AARP recently launched a new podcast series, “The Perfect Scam.” The series features author and journalist Bob Sullivan and Frank Abagnale, a fraud expert with over 40 years of experience advising the FBI and lecturing about embezzlement & forgery. Abagnale’s criminal (mis)adventures were featured in the movie Catch Me if You Can.
“They took 14 of Kise’s last months away from her and made it a nightmare,” says Larry, who testified before New Mexico’s guardianship commission at last year’s hearings. “It was like a hostage situation. No one should have to go through what happened to us.” A sentiment I have repeated in print and on-air throughout this series.
- Rebecca Fierle of Ocala, FL, is currently facing charges brought in Feb. of 2020. A Spectrum News13 report at the time of her arrest said the following:
- “State agents arrested Fierle on Monday in Marion County, where she lives. Records show Fierle was booked into the Marion County Jail at about 6:30 p.m.
- The Florida Department of Law Enforcement said that Fierle was charged with aggravated abuse of an elderly person and neglecting an elderly person on a warrant out of Hillsborough County. The arrest was connected to the death of 74-year-old Steven Stryker, a Brevard County man who died in her care last year at a hospital in Tampa.
- “The guardian who caused my dad’s death has been arrested. It’s encouraging that the state has brought charges. But the problem of guardian abuse does not go away with her. The laws vary state to state and God forbid you, or someone you love, falls into the control of a bad one like her,” Stryker’s daughter, Kim, said Tuesday.
- A phenomenal report on this case that details Fierle’s role as a guardian to over 450 wards in 13 counties throughout Florida can be found here.
- Susan Harris and Sharon Moore, the co-founders of Ayundando Guardians, William Harris, Susan’s husband, and Craig Young,
Susan’s son, are facing decades in prison each for their role in a case
that involved an estimated $11 million in theft through their
guardianship company in New Mexico. Money that detailed in documents
released by a news report on KRQE highlighted went to a $50,000 Mercedes Benz purchase, vacations, and personal purchases. A statement by the Department of Justice, March 3, 2020, laid out their crimes.
- Susan Harris was the 95% owner of Ayudando and acted as president; Moore was a 5% owner and acted as chief financial officer of Ayudando. They engaged in a decade-long pattern of sophisticated criminal conduct from November 2006 to July 2017. This included unlawfully transferring money from client accounts to a comingled account without any client-based justification as part of the fraud scheme and money laundering conspiracy. Susan Harris and Sharon Moore wrote and endorsed numerous checks, often of more than $10,000, from these comingled accounts to themselves, family members, cash, and other parties where payment would benefit their families. The stolen funds were used to fund a luxury lifestyle and were used to purchase homes, vehicles, luxury RVs and cruises, as well as a private box at “the Pit” at the University of New Mexico. The stolen funds were also utilized to pay off more than $4.4 million in American Express charges incurred by the defendants and their families.
- In order to conceal the fraud scheme, Moore created and sent forged and fraudulent reports to the Veterans Administration for fiduciary clients. She falsified bank statements and annual reports to disguise the theft of money from client accounts. Susan Harris also took acts to maintain Ayudando’s appearance of legitimacy, including submitting a proposal to the New Mexico Office of Guardianship, which contained numerous false representations, including a false claim that another defendant was a nationally certified guardian at the time of the submission.
- Sharon Moore was sentenced to 20 years in prison.
- According to a press release issued by the Internal Revenue Service, Craig Young was sentenced to 71-months in prison and 3-years supervised release following his incarceration. “Young pleaded guilty on Nov. 12, 2019. In his plea agreement, he admitted committing these crimes while employed as a guardian for Ayudando. Young used a business American Express card to pay personal expenses. He knew that Sharon Moore of Albuquerque, who served as co-owner and chief financial officer at Ayudando, paid his American Express bill each month from at least 2010 to June 2017 using funds from Ayudando‘s client reimbursement and petty cash accounts.”
- The Harris’s initially took a plea deal but then skipped town, assumed fake names, and tried to start a new life. Prosecutors have since withdrawn their deal. According to a June 3, 2020 news report, “They were found in Shawnee, Oklahoma, where prosecutors say they were living under the alias Marvin and Cheryl Valdez. They say the couple spent a substantial amount of money to buy fake IDs showing they were from Utah and purchased a new vehicle. William even secured a job at a grocery store in an attempt to fit in. Prosecutors are now asking the judge to sentence William to the full 15 years he faced. It’s unclear how much time they want Susan to face. She was looking at 30 years.”
These are just a few of the cases they highlighted, but the details should be jarring enough to make even the most complacent see how important additional safeguards are for this important system.
In talking to Sullivan at the end of the podcast, Larry Davis gave a key point of advice that we should all heed, “There’s one lesson I learned is that no matter how awkward it seems to be intervening in your loved one’s life, and how much they may resist it because of their own independence, you cannot get in there too soon.”
No comments:
Post a Comment