Bonnie Lee Apple’s family knew she was not well.
Her ex-husband had complained to Ms. Apple’s court-appointed guardian, who has been in charge of her care since a 2018 aneurysm left her moderately brain-damaged, that she had lost considerable weight.
Whenever her twin sister went to her apartment on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, Ms. Apple, 66, was covered in blankets or sheets. Health aides said she was sleeping. When Ms. Apple’s 18-year-old daughter visited in early February, she thought her mother was near death.
On Feb. 12, a longtime friend who happens to be a doctor called to say hello. “All she could say was, ‘I don’t feel good, I don’t feel good,’” said the friend, Scot Silverstein.
He asked Ms. Apple’s health aide what was wrong. The aide texted a photo.
“She looked like she had just walked out of a concentration camp,” Dr. Silverstein said.
Ms. Apple’s emaciated face looked like skin pasted to bone; her arms were gaunt sticks.
Dr. Silverstein called Ms. Apple’s ex-husband. The ex-husband called the police. The police called an ambulance that took Ms. Apple to a hospital where she remains six weeks later, suffering from complications that Dr. Silverstein says were brought on by what was most likely months of near-starvation.
On Thursday, Dr. Silverstein and Ms. Apple’s sister, Amy Lee, are going to court to try to strip Ms. Apple’s caretakers, the Guardianship Project of the Vera Institute of Justice — a well-known legal-reform nonprofit — of control of her affairs.
The hospital, NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell, did not respond to a request for comment about Ms. Apple. But Dr. Silverstein, who said the hospital had shared limited information, said a doctor told him the day after Ms. Apple was admitted that she was suffering from severe malnutrition.
Since then, he said, batteries of tests and scans had found no underlying illness that could account for his friend having lost about 40 pounds since 2019. Medical records show that she weighed 135 in 2019 and 96 pounds in October 2021. Her weight upon admission remains unclear.
The Vera Institute, in a statement on Wednesday, said, “The medical reasons behind Ms. Apple’s weight loss are still being determined by medical professionals.”
While guardians are required to file annual reports on their wards’ health and financial status, Vera filed its most recent one, for 2019 — before Ms. Apple started losing weight — on Wednesday, after receiving inquiries from The New York Times. Vera declined to answer several other questions about her case.
Vera said that Ms. Apple’s care was now being overseen by Project Guardianship Inc., an independent entity spun off from Vera’s Guardianship Project last year, and that Project Guardianship was “investigating this matter internally.” Project Guardianship said in a statement on Wednesday, “We have worked closely with Ms. Apple’s physicians and the 24-hour home health aides who provide direct care and assistance to Ms. Apple to help her make decisions about her treatment and care.”
Guardians can be appointed by the court system when someone cannot care for themselves and no one else is both willing and able to do so; there are about 13,000 people under guardianship in New York City, the state court system said.
No city or state agency was able to provide statistics Wednesday on elder abuse complaints involving people under guardianship. But Elizabeth Valentin, a visiting associate professor at New York Law School who specializes in elder law, said that guardianship rules had “a number of gaps” in oversight mechanisms and that “opportunities exist for negligence.” She added: “You only need one or two people not doing their job and the whole thing falls apart.”
How Ms. Apple ended up starving under the care of a guardian does not matter, her family says. Ms. Apple’s case manager was supposed to visit every month. Home health aides were with her around the clock, at a cost to Ms. Apple, a former instructor at the Manhattanville College School of Education, of more than $20,000 a month.
Ms. Apple’s ex-husband, Gary Apple, said of the guardians, “If they looked in it’s tragic. If they didn’t look in, it’s tragic. It’s no excuse.”
To this day, the family said, neither Vera nor Project Guardianship has offered an explanation for how Ms. Apple wound up in her condition. Vera remains legally in charge of both Ms. Apple’s personal care and her finances.
For the first week of her hospitalization, Dr. Silverstein said, the hospital refused to let Ms. Apple’s family visit her or even get information about her condition; he said the patient services department told him that was on orders of the guardian.
The lawyer Dr. Silverstein and Ms. Apple’s sister retained, Marcel Florestal, said that in a recent conference, Vera’s lawyer indicated that the organization would agree to step aside as Ms. Apple’s health guardian but that it would seek to remain the guardian of her assets, which as of 2019 amounted to more than $700,000, according to the report Vera filed on Wednesday. In 2019, Vera received $9,375 in commissions for managing Ms. Apple’s finances, the report said.
Vera founded its guardianship project in 2005, in partnership with the state court system, “in response to studies and news reports documenting abuses by guardians,” according to Vera’s website, which promotes the project’s “highly regarded holistic guardianship services model” that includes lawyers, social workers and finance associates.
Ms. Apple’s aneurysm left her with noticeable cognitive deficits and unable to care for herself. But she remained animated and able to carry on conversations, her family said.
By last June, her ex-husband was concerned about her weight. He wrote to Beth Williams, Project Guardianship’s main lawyer on Ms. Apple’s case, that she “seemed exceptionally thin and frail.” Ms. Williams thanked him for bringing the issue to her attention. On Wednesday, Ms. Williams, who left Project Guardianship in October, said by phone, “I really don’t remember having any correspondence with Gary about Bonnie’s doctors or any weight loss.”
Ms. Williams said that Vera had done a lot for Ms. Apple, including getting her piano lessons and buying her a computer (with her own money). “Whatever she wanted to do, we tried to use her resources to make her life as good as it could be,” she said.
A report by a court evaluator submitted Wednesday night in advance of Thursday’s hearing recommended that a new guardian be appointed “since the actions of the guardian” in managing Ms. Apple’s health “have been problematic.”
But it also stated that the hospital’s investigation of Ms. Apple’s medical and home care had found that “while certain decisions may have been done differently, they did not conclude that the guardian had neglected” Ms. Apple. It noted that Ms. Apple had been seen by a gastroenterologist in November, but that “there was no resolution” on why she was losing weight.
In early February, when Ms. Apple’s daughter Josette visited her, she stayed just a few minutes because it was so painful to see her mother so ill and disoriented.
“I’d say something and she wouldn’t respond,” or she would respond with gibberish, Josette said. “She was like mumbling and yelling at the same time.”
Josette added, “I knew that she wasn’t getting out and I knew that she wasn’t really eating, but I thought that had something to do with her condition, not the way she was being treated.”
Since she has been hospitalized, Ms. Apple has faced a series of problems, including blood clots, gastrointestinal bleeding, anemia and unstable blood pressure, Dr. Silverstein said.
Loss of appetite is not one of them.
“She’s like, ‘Where is my dinner’ when it’s breakfast time,” Ms. Apple’s sister said.
I have been sick for 4 years fir no reason. Harassed and abused, robbed, declared crazy and involuntary medical conservancy by persons running this senior housing, with dss worker that lied. I was dosed with miralax.. just enough to keep me sick but not so anyone could figure out what was wrong with me.in my food and coffee grounds. I figured it out. Granby homes for seniors, granby, Ct,. Also lied was dr johanna Fogg of institute of Living, Hartford.
ReplyDelete