A
conservator stole money from her elderly and disabled clients and was
prosecuted and sentenced in federal court. Connecticut Probate
Administrator Paul Knierim stated that the incident was unfortunate but that safeguards are in place. Judge Knierim suggested that such abuses are rare.
These reported abuses are the tip of an iceberg. The safeguards he referred to do not address the problems.
As
lawyers who represent low-income individuals with mental health
conditions, we and our colleagues who represent elderly clients too
often see court-appointed conservators mismanaging the conserved
person’s money. Life savings, however modest, are frequently wasted due
to conservators’ ignorance of the Medicaid rules. Conservators may pay a
nursing home nearly all of an individual’s assets, making their return
home difficult or impossible. Often, these same conservators are quick
to move the person to a nursing home without exploring community
supports that would allow them to remain at home. In most situations,
the Connecticut law requires that a conservator explore such less
restrictive options before moving an individual to a nursing home.
But,
it does not matter what the law says, because they don’t always follow
the law. The law, enacted to protect vulnerable conserved individuals,
is frequently ignored by those whose job it is to carry it out.
For
example, the statute requires most conservators to provide a bond,
which is a kind of insurance to protect the conserved individual’s
assets from loss caused by fraud, negligence, theft or misrepresentation
by the conservator. However, the probate courts rarely enforce that
requirement, leaving people like the victims of the federally sentenced
conservator unprotected.
When
these issues have been exposed in the press over the years, probate
court administration explains them away as isolated incidents. That is
not the experience of our clients. We see theft, fraud, sloppy
accounting and gross mismanagement of the conserved individuals’ funds.
Sometimes the sums are smaller, because our clients are not wealthy, but
the sums represent everything they have. Or had.
Too
often, advocates for people who are elderly and disabled see this
pattern: conservators (or their family members or colleagues) are
enriched at the expense of a conserved individual under the excuse of
making the conserved individual eligible for Medicaid. For example, we
have seen that when someone’s home was sold to pay for a nursing home,
the sale may be a “sweetheart” arrangement where the conservator is paid
for doing the closing and the selling price is such that a colleague,
relative or friend of the conservator purchases the real estate and
flips it for a large profit. None of that profit benefits the conserved
person (or the nursing home or by extension, the state and its
taxpayers).
A
colleague appealed one such case to Superior Court and won. The judge
said that “substantial rights of the (conserved person) were gravely
prejudiced” by the failure of the court to follow the statute and by the
failure of the attorney to provide zealous advocacy. Despite a request
to have him removed from the appointment list, he is still handling
these cases.
This
kind of self-dealing is not isolated or unique. Many people involved in
the probate court system profit by exploiting conserved individuals.
It
is unconscionable that the probate courts fail to take steps to prevent
fraud and mismanagement. It is an embarrassment to the probate courts
that it is the federal court and the federal prosecutors, not the
probate courts, who have been addressing these problems.
It
is absurd that random audits are touted as the solution to these
problems when actual incidents that are pointed out are not punished or
corrected by probate court judges. The offenders continue to be
appointed as conservators and court-appointed attorneys.
Connecticut
has a modern, even a model conservatorship statute, but it is too often
ignored. The safeguards that are in place did not and would not protect
the victims of the federally sentenced conservator. A bond would have
protected them. A vigilant probate court might have protected them.
Vigilant court appointed attorneys might have protected them. But no one
protected them.
A
system that required training might have protected them. A system where
these cases were heard in Superior Court would have protected them.
Connecticut can choose to protect its most vulnerable residents. It just needs the political will to make the necessary changes.
Full Article & Source:
The state’s probate courts need to be fixed. Here’s how.
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