CLEVELAND, Ohio – Ohio isn’t the only state concerned about vulnerable seniors.
Minnesota tackled financial elder abuse in 2012 by establishing a Conservator Account Auditing Program (CAAP).
It
created an online system for uploading records of court-appointed
conservators and hired a team of auditors to periodically review them. A
related initiative is called the Conservator Account Review Program (CARP).
According to Minnesota Judicial Branch Audit Manager Jamie Majerus,
roughly 4,800 Minnesotans had assets under conservatorship in 2018 that
were monitored by the programs. The value of these assets totalled $950
million.
In both programs, professionals supervised by
certified fraud examiners oversee wards’ finances. CAAP audits all
conservator-managed accounts after the first year and all accounts with
assets exceeding $10,000 every four years. CARP routinely audits all
conservator-managed accounts, regardless of size, and can refer those
accounts to CAAP if it spots potential problems.
After
the audit, judges get an account review report summarizing the
auditor’s findings and recommendations. A similar document is provided
to the judge before conservatorship hearings.
One expert calls it the model for an auditing system.
Nevada addressed guardianship abuse after a fraud case drew national attention.
Professional
guardian April Parks used her court-appointed position to isolate and
financially exploit more than 150 people in Las Vegas before she was
caught. She got the maximum sentence of 16-40 years in prison after
pleading guilty last November.
In 2017, the Nevada Supreme Court created the Permanent Guardianship Commission, made up of judges, advocates and lawyers, to oversee and improve the state’s guardianship practices.
Wards
must be present at a hearing, if physically able, and must have legal
representation. A proposed ward can hire his or her own lawyer, but many
are appointed by the court through legal aid centers.
“Now,
protected persons and proposed protected persons have trained lawyers
fighting for what they want, not what everyone thinks is in their best
interest,” said Jim Berchtold, who leads the guardianship advocacy
program at the Legal Aid Center of Southern Nevada.
Berchtold
believes that a lawyer independent from the probate system can best
serve wards as an impartial advocate. “Even if a protected person is
unable to express his or her wishes, the mere presence of an attorney to
represent them helps to ensure compliance with the statutes and
dissuades financial exploitation and other abuses,” he said.
Nevada also created a Guardianship Compliance Office,
which supports district probate courts by reviewing cases and
performing investigations upon request. It can investigate the health
and welfare of a protected person, locate guardians the court has lost
contact with and run forensic audits if a judge is concerned about
accounting for a ward’s assets.
“Before, the
court didn’t have those resources to dig in and investigate,” said
Guardianship Compliance Manager Kate McCloskey. “We have one district
court that calls our audits ‘liquid gold.’”
Nevada’s
Guardianship Complaince Office also operates a hotline for anyone who
has questions about guardianship or needs help reporting guardianship
abuse.
Berchtold and McCloskey said Nevada’s
2017 Protected Person’s Bill of Rights was another major step forward.
It includes the right to be educated about guardianships, to participate
in developing plans that will affect the ward’s future and to remain as
independent as possible.
Full Article & Source:
What can Ohio learn from other state guardianship programs?
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