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For
a second time, a panel of judges has dismissed an appeal by former
Orlando guardian Rebecca Fierle, who sought to quash an Orange County
judge’s order finding she violated state rules by misusing “do not
resuscitate” orders on incapacitated clients.
The
Fifth District Court of Appeal in Daytona Beach on Thursday tossed
Fierle’s appeal, in which she argued Circuit Judge Janet C. Thorpe
overstepped when she wrote in a Sept. 12 order that she had “no confidence in Ms. Fierle’s actions, reliability, or truthfulness as a professional guardian.”
“This court finds probable cause to permanently remove Rebecca Fierle from any appointment in Orange County as a professional guardian,” Thorpe wrote.
The embattled guardian, who had overseen hundreds of wards across the state, was arrested last month on charges of aggravated abuse and neglect of an elderly person in the death of 75-year-old Steven Stryker, an incapacitated client who died at a Tampa hospital in May.
“This court finds probable cause to permanently remove Rebecca Fierle from any appointment in Orange County as a professional guardian,” Thorpe wrote.
The embattled guardian, who had overseen hundreds of wards across the state, was arrested last month on charges of aggravated abuse and neglect of an elderly person in the death of 75-year-old Steven Stryker, an incapacitated client who died at a Tampa hospital in May.
Medical
staff were unable to attempt to save his life because Fierle had signed
a DNR order against his wishes and the protests of his daughter,
health-care surrogate and psychiatrist.
The court-appointed decision maker later admitted to routinely filing DNRs on her wards.
Fierle’s
attorney, Harry Hackney, argued in the rejected appeal that Thorpe’s
decision should be reversed because she wrongly suggested the guardian
needed permission from a judge or family members before signing a DNR
for a ward.
“[Fierle]
can consult family and friends to discern what the ward would have done
when competent,” Hackney argued. “She is NOT required to get their
permission nor the court’s.”
Attorney
General Ashley Moody’s office called that a “strawman argument.” Thorpe
did not object to Fierle signing DNRs on behalf of incapacitated
clients but rather to her doing so against wards’ wishes, like in
Styker’s case, said Senior Assistant Attorney General William H.
Stafford III.
“The
circuit court found probable cause that [Fierle] failed to act in the
best interest of at least one of her wards by signing a DNR, not that
court approval was required in all instances,” Stafford wrote.
In November, the appeals court denied a separate petition by Hackney that sought to remove Thorpe from the case.
Hackney did not immediately respond to a request for comment Friday.
The
Stryker case embroiled Florida’s guardianship system in scandal. Since
Fierle resigned from all cases statewide in July, further investigations
have found she mismanaged wards’ fiances, double-billed for services and improperly billed AdventHealth Orlando for nearly $4 million in unauthorized payments.
A series of Orlando Sentinel special reports exposed gaps in Florida’s guardianship system, including potential conflicts of interest on committees that determine whether a person should be placed under guardianship and loopholes that allow guardians to seek their own appointments, despite state law generally requiring a rotation system.
State lawmakers passed legislation Wednesday to fix those flaws by requiring guardians to get a judge’s approval before signing DNRs
on behalf of incapacitated clients, prohibiting them from seeking their
own appointment to specific cases and revising provisions related to
conflicts of interest.
If signed by Gov. Ron DeSantis, the law would go into effect July 1.
Full Article & Source:
Court tosses disgraced guardian Rebecca Fierle’s appeal of ruling she misused DNRs
See Also:
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Florida Elder Affairs chief announces ‘immediate’ changes as embattled Orlando guardian Rebecca Fierle resigns from all cases
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