LARGO, Fla. — A Pinellas County man is fighting to care for his
grandmother after he wasn't notified of a court hearing that stripped
away her rights.
The family called the ABC Action News I-Team,
hoping we could get to the bottom of why nearby close relatives were
left out of the process.
“I love you, grandma,” Jesse Locke told his grandmother Eloise, as he gave her a hug.
He
recently reunited with her for the first time since she had been
removed from her home by a professional guardian earlier this month.
Jesse says he and other family members were banned from seeing her in the assisted living center for 17 days.
“God it was a nightmare,” Eloise said, describing her recent ordeal.
A
professional guardian who was appointed by the court obtained an
ex-parte order, normally used to detain mentally ill people, to remove
her from her home on June 4.
“I knew I couldn't fight the handcuffs. And there were three big policemen,” Eloise said.
Records
indicate she was transported by ambulance from her home to a Largo
mental hospital, before being taken to the memory care center at an ALF.
A
Pinellas County Probate Judge earlier determined Eloise was
incapacitated based on a petition filed by her guardian’s attorney.
Among the allegations in the petition were that she has dementia and lived in an uninhabitable, dirty home.
“It might not look like much to the average person, but I have a million memories here,” said Jesse.
He admits the home is small and old but believes it is a clean, safe place for his grandmother to live.
“My grandpa built it with his two hands 69 years ago. She wants to die in there,” Jesse said.
The guardian also reported Eloise was paranoid, confused and malnourished.
“Oh, baloney. The refrigerator was full of food,” said Eloise.
She says her daughter-in-law, who lives down the street, regularly goes grocery shopping for her.
Another grandson lives directly behind her home.
Eloise’s
guardian tried to get the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office to remove
her from her home on June 1, saying it was an emergency situation since
she was living in deplorable conditions.
A deputy visited the home
and said in his report, “We made contact with Eloise right after and
she let us look around her residence.”
“While Eloise’s residence
didn’t appear spotless, it did seem livable from my perspective. The
residence had working water and electricity. The fridge had food and
Eloise stated she has friends to bring her to and from grocery stores,”
the report goes on to say.
He informed the guardian that based on his observations, he did not find it uninhabitable.
That’s when the guardian sought the court order to have her forcibly removed.
“Literally
you could have thrown a rock from Eloise's house and hit one of those
people's houses,” said attorney Gerald Hemness, who represents Jesse.
Hemness
says Jesse and three other children of Eloise’s late son should have
been given notice of her incapacity and guardianship hearings, arguing
they are legally considered “next of kin” in Florida.
The Florida
Guardianship Law says “Next of Kin” means those persons who would be
heirs at law of the ward or alleged incapacitated person if the person
were deceased and includes the lineal descendants of the ward or alleged
incapacitated person.
“Had notice been done properly, he would
have been aware of the proceeding. He could have pointed out that he
wanted to help his grandmother,” said Hemness.
Eloise's two sons, who live in other states, were notified and did not object to the guardianship.
“The family members she checked with are thousands of miles away. Why didn't you check with anybody in the area? “ Jesse said.
The
guardianship attorney declined an on-camera interview but says he
doesn’t believe he was required to give notice to the local relatives
since Eloise’s two sons are alive and agreed Eloise should be cared for
by a professional guardian.
He told us that Jesse has the right now to petition the court to become involved in the process, which Jesse plans to do.
But
he says he wishes he had been included in the original process, so he
would not have had to hire an attorney at a personal cost of thousands
of dollars.
“Jesse the grandson is having to come in and struggle
to get back into a conversation that's essentially over already,” said
Hemness.
“My client is completely eligible to serve. He had no
blemishes that would cause the court concern about him,” said Hemness,
who hopes Jesse will be given the chance to oversee his grandmother’s
care through a family guardianship.
“We're all willing.
Everybody's willing to help out,” Jesse said, indicating his brothers
and other relatives also want to be part of the process.
“I can tell they love me and everything,” Eloise said, indicating nobody in her family has ever abused or exploited her.
“I’m not gonna stop until I get my grandma back,” Jesse said.
His attorney says he hopes Eloise can eventually have some of her rights restored.
He doesn’t believe she needs to be in a lock-down Alzheimer’s unit.
“Even
when you're under a guardianship, what you want still matters. It's not
supposed to be prison. It's not supposed to be a stripping of all of
your life,” Hemness said.
“If she wants her grandson to take care
of her instead of a stranger, that is, if not the most important thing,
one of the most important things the court has to consider,” he said.
Full Article & Source:
Grandson says a court appointed a stranger to care for his grandmother without telling him
I saw this on facebook and it's another Adam Walser report. Thank you Adam. You are a beacon of hope for so many victims.
ReplyDeleteI can't help but wonder why is it that our elderly are routinely seized and their wishes are not important while immigrant children and illegal immigrants crossing borders into the USA are important with breaking news, front page news all day, every day?
ReplyDelete