The
new position comes in the wake of a months-long scandal involving
Rebecca Fierle, a former Orlando guardian under criminal investigation
after the death of a client.
Orange-Osceola
Chief Judge Donald Myers Jr. said guardianship filings have increased
by 33% over the past five years, with an estimated 450 to 460 cases
filed in 2019. Myers wouldn’t say if the request for a new case manager
was related to Fierle and the firestorm of criticism surrounding
Florida’s guardianship program.
“It was a response to where we see the need,” Myers said.
The
$47,482 allocated for the guardianship case manager came from a U.S.
Department of Justice grant for $359,322 awarded to Orange County. Aside
from identifying guardianship cases that are at risk for criminal
exploitation and neglect of wards, the case manager will provide
“intensive court supervision to ensure that the interests of the ward
are being protect,” according to a Oct. 14 memo to commissioners from
Yolanda Martinez, the county’s director of health services.
Orange
County currently has 3,500 guardianship cases that remain under the
supervision of one judge, Myers said. The case manager will help
identify “potential fraud or abuse” by reviewing annual accountings
filed by court-appointed decision makers for their incapacitated
clients, according to the chief judge.
Myers
said after Jan. 1, a judge will be moved from the Ninth Circuit’s civil
division so there will be two judges handling probate, guardianship and
mental health cases. The division is being split into one section for
probate and trust litigation and another for guardianship and mental
health cases.
“We’ve
determined the probate and guardianship areas have now exceeded the
capacity of a single judge to handle, so we made that decision to
reallocate,” he said.
The chief judge said the Ninth Circuit is looking into monitoring technology used in Pennsylvania and the 15th Circuit
in Palm Beach County that requires guardians to input the amount of
money they’re managing for incapacitated clients and other data.
“[The software] can trigger the need for further review," Myers said.
Fierle resigned from all cases after one of her wards, 75-year-old Steven Stryker,
died at a Tampa hospital because staff were unable to perform
life-saving measures due to a “do not resuscitate” order Fierle filed
against his wishes and refused to remove. Two probes found Fierle was profiting from her work handling the affairs of vulnerable adults in arrangements not approved by a court, including a nearly $4 million financial relationship with AdventHealth.
She is not currently facing charges.
Full Article & Source:
Amid Rebecca Fierle scandal, Orange to add guardianship manager to identify ‘high risk’ cases
1 comment:
They are all running a scam .. Lawyer .. doctors and Judges.. We need a sting on all of them.
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