Amy McLellan, 61, of Brunswick was
indicted last week by a Cumberland County grand jury on charges of Class
B misuse of entrusted property of a vulnerable person more than $10,000
and Class B theft by unauthorized taking more than $10,000.
Since purchasing the building for just
more than $1 million in August 2016, McLellan has renovated the former
Skofield House nursing home — and original Brunswick Hospital — at the
corner of Cumberland and Union streets into The McLellan, an upscale
elderly living complex with on-site skilled nursing care.
In October 2017, the Brunswick Police
Department executed a search warrant of McLellan’s unit at The McLellan
and seized computers and records.
According to an Oct. 27, 2017, affidavit
in support of that search warrant, Brunswick police Cmdr. Mark Waltz
wrote that an employee of McLellan’s had reported to the state
Department of Health and Human Services that they had seen on McLellan’s
computer financial documents and text messages indicating that
“McLellan now had about $470,000 of their money, and that they had taken
her about $70,000 of that amount one day when she was on duty at CMMC.”
Waltz wrote that he learned from
interviewing the alleged victims that they met McLellan while the
husband, 89 at the time, was her patient at CMMC. McLellan allegedly
visited him while he then stayed at several rehabilitation facilities in
the Lewiston-Auburn area, and then at their Auburn home.
According to the affidavit, in April 2016, while the man was at Clover Manor in Auburn, he executed a general power of attorney naming McLellan as his agent.
His wife, who was 92 at the time, told
Waltz that her husband had been “in love” with McLellan and that she had
seen McLellan kiss him on the lips.
Waltz wrote that on April 28, 2016,
McLellan drove the couple to their bank where the husband withdrew
$200,000 and had a cashier’s check prepared, which McLellan took.
In December 2016, $74,000 allegedly was
withdrawn from their account, and on Aug. 1, 2017, a check for $50,000
allegedly was made out to The McLellan, LLC by the husband, he wrote.
The alleged victim told Waltz his
signature was on the check, but he didn’t make it out, “and that
McLellan had been making out their checks. He also did not know why he
had paid the money, nor did” his wife, Waltz wrote.
Waltz wrote that McLellan had taken approximately 60 percent of the couple’s net worth.
Waltz wrote that McLellan took out a
mortgage from Norway Savings Bank for $1.6 million in August 2016. He
alleged that she used the initial $200,000 from the victims as
collateral for the mortgage.
In a text message allegedly found on the
computer, McLellan told a contractor working on the building that the
victim “cashed out savings bonds. He put them into his savings account
that totals $202,000. He and I signed a form and had it notarized. I
need to get the LLC formed before I can set up an account at nsb. I
signed the commitment letter. They keep asking where the 200,000 is
coming from and I keep saying it is a gift.”
According to Waltz, the McLellan website
said the couples’ entrance fee upon moving in was supposed to be
$50,000, so the August 2017 check for that amount may be legitimate.
“However, there is no apparent rationale
for the $200,000 April 2016 and $74,000 December 2016 transfers to
McLellan,” he wrote. “After the August 2017 payment of $50,000, the
[alleged victims’] assets are only approximately $130,000. Even if the
$50,000 payment is not counted, while serving as [the alleged victim’s]
fiduciary, McLellan inducted the couple to transfer to her $274,000 of
funds to which she was not entitled, which represented 60 percent of
their total assets.
The couple, Waltz wrote, “were both clear … that the money was not a gift and they expected it to be repaid.”
“The [alleged victims] are vulnerable
people,” Waltz wrote, noting that the man seemed to be “losing capacity”
and was using a wheelchair. “They are of advanced age.”
In October 2016, McLellan told the Bangor Daily News
that the project was “all about allowing people to live their lives to
the fullest as they age, to show that life continues to grow and change
in positive ways. I think I can bring the same energy and feeling to
another setting.”
She said she had taken deposits on eight of the 18 apartments.
She said she had purchased the
three-story building for just more than $1 million, far less than the
$1.6 million asking price, and had spent “most of my life’s savings” on
the project, intending to create small, assisted-living apartments for
couples 62 and older.
She said she had named the project for her late father, William Arthur McLellan, a physician with deep family ties to Brunswick.
McLellan’s attorney, Kristine Hanly, did not immediately return a phone call Wednesday.
Full Article & Source:
Brunswick nurse charged with bilking elderly couple out of $274,000
1 comment:
Horrible. Can't trust ANYBODY anymore!
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