Suffering
in silence, some older adults may never tell law enforcement or
authorities about government benefits and other income being stolen by
family, friends or caregivers.
“That’s a really hard one to
deal with because many times that older person doesn’t want everybody to
know what their flesh and blood is doing to them,” said Pat Freeman,
chief executive officer of the Oakwood-based Legacy Link.
A trio
of bills sent to Gov. Nathan Deal’s desk this month would empower the
elderly, their families and their advocates against abuse and
exploitation. First lady Sandra Deal co-chairs the Older Adults Cabinet
with Department of Human Services Commissioner Robyn Crittenden. The
cabinet is an executive committee created in 2017 to address issues such
as housing, health care and exploitation.
“I think for a lot of
the bigger issues we’re seeing with older adults especially is financial
exploitation. Family, friends and caregivers befriend the older adults
and then help themselves to assets and so forth,” said Pat King, team
leader of the forensic special investigations unit inside the state’s
Division of Aging Services.
According to the Hall County Sheriff’s Office, reports to law
enforcement on elder abuse or exploitation jumped from 18 cases in 2014
to 46 in 2015. In 2017, there were 56 reports.
Adult Protective Services’ policy writer/trainer Sharee Rines said the numbers statewide continue to rise.
“Over probably the last five years, our numbers have continued to go up,” she said.
Hall
County Sheriff’s Office Investigator Brett Roach said financial
exploitation is one of the main complaints investigated. Some cases
involve abusing power of attorney, and the investigators work closely
with Probate Court on such cases.
“Just because you are the power of attorney doesn’t make it where you can make a financial gain off of it,” Roach said.
House
Bill 803 concerns trafficking elderly and disabled people, where a
person “recruits, harbors, transports, provides or obtains” people “for
the purpose of appropriating the resources … for one’s own or another
person’s benefit.” These resources are often Social Security payments
and other financial help for the elderly.
Anyone convicted of such trafficking would be guilty of a felony
punishable by jail time between 12 months and 20 years, a maximum fine
of $100,000 or both.
The trafficking statute is defined as
“deception, coercion, exploitation or isolation.” Isolation is
considered preventing a disabled or elderly person of having any contact
with friends, family, law enforcement or others against their will.
“Even
bank employees have gone to training about signs to look for, like if
someone is illegally and without permission taking charge of a loved
one’s assets,” Freeman said.
In 2010, the U.S. Government
Accountability Office authored a report saying it had identified
“hundreds of allegations of physical abuse, neglect and financial
exploitation by guardians” in 45 states and Washington D.C.
“In 20
selected closed cases, GAO found that guardians stole or otherwise
improperly obtained $5.4 million in assets from 158 incapacitated
victims, many of whom were seniors,” according to the report.
If
family members are concerned about a loved one’s care in an assisted
living facility or nursing home, Freeman said all licensed facilities
must have a poster with Legacy Link’s number to call about complaints.
The agency’s ombudsman are advocates for the residents who settle
issues before law enforcement or state government agencies get involved.
Regarding
the increase in reports, King pointed to the 2012 initiative known as
the At-Risk Adult Crime Tactics training, which is a 16-hour course for
primary and secondary responders.
“We want to make sure when
someone calls 911 — whoever answers that phone until the case goes to
court — we want to make sure anybody that touches that case knows what
abuse looks like, what questions to ask, how to build a case, who the
mandated reporters are … so forth and so on,” King said.
Roach said investigators will look at living conditions and what type of care the person is receiving.
When
her team started tracking arrests and where they’ve done training last
year, King said there was a positive correlation between the two,
suggesting that the training is helping to identify exploitation that
previously wasn’t reported.
Senate Bill 406, which was part of
Deal’s final criminal justice reform package, concerns background checks
and licensing for employees and facilities.
“One of the things that we’ve seen a number of times this past year
is people are opening up homes (that) they say it’s assisted living or
they call it a personal care home. They’re not licensed. They’re not
following the rules that they should be for safety’s sake and feeding
people as they should,” Freeman said.
Legacy Link’s ombudsman helped law enforcement and state government agencies in finding these places and helping shut them down.
“Many times, the owners just go to a different county or a different place in the state and start all over again,” Freeman said.
According
to the bill, those submitting an application for a new license must
send in a records check application for each owner, applicant and
employee.
“On or before Jan. 1, 2021, each owner and employee of a
currently licensed facility shall furnish to the department a records
check application,” according to the bill. “In lieu of such records
check application, a facility may submit evidence, satisfactory to the
department, that within the immediately preceding 12 months each owner
and employee received a satisfactory determination.”
Background checks will be processed through the Georgia Crime Information Center and the FBI.
House Bill 635 would increase information sharing among agencies investigating elder abuse and developing local task forces.
“Our
Adult Protective Services unit cannot currently share its files with
medical examiners and coroners, so that bill authorizes us to do that,
should it be signed into law,” said Ashley Fielding Cooper, the chief
operations officer for the Division of Family and Children Services.
If
signed, the law would allow the prosecuting attorney, law enforcement,
other state agencies involved in the investigation and coroners/medical
examiners to have access to these abuse reports.
The district
attorney of each judicial circuit would also be able to establish an
“adult abuse, neglect and exploitation multidisciplinary team,” which
would review responses to abuse reports and identify areas to improve.
Cooper said the review team would be similar to the child fatality
review completed by county committees annually.
“It does clarify
some sharing of records information and clarify with Adult Protective
Services, so it can be an asset in those communities that are able to
form such a team,” said Julia Fisher Strauss, associate general counsel
for the Division of Aging Services.
Full Article & Source:
Bills on governor’s desk would boost elder abuse protections
1 comment:
I wonder who is trafficking the elderly other than guardianship and where are they trafficked to?
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