OHIO - A Lorain County Probate Court Guardian moved Cuyahoga County
Civil Judge Sherrie Miday yesterday to issue an order that would prevent
the physician plaintiff in a racketeering lawsuit from accessing and
distributing information concerning his 85 year old wife whom he was
allegedly forced to divorce.
In January 2019, Zachary Simonoff, who is guardian of the estate of
Mrs. Fourough Bakhtiar [Saghafi], was sued under the state of Ohio’s
Organized Crime Control Act by her husband of sixty years, Dr. Mehdi
Saghafi.
“Given their advanced ages and Mrs. Saghafi’s advanced, progressive
dementia, filing an action for divorce was not in the best interests of
either party, and there existed no reasonable, rationale or good faith
basis for filing the Divorce Action,” stated Dr. Saghafi’s attorney
Charles Longo in previous court pleadings.
Simonoff’s counsel, Theresa Richthammer, filed yesterday's motion
to bar Dr. Saghafi from distributing information to non-parties after
the retired surgeon’s attorney issued subpoenas to the Vanguard mutual
fund company, Northwest Bank and Fifth Third Bank.
“Since receiving responsive documents, it appears that Plaintiffs,
or at least their counsel, have shared the documents with persons who
are not parties to this case,” wrote Richthammer in her Nov. 14 pleading
on behalf of Simonoff.
The Saghafis had amassed $8 million in marital assets before Mrs.
Bakhtiar [Saghafi] was guardianized by the Lorain County Probate Court,
according to a press release.
As previously reported in the Southeast Texas Record, Khashayar
Saghafi, the youngest son of Dr. and Mrs. Saghafi, alleges neglect of
duties, incompetency, fraudulent misconduct and theft.
Dr. Saghafi's racketeering complaint is one of many lawsuits filed
under various causes of action in state and federal court across the
country highlighting the unexpected downsides of court-appointed adult
guardianship, which are designed to help the elderly and the infirm
manage their lives but have been under fire nationwide amid allegations
of neglect, abuse, starvation, over medication, wrongful isolation and
financial exploitation.
Those problems haven’t escaped the watchful eye of Congress. HR
4174 is currently pending before the House Committee on the Judiciary
and, if enacted, would activate protections against elder abuse,
exploitation and neglect under court appointed guardianship.
“We owe it to our seniors and to those living with disabilities to
provide protections from ill-intended bad actors who abuse the system
designed to provide a better quality of life,” said Florida Congressman
Darren Soto who introduced HR 4174 in August.
Just yesterday, Traci Hudson [Samuel], 51, a professional guardian
in Florida, was arrested for allegedly financially exploiting 92 year
old Maurice Myers.
According to a Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office press release,
detectives discovered a total of $541,541.12 was transferred from Myers
account to accounts owned by Hudson [Samuel], founder of Florida
Guardianship Services and President of the Guardian Association of
Pinellas County.
In the Saghafi case, Simonoff’s request to restrict the disclosure
of subpoenaed information was filed on the heels of Khashayar Saghafi’s
Nov. 8 motion calling for Simonoff to justify payments of $127,730.17 in
legal fees to Tucker Ellis, a law firm that is allegedly representing
some of the Defendants named in the racketeering case pending before
Judge Miday.
“Each of these motions cites and attaches financial documents
Plaintiffs’ counsel subpoenaed through this case and which he did not
have access to through the Lorain County Probate Court,” states
Richthammer in Simonoff’s Nov. 14 pleading. “Further, if the information
must be filed with the Court, Mr. Simonoff requests that it be filed
under seal to protect it from public disclosure and view.”
However, the Saghafi Family alleges improper spending on attorney fees, according to court records.
“By law, Mrs. Saghafi’s funds are only supposed to be used for the
care and needs of Mrs. Saghafi not legal fees,” Longo stated on behalf
of Dr. Saghafi.
Simonoff’s pleading further states that the aging couple’s son,
Khashayar Saghafi, has been unsuccessful in obtaining guardianship
records from the Lorain County Probate Court.
“The Probate Court has repeatedly held that financial information
related to the Ward [Mrs. Saghafi] is confidential and not subject to
disclosure,” stated Richthammer’s pleading on behalf of Simonoff.
But Dr. Saghafi claims, through counsel, that Mrs. Saghafi’s
guardianship records should not be withheld as confidential by the
Lorain County Probate Court, whose Judge, the Honorable James Walther,
is also the Clerk of the Lorain County Probate Court.
“As my clients have alleged a high degree of secrecy in the
maintenance of records by the Probate Court, any order or motion claimed
as justification for non-production must be met in this matter with
skepticism and a full opportunity to brief and argue for release,”
stated Longo who requested an Order to Show Cause from Judge Miday on
Nov. 1 as to why the Honorable Judge Walther should not be held in
contempt for failure to respond to Dr. Saghafi’s subpoena.
According to court records, the Honorable Judge Walther was served a
subpoena related to Mrs. Saghafi in the racketeering lawsuit to which a
response was due to Judge Miday on September 16 but he has, so far,
reportedly failed to respond.
“By failing to make written objections, the Lorain County Probate
Court in the office of Judge Walther has circumvented the correct
process for responding to a subpoena,” stated Dr. Saghafi's attorney in
his Motion requesting an Order to Show Cause. “The subpoeanaed documents
continue to be at issue in this matter, as they relate to the
underlying probate dispute which has given rise to the instant
litigation.”
Full Article & Source:
Probate court officer moves Ohio judge to limit subpoena power in elder guardian racketeering lawsuit
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