featured in the Sarasota Herald-Tribune‘s Elder guardianship: A well-oiled machine,
had her rights removed at the request of her stepson-in law. The court
ordered a trust company to pay out some $635,000 to attorneys, guardians
and other involved in her case. She survived wartime Poland and said
even Hitler’s Germany failed to prepare her for this travesty.
Republican member of the Florida House of Representatives Larry Ahern said, “In extreme cases, the wards are sometimes prevented from regaining their competency and remain, in effect, prisoners of guardians.” How many seniors, like Lillie and Marie, are being exploited in this cruel and systemic manner?
Republican member of the Florida House of Representatives Larry Ahern said, “In extreme cases, the wards are sometimes prevented from regaining their competency and remain, in effect, prisoners of guardians.” How many seniors, like Lillie and Marie, are being exploited in this cruel and systemic manner?
Due to a string of horror stories and rising complaints, on March 10, 2016 Governor Rick Scott signed into law Senate Bill 232 creating the Office of Public & Professional Guardians
to replace the Statewide Public Guardianship Office within the Florida
Department of Elder Affairs. In April, they initiated rule making
procedures to address the regulation of professional guardians,
including standards of practice and disciplinary guidelines.
These are expected to be in place October 2016. While these necessary
changes are underway, what happens to seniors, like Lillie and Marie,
who are being victimized this moment in Florida? Will they get a pardon and be set free?
A New Form of Human Trafficking?
According to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, Article 3, paragraph (a) of the Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons
defines Trafficking in Persons as the “recruitment, transportation,
transfer, harbouring or receipt of persons, by means of the threat or
use of force or other forms of coercion, of abduction, of fraud, of
deception, of the abuse of power or of a position of vulnerability or of
the giving or receiving of payments or benefits to achieve the consent
of a person having control over another person, for the purpose of
exploitation. Exploitation shall include, at a minimum, the exploitation
of the prostitution of others or other forms of sexual exploitation,
forced labour or services, slavery or practices similar to slavery,
servitude or the removal of organs.”
Trafficking involves psychological coercion to render someone a slave. To do this, perpetrators employ “tactics that can lead to the psychological consequence of learned helplessness
for the victims, where they sense that they no longer have any autonomy
or control over their lives.
Traffickers may hold their victims captive, expose them to large amounts of alcohol or use drugs, keep them in isolation, or withhold food or sleep. During this time the victim often begins to feel the onset of depression, guilt and self-blame, anger and rage, and sleep disturbances, PTSD, numbing, and extreme stress. Under these pressures, the victim can fall into the hopeless mental state of learned helplessness.”
Traffickers may hold their victims captive, expose them to large amounts of alcohol or use drugs, keep them in isolation, or withhold food or sleep. During this time the victim often begins to feel the onset of depression, guilt and self-blame, anger and rage, and sleep disturbances, PTSD, numbing, and extreme stress. Under these pressures, the victim can fall into the hopeless mental state of learned helplessness.”
An argument can
be made that the “Liquidate, Isolate, Medicate” Elder Guardianship
process in Florida at its worse is a form of human trafficking. On the
basis of the definition, it is evident that trafficking in persons has
three constituent elements: a) The Act (What is done) — In this case,
the transfer and harbouring of a person, b) The Means (How it is done) —
Abduction, deception, abuse of power or vulnerability, and c) The
Purpose (Why it is done) - In the case of guardianships, the purpose is
financial exploitation — a form of servitude. Seniors are sedated in
locked assisted living facilities while their assets are spent down.
The Right to be Protected & Respected
Probably the
most famous case of financial elder abuse is that of one-time New York
socialite Brooke Astor when she was more than 100 years old. Her
grandson Philip C. Marshall testified against his father and helped put
him in jail. In his 2015 testimony
to the Senate’s Special Committee on Aging, Mr. Marshall said, “To be
complacent about elder justice is to be complicit in elder abuse.”
Given
demographic trends, elder financial abuse is expected to grow
dramatically unless we do something. The baby boom generation is
reaching retirement age at a rate of 10,000 people per day. Those 65+ will make up 20% of the population by 2050. The 2015 White House Conference on Aging has made “elder justice” one of its four tracks. There is now a federal home for Adult Protective Services and a new Elder Justice website
called a “one-stop shopping site for victims, families, prosecutors,
researchers and practitioners.” President Barack Obama declared June 15,
2016 as World Elder Abuse Awareness Day.
Awareness is
good, but immediate action is needed. If states are not doing their
jobs, the federal government needs to step in. It’s time to reform the
Elder Guardianship system in the U.S., prosecute predators and hold
legal agents — judges, attorneys, evaluators, professional guardians,
etc. — to a higher standard. As Vice President Hubert Humphrey said,
“The moral test of government is how that government treats those who
are in the dawn of life, the children; those who are in the twilight of
life, the elderly; those who are in the shadows of life — the sick, the
needy and the handicapped.”
Just as we
continue to make strides with human rights issues around the world, we
need to shine a brighter light on elder abuse on our soil — particularly
this type of vicious and systemic financial exploitation. To be an
elder is a privilege, not a condition causing you to be tossed aside and
abused. Our elders need to be protected and respected. If we’re lucky,
we will all get old. Let’s create a society where we can age with grace
and dignity.
Teresa Kay-Aba Kennedy is a Harvard Business School-trained strategist and President of Power Living Enterprises, Inc.
Her mission is to raise the consciousness of the planet and create a
more sustainable world by releasing the potential in individuals. A
seasoned life coach/speaker and founder of the first yoga studio in
Harlem, she has been featured on the cover of Yoga Journal, in Oprah’s
book, Live Your Best Life!, and was selected as a World Economic Forum
Young Global Leader. An early Internet pioneer and TV executive, she has
advised billion-dollar companies on their multi-platform engagement
strategies. Her latest award-winning book — co-authored with her mother
Columbia University-trained journalist Janie Sykes-Kennedy — is Dancing Light: The Spiritual Side of Being Through the Eyes of a Modern Yoga Master on her teacher/mentor 98-year-old yoga master Tao Porchon-Lynch.
On June 20, 2016, Kennedy moderated a conversation with Tao Porchon-Lynch at the United Nations for International Day of Yoga on “Yoga for the Achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals.” On October 3, 2016, for International Day of Non-Violence,
she will facilitate a conversation with Ms. Porchon-Lynch on Mahatma
Gandhi and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. hosted by the Indian Consulate in
New York. On November 19, 2016, she will moderate another discussion
with Ms. Porchon-Lynch at the United Nations for Women’s Entrepreneurship Day.
For inspiration, go to www.IAmPowerLiving.com, subscribe to the weekly Dose of Power Living and the Power Living YouTube channel. Be sure to Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.
Note: Kennedy is the niece of Lillie featured in this article. As of September 13, 2016, Lillie’s family still does not know where she is and the temporary guardian refuses to tell them. For more, go to www.elderdignity.org. Watch the video and let us know what you think.
Full Article & Source:
Is Elder Guardianship A New Form Of Human Trafficking?
The answer to the question in the title of the article is simply no. Guardianship is not a form of human trafficking. Guardianship abuse is the problem, and I even think the term human trafficking is a bit of a stretch for that. Guardianship abuse is a crime that should be prosecuted.
ReplyDeleteI think it's human trafficking for profit!
ReplyDeleteGuardianship includes the kidnapping, isolation and psychological torture and medical abuse of the targeted victim...al of it done for $$. It is trafficking one human being in order for another to profit.
ReplyDelete