A couple charged with scamming their elderly next-door neighbor
out of her home and some of her $2 million won't have to split up while
their case is pending, a court commissioner ruled Monday.
Orlin
Root-Thalman, 37, and his husband Craig Root-Thalman, 29, made their
initial court appearances Monday. Assistant District Attorney Kurt
Benkley asked for no contact orders between the two men, and their
victim, and that they each sign $15,000 personal recognizance bonds.
Benkley said he was concerned because Craig
Root-Thalman has indicated a willingness to cooperate with the
prosecution in the case and Orlin Root-Thalman has a history of domestic
violence.
But Orlin Root-Thalman's attorney,
Justin Singleton, told Court Commissioner Barry Phillips that his
client's prior cases were 12 years ago, mostly involved texts and that
he's known for weeks that Craig Root-Thalman gave a lengthy debriefing
to investigators.
Phillips denied the order, noting
that Craig Root-Thalman was not seeking any kind of protection from
Orlin Root-Thalman, no one is citing specific threats and that the two
continue to live together.
"I
understand the concern, but it's inappropriate at this time," Phillips
said. He did order that the couple to have no contact with their former
next-door neighbor, who deeded her home to them when prosecutors say she
was incompetent.
Phillips set the $15,000 personal
recognizance bonds and gave each man until 3 p.m. Tuesday to appear at
the jail to be booked and released.
A preliminary hearing was set for Jan. 22.
The
victim, a retired Milwaukee Public Schools teacher, lived alone for
years at her house on N. 77th St. in Milwaukee. Around 2012, the
Root-Thalmans moved in next door. A cousin of the victim, a senior
citizen himself, and his wife had been helping care for the woman, but
as her dementia worsened, it became harder for them.
Around
April 2016, the Root-Thalmans began helping the cousin care for the
woman and her home. By July 2016, the Root-Thalmans had filed a
quitclaim deed purporting to transfer the victim's house to them. Four
days later, she signed a power of attorney document naming Orlin
Root-Thalman as her financial agent.
According to
the complaint, the defendants knew their neighbor was mentally
incompetent before they had her sign over her house and sign a financial
power of attorney because "her dementia was obvious, chronic and
longstanding."
Full Article & Source:
Court official denies request to split up couple accused of scamming elderly neighbor pending fraud case
See Also:
Couple charged with scamming home, cash from 92-year-old neighbor with dementia
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