County Recorder Gary Ott |
West Jordan • A decision about who will be the permanent legal guardian of enfeebled former Salt Lake County Recorder Gary Ott has been delayed a month, along with a ruling over whether the news media will be allowed in court to observe the proceedings.
Because Ott is in an undisclosed hospital and did not attend a
Wednesday court hearing, 3rd District Judge Bruce Lubeck said he felt
uncomfortable making a decision that would impact the rest of Ott’s life
without seeing him in person and evaluating whether his widely
publicized mental decline rendered him unfit to have any say over the
outcome.
“The statute says he has an absolute right to be here,” Lubeck said,
even though there was a verbal consensus among Ott attorney Dara Cohen
and lawyers for both Ott’s siblings and their adversary in the
guardianship case, Ott girlfriend Karmen Sanone, that the former
recorder’s presence was not necessary, given his diminished mental
state.
“I have to choose whether there’s a guardian and who it ought to be. I
can ask him that. He may tell me,” the judge said. “Until I get him
here, I may not know. [Having him here] informs me on all sorts of
levels about what I ought to do.”
Ott resigned Aug. 1 after Lubeck’s initial guardianship decision in
favor of the recorder’s siblings. The family then negotiated an agreement for Ott to step aside
after a year of fruitless entreaties for him to resign from Salt Lake
County Mayor Ben McAdams and the County Council. The county agreed to
pay 12 weeks salary — $35,000 — into a trust to be used for his ongoing
care.
Lubeck learned only Tuesday afternoon that Ott would not attend the
hearing, in part because of the earlier ruling making Ott’s brother and
two sisters his temporary guardians and putting them in charge of his
financial matters. But Lubeck had left Sanone in charge of Ott’s medical
care.
That split authority prevented Ott’s siblings from checking him out of
the hospital — where he has been since being forced to leave a long-term
care facility after he smashed a television set and tried to put a
nurse into a headlock. Only Sanone, as his court-appointed medical
surrogate, had authority to move him.
Sanone maintained the hospital would not release Ott unless he had
another facility to go to. She blamed his siblings’ tight financial
controls with making it difficult to find a suitable place, a charge
they denied.
Seeing the bind he had created, Lubeck reversed his earlier decision
and put the siblings in charge of Ott’s overall medical care until the
delayed hearing, now set for Oct. 12-13. Sanone believes she has that
authority, due to an advanced medical directive that Ott signed before
his mental-health problems became apparent, said her attorney, Aaron
Bergman.
Lubeck also denied a request by Cohen to allow Ott’s guardians to sell
his Salt Lake County home and to use the money to cover his future
medical care. Again, the judge said he wanted to wait until hearing what
Ott himself wants to do.
Cohen surprised Lubeck early in Wednesday’s proceedings when she
withdrew a motion to close the guardianship hearing to reporters. She
acknowledged her request probably would lose out to counterarguments by
The Salt Lake Tribune, Deseret News, KTVX Good 4Utah News and The Utah
Headliners Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists and felt
it was more important to spend time on the issue of Ott’s care.
Ott no longer watches television news or reads newspapers, Cohen noted, so the media’s coverage would not impact him.
Lubeck was not convinced, saying multiple times that he believes Ott’s
right to privacy would be undermined if the hearing was open. “It seems
that may cause him some damage even if he’s unaware of it,” he said,
inviting all of the attorneys to opine on whether a judge can close the
proceeding “even if everyone else wants it open.”
After initially saying he had no objections to opening the hearing,
Bergman later changed positions after Sanone objected that some of her
financial information could be disclosed in the hearing.
Full Article & Source:
Without Gary Ott to speak for himself, judge delays decision on future of former county recorder
See Also:
Sister, brother file for legal guardianship of embattled county recorder
Jay Evensen: What is the solution for an incapacitated politician?
Lawmakers continue conversation about bill to remove incapacitated elected officials
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