A Cuyahoga Court of Common Pleas Civil Judge gave a Lorain
County Probate Judge who failed to honor a subpoena duces tecum from
last year an absolute deadline Thursday.
The
Honorable Judge Sherrie Miday issued an order on March 5, 2020 stating
that the Honorable Lorain County Probate Court Clerk and Judge, James
Walther, could face contempt of court sanctions if requested documents
are not delivered within seven days. The Honorable James Walther, who
acts as both Judge and Clerk of the Lorain County Probate Court, is
expected to comply with the subpoena as soon as March 12, 2020. Until
then, a ruling in favor of contempt or not is temporarily suspended.
“Failure
to comply with this order may result in a finding of contempt and/or
sanctions pursuant to Ohio Civ. R 45,” wrote Judge Miday in her order.
The
ultimatum arrived on the heels of a March 2, 2020 hearing on a Motion
to Show Cause as to why the Lorain County Probate Clerk, the Honorable
Judge James Walther, should not be held in contempt for failure to
comply with a subpoena that demanded the release of records concerning
the health and finances of Mrs. Fourough Saghafi, 85, who was
guardianized by the Honorable Judge Walther in 2013.
The
Honorable Judge Walther did not immediately respond to requests for
comment but just last month, the Honorable Judge Miday denied a request
by the Honorable Judge Walther to quash the subpoena.
“Lorain
County Probate Court Judge James T. Walther’s Motion to Quash Subpoena
Duces Tecum served upon Paula Strickler, the Lorain County Probate Court
Investigator, is hereby denied,” wrote Judge Miday in her February 25,
2020 order.
The subpoena in question is part of
an overarching lawsuit alleging racketeering in the court-appointed
guardianship of Mrs. Saghafi filed last year by Dr. Saghafi under the
Ohio Organized Crime Control Act of 1970 (RICO).
Without
stating how access to Mrs. Saghafi’s requested records would be
detrimental to Mrs. Saghafi, Judge Walther’s attorney Cara Finnegan
argued that releasing the requested documentation would not benefit Mrs.
Saghafi.
“As such, it is incumbent upon Judge
Walther, as the superior guardian of the ward, not to release these
confidential records to protect his ward,” Finnegan stated.
Although
the Honorable Lorain County Probate Judge Walther is not named as a
defendant in Dr. Saghafi’s litigation, the retired general surgeon
alleges that spending within his wife’s guardianship has been frivolous
and unnecessary and that prior court judgments were obtained from the
Honorable Judge Walther improperly and without jurisdiction.
Defendants
named in Dr. Saghafi’s lawsuit include a construction company, 7
lawyers, a CPA, probate court officer Zachary Simonoff, Philip Presutto
and his wife Jaleh Presutto, who is Mrs. Saghafi’s former guardian.
“Jaleh
Presutto was removed as guardian for criminal activity three times and
was reappointed by Judge Walther despite pleading guilty to multiple
charges of forgery and theft for defrauding the Amherst school system,”
Dr. Saghafi’s attorney Charles Longo previously told the Southeast Texas Record.
A
professional forensic accounting expert alleges that Defendant Jaleh
Presutto received in excess of $375,000 in guardian fees and for home
care, Defendant Simonoff, who acts as Mrs. Saghafi’s guardian of the
estate, received $194,896.78 in guardian fees while Defendant Philip
Presutto received some $256,716.16.
The Saghafi
litigation is one among many lawsuits filed nationwide citing various
causes of action, such as financial exploitation, sexual abuse,
starvation, isolation, cruelty, fraud and neglect of the elderly and
people with disabilities who are under court-appointed guardianship.
Ideally, the purpose of a guardianship is to help the elderly and infirm
manage their lives however in recent years heirs have increasingly
alleged foul play.
In Pennsylvania, for example,
Mary Bush sued the Honorable Chester County Court of Common Pleas Judge
Katherine B.L. Platt on October 15, 2019 over her guardianized elderly
mother Genevieve Bush. The daughter is only allowed to see the mother,
who resides in a care center, once a month, is required to pay $50 for
the visit and a Sheriff must be present, according to a court order
signed by the Honorable Judge Platt.
“Defendant
Judge Katherine B.L. Platt cannot provide any legitimate reason or
grounds for the restraint and detention of Genevieve Bush and Mary
Bush,” wrote the Plaintiff Daughter in a pleading.
In
her petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus, filed in the Eastern District
of Pennsylvania, the daughter alleges she has been targeted and harassed
for some ten years by the Honorable Judge Platt after her aging mother
was conscripted to be a ward of the State under guardianship.
A
Writ of Habeas Corpus is typically reserved for prisoners incarcerated
in a penitentiary but Ms. Bush said the goal of her petition for a Writ
of Habeas Corpus is not just for the release of her mother but to ensure
due process under the US Constitution.
“Defendant
[Judge Platt] has been maliciously inciting public hatred towards
petitioner that has resulted in physical attacks, injury, further
identity thefts, financial destitution and continued irreparable harm,”
stated Ms. Bush. “Petitioner can prove that she and her mother have been
intentionally targeted by defendant, Judge Katherine B.L. Platt, for
cash and property.”
In response to a request for
comment, Stacy Witalec, spokesperson for Pennsylvania courts and judges,
said no information can be provided.
Full Article & Source:
Ohio Probate Judge Confronted with Contempt in Elder Guardian Case
No comments:
Post a Comment