BRADENTON, Fla. — Even the best retirement plans may not be enough to
keep a stranger from taking over your life under the state’s troubled
guardianship system, the I-Team found.
Alice Yaniscavitch said she
thought she was making all the right moves in retirement when she went
to a lawyer to set up a family trust – a decision she says ended up
costing her control over her own life.
The 85-year-old moved in with her daughter Terri McGuire and her
son-in-law Mickey in Manatee County after last year selling her home in
Cleveland, Tennessee.
“Terri was taking care of me. She’s very good,” Yaniscavitch told I-Team Investigator Adam Walser last month.
At the time, Yaniscavitch was waiting to see if a judge would
permanently place her in court-ordered guardianship, which she said she
didn’t want.
“It’s my life – not theirs,” said Yaniscavitch.
Yaniscavitch said the thing she feared most was “going to a nursing home.”
“They’re not going to put me in one,” she said.
McGuire and the advocacy groups that she reached out to were concerned when the case first started in late November.
They
contacted the Florida Office of Public and Professional Guardians, a
watchdog agency set up three years ago to police the state’s broken
guardianship system.
So far, the agency hasn’t taken any action in Yaniscavitch’s case.
How did the guardianship start?
Yaniscavitch
gave both her daughters – Terri McGuire and Lori Yaniscavitch – powers
of attorney over her health care decisions as part of her retirement
planning, according to court records.
In November 2017,
Yaniscavitch set up an irrevocable family trust, with 90 percent of her
money benefitting McGuire, who was taking care of her and the rest going
to Lori, according to the trust document obtained by the I-Team.
Tennessee attorney Jeff Miller wrote, witnessed and notarized the trust agreement.
“She knew why she was there. She had a purpose for being there,” said Miller.
Miller
said Yaniscavitch wanted to move her assets into a trust to make sure
she would be eligible for a future government benefit.
Miller said she also wanted her daughters to avoid going to probate court to settle her estate after her death.
But when Lori Yaniscavitch found out about the trust, she went to court in November, seeking guardianship for her mother.
Lori
Yaniscavitch wouldn’t speak to the I-Team at a recent court hearing,
but in court documents she alleges her sister was financially exploiting
their mother and endangering her health.
When I-Team Investigator
Adam Walser asked Alice Yaniscavitch if she felt safe in her daughter
Terri’s home, she replied, “Oh, yeah. Definitely.”
Daughter moves to break up trust
Lori’s
attorneys asked a judge to remove her mother from Terri’s home and put
her in memory care and argued her mother didn’t know what she was doing
when she signed the trust document in 2017, court transcripts and
documents from the case show.
But Stetson Law Professor Roberta Flowers, director of the Stetson Elder Law Center, said that may be difficult to prove.
“The issue revolves around, under the law, was the person capable at the moment they signed the document,” said Flowers.
“You
have to have people who are there when they signed the document who are
able to articulate what was going on with that person, how was that
person acting so that a judge at some future date can say ‘Oh yeah. Ok.
It sounds like that person understood,’” said Flowers.
Miller said he put those safeguards in place when Alice Yaniscavitch signed her trust documents.
“She
was fully engaged, fully aware of what she wanted to do,” Miller told
the I-Team. “She was the one who spoke out and told me what she wanted
and why she wanted it.”
Judge freezes all accounts
But Judge Deno Economou froze Yaniscavitch’s trust account, along with Terri and Mickey McGuire’s bank accounts.
Their
funds were frozen before Christmas, according to the court order, but
the McGuires hope the Florida Court of Appeals will overturn the judge’s
order.
“The allegation is that they have improper funds in that
account. Unfortunately, there’s no evidence to support that,” said
attorney Marc Soss, who represents the McGuires. “It’s someone trying to
second guess the estate planning that Alice put into place because they
don’t like it.”
Judge Economou also appointed Anne Ridings as Yaniscavitch’s guardian.
Within a few days of being appointed guardian, Ridings took all of Yaniscavitch’s jewelry for safekeeping.
Terri McGuire showed ABC Action News photos she took of hundreds of pieces of her mother’s jewelry before they were taken.
“Gold
watches… I’ve got bracelets, a lot of earrings, diamond earrings,” said
Yaniscavitch about the jewelry she had taken from her.
Wedding ring taken off her finger
Yaniscavitch
said Ridings even took the wedding ring off her finger, which she has
worn for 58 years – even after her husband died.
“Horrible, horrible,” said Yaniscavitch when asked about losing the ring she wore for 58 years –even after her husband died.
“It’s
called marshaling the assets,” said Jeff Swartz, a former judge and law
professor. “I can understand that the guardian wants to marshal and
inventory assets – that’s fine – but taking her wedding band off her
finger and not letting her have it back or taking her jewelry and just
sticking it away – when maybe she does still wear it because at certain
lucid moments she wants her things around her – that’s just not
necessary.”
Less than two weeks after the I-Team interviewed
Yaniscavitch, her daughter Lori picked her up, saying she was taking her
to a hair appointment.
Instead, she moved her into assisted
living – even though court transcripts show the judge said earlier that
Yaniscavitch should remain in her daughter Terri’s home.
Injured in assisted living
Days
later Terri shot a video of her mother at the memory care center, which
she shared with the I-Team. In the video, Yaniscavitch complained of
arm pain and said she had fallen.
Terri McGuire had her friend,
who at the memory care center with her, call 911 for an ambulance to
take her mother to a hospital, where doctors diagnosed Yaniscavitch with
a fractured vertebra.
Days after Yaniscavitch went to the
hospital, guardian Anne Ridings filed an emergency motion asking the
judge to limit McGuire’s visits, court records show. The judge denied
that request.
Ridings did not respond to the I-Team’s interview requests.
It’s
unclear whether Yaniscavitch’s wishes will ultimately be carried out.
She has not been in the courtroom to talk to the judge during five
hearings so far.
Before she was removed from her home, I-Team
Investigator Adam Walser asked Yaniscavitch what would happen if a judge
told her she had go to a nursing home.
“I'm not, I'm not,” said
Yaniscavitch. “I’d say you’re going to have to put me in jail. There’s
no way they’re putting me in a nursing home. I’ve been through it. I’ve
seen it. I don't want to be there.”
The judge still hasn’t ruled yet on whether Yaniscavitch will be placed in permanent guardianship.
After
Yaniscavitch was released from the hospital, she was taken to a
rehabilitation center, where she is currently recovering from her
injury.
If you have a story you think the I-Team should investigate, contact
adam@abcactionnews.com.
Full Article & Source:
The best legal planning may not be enough to keep you safe from guardianship
1 comment:
I am a member of NASGA and I am so happy to see Adam Walser reporting on guardianship again. He's just a wonderful person and reporter and I appreciate him.
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