By: Walt Kane
More than 36,000 New Jersey residents are living under court-appointed guardianships. They are unable to make decisions or access their money. Some advocates say the system needs to be reformed to make it easier for them to have their rights restored.
Elberta Cohen, 80, has no access to her life savings.
Her life is in the hands of a stranger, a guardian appointed by a
judge. She says she isn’t happy about it.
“What gives them a right to do this to anybody?” Cohen asks rhetorically. “I'm not incapacitated.”
In the eyes of the law, she is. Kane In Your Corner
first investigated Cohen’s case last month. A judge placed her under
the care of a guardian after her youngest son argued she was no longer
able to make decisions on her own. She says that she and her son aren’t
even on speaking terms, and he was just trying to get her declared
incapacitated to prevent her from revising her will. Eldercare attorney
Lauren Marinaro is now representing Cohen in her effort to get her
rights restored.
Terminating a guardianship is no easy task. New Jersey has no clear
standard to determine if a person lacks capacity. Judges decide each
case individually.
Cohen was initially evaluated by three doctors. One
said she could make decisions for herself, but the other two disagreed.
The judge went along with the majority.
But
Marinaro has now gotten two more medical experts to weigh in. Both say
Cohen is capable of making decisions on her own. Cohen’s personal
physician also writes that Cohen’s “memory and judgment are intact.” The
majority of experts are now squarely on her side.
Cohen’s
motion to restore her rights is also unopposed – her son chose not to
dispute it and her current guardian says he takes no position as to
whether the guardianship should be continued. But ending the
guardianship, or even relaxing it, is still not a sure thing. The judge
has sole discretion under the law.
Marcia
Southwick, executive director of the National Association to Stop
Guardianship Abuse, says the system needs to be reformed to make
terminating a guardianship easier.
“They should
always have to prove that you're still incapacitated,” she says.
“Instead, you have to go to court and you or your lawyer have to prove
that you're not. And if you weren't in the first place, that just seems
so unfair to me.”
Pam Teaster, director of the
Center for Gerontology at Virginia Tech, argues courts should always
view guardianship as a last resort. “If there's anything else that could
be done for that individual, other than a guardianship, that's what
should be happening,” she says.
New Jersey Assembly Member Carol Murphy (D –
Cinnaminson) agrees. She wrote a bill that would require courts that
impose guardianships to always use the “least restrictive option.” But
two years later, Murphy’s bill has still not come up for a vote.
Teaster
argues that another reform could help people like Elberta Cohen. While
the guardianship process is currently shrouded in confidentiality, she
is calling for a public database of guardianship cases that would help
evaluate how well or poorly the system is working.
Peter
McAleer, spokesperson for the New Jersey courts, says the judiciary is
constantly trying to improve the system, including making it easier for
people to challenge their guardianships.
Full Article & Source:
KIYC: Advocates say New Jersey needs to reform how its guardianship program functions
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