Local author Teresa Lyles is sharing her experiences about guardianship and the rights of incapacitated individuals.
Teresa
Lyles says she was very close with her mother, Carmen Tozzo, before
2011. Lyles says she was Tozzo's primary caregiver, until a family
dispute ended in her siblings removing Tozzo from her custody. Tozzo
was evaluated by Alachua County, in a competency hearing to determine
her future.
Lyles says, "She was deamed incompetent,
which means that you have no rights. She couldn't vote, she couldn't
file a police report, she couldn't sue anybody. All of her
constitutional rights were taken away, and she was put under a
guardian."
Lyles says problems began with the guardian. "This
permanent guardian literally started drugging her. Then she was drugged
and removed from her home, and put in a lock down facility, also here in
Gainesville."
Guardian care, Lyles claims, is what
ultimately led to her mother's death. "She fell close to thirty times,
while she was in both facilities. She was not given access to her money,
she was not given access to her family."
Tozzo died at
the age of 96, and Lyles says she didn't know how to cope. She
eventually wrote a book, detailing their story, to bring awareness to
situations like this. Lyles says, "What I want to do is raise awareness
of this issue. It can happen anywhere, it happened here. I'm not the
only that has gone through this experience."
Lyles explains her story more completely in her novel, "65 Minutes: A Tale of Torture and Murder in Guardianship."
Full Article & Source:
Local Author Shares Troubling Experiences with Guardianship
3 comments:
Good for you Teresa! The story of your Mom's abuse should be told and you have ensured her voice will never be silent.
I agree. These stories should be heard and they will outrage every reader.
I am so proud of you, Teresa.
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