Rebecca Fierle's downtown Orlando office was searched by FDLE agents in August 2019. The cremated remains of several people and one dog were found in urns. (File) |
ORLANDO, Fla. — State agents have identified the cremated remains found last summer in the Orlando office of embattled professional guardian Rebecca Fierle.
- FDLE executed search warrant on guardian's office in August 2019
- Rebecca Fierle is subject of criminal probe into her handling of "wards"
- Agents recovered cremains in urns; all but 1 individual identified
Agents recovered the remains August 5, 2019 during a search of Fierle’s office on Hillcrest Street as part of an ongoing criminal investigation.
Fierle has not been charged with a crime, although she remains the subject of a FDLE criminal investigation related to allegations of abuse and wrongdoing involving seniors she was court-appointed to care for as a guardian. Fierle is also the focus of a Medicaid fraud investigation being conducted by the Office of Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody.
“The investigation into allegations against Fierle and her business is on going,” Plessinger said in a statement. “The presence of the cremated remains recovered at the office does not necessarily constitute a crime.”
With most of the cremated remains identified, investigators said they're in the process of obtaining court orders to release the remains to their families.
Fierle has been the focus of multiple investigations since the 2019 death of Brevard County's Steven Stryker. Orange County Judge Janet Thorpe appointed Fierle as Stryker's guardian in September 2018. The court appointment gave Fierle full legal authority to make health-care decisions for Stryker as well as control his money and assets.
State investigators say Stryker died in part because of neglect by Fierle.
Spectrum News later learned Fierle was registered as a guardian for at least 450 people, or "wards," in 13 counties.
Two investigations by the Orange County Comptroller’s Office accuse Fierle of mishandling cash and assets belonging to her wards, as well as receiving almost $4 million by overbilling AdventHealth and the court system.
Family advocates also place blame on the court system itself, saying judges routinely fail to provide the necessary oversight.
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Agents ID Cremated Remains Found in Office of Embattled Guardian
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