Two women are charged with exploiting an
elderly man's pocketbook from their positions as management in a Great
Falls assisted living home.
Jillian Lorrain Davis and Erica T. Lawrence are charged with exploitation of an older and incapacitated person, a felony.
In
October, one of the man's children reported to Great Falls police that
he suffered from dementia and stayed at the Bluebird Assisted Living
Facility. A woman reportedly charged with managing the man's finances
said Davis, house manager of the assisted living facility, had been
using his checking account for medical supplies, cigarettes, snacks and
clothing.
The woman told police that the man's
medical supplies had been paid for by other sources and that he had no
new clothes to show for the money spent.
According
to court documents, the incident that prompted them to visit police
included a $1,000 withdrawal from a Great Falls bank, which Davis said
would be for a new TV. The family reported, however, that the man never
got a new TV.
Great
Falls police reportedly found that Davis had received approximately
$1,967.50 from the man's account between August and October in 2017.
Another $40 check was written to Ken Davis, Jillian's husband and not an
employee at Bluebird, according to reports.
In
addition, Lawrence, a former Bluebird manager, was reportedly received
$2,070 from the man's account between January 2016 and August 2017.
In
speaking with the general manager at Bluebird, police learned the "plan
of care" for the man included conditions that the woman in charge of
his finances would handle the man's money, not the staff. The plan was
signed and filed by Davis and Lawrence, according to court documents.
The
manager also told police that Davis and her husband had reportedly been
caught stealing a flat screen TV from the Meadowlark House, a facility
affiliated with Bluebird. The incident was reportedly caught on
surveillance footage, but they returned the TV and staff never reported
the incident to police, she said.
Meadowlark
manager Laurie Kelly told the Tribune Davis no longer works at assisted
living homes. She said Davis was likely allowed to return to work after
the TV incident because she returned it, but added that there was less
supervision at Bluebird to impose some discipline.
In
October, Davis reportedly stopped showing up to work after a manager
said she wanted to have a meeting regarding some money matters. In
November, officers were able to phone Davis, who said she "did not know"
the man was a dementia patient. Davis was not in custody at her initial
appearance on Monday after posting her $2,500 bond. Her arraignment has
not yet been set.
Full Article & Source:
Great Falls assisted living managers charged with stealing from a dementia patient
1 comment:
This is awful and I hope justice is served. I also worry that Dementia is affecting more and more people and the predators are waiting.
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