By: Walt Kane
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A woman who was placed in a guardianship against her
will finally had her rights restored after a series of Kane In Your
Corner investigations, but court documents show the ordeal has cost her
over a quarter of a million dollars.
For
two years, Elberta Cohen was not allowed to decide how to spend her own
money or make her own health care decisions. As Kane In Your Corner
reported in a series of investigations, that power was placed in the
hands of a stranger, a guardian appointed by the court, after a judge
found Cohen lacked the capacity to make decisions on her own. Cohen
insisted she was never incapacitated. A judge restored her rights in
March.
But that freedom came at a price. Kane In
Your Corner obtained the final accounting filed with the courts by the
guardian, attorney John Ross. In two years, he accrued guardianship
expenses of over $258,000.
“He just did whatever he wanted,” Cohen says.
Some of the numbers are staggering. There was
$37,476.34 for a money manager to pay Cohen’s bills. A geriatric care
manager received $63,495.37 to coordinate Cohen’s health care. The
health care itself cost under $8,500. There were also a whopping
$99,001.42 in legal bills, and the guardian himself is billing for
$33,136.50 in commissions. All of the spending was totally legal, done
in the name of protecting a senior who could not be trusted to spend her
own money wisely.
“There was no protection,” Cohen says. “They did the opposite.”
Attorney Lauren Marinaro, who represented Cohen in
the fight to restore her rights, says if the guardianship hadn’t been
terminated and spending had continued at the same pace, Cohen would have
been out of liquid assets in about two more years. She’s asking the
judge to reduce Ross’ guardianship commission, even though she admits
he’s probably legally entitled to it. “I feel like I have no choice but
to ask the court to just give this lady a break,” Marinaro says.
Ross, the former guardian, declined requests for an
interview and Kane In Your Corner was unable to catch up to him at his
law office. In an email, Ross says “I had no involvement whatsoever in
having Elberta Cohen declared to be an incapacitated person, and I made
no effort to oppose the restoration of her capacity.” He adds that he
provided an accounting of first-year spending “to Mrs. Cohen and all
interested parties approximately a year ago and I did not receive a
single objection.”
Some advocates for guardianship reform say what
happened to Cohen is sadly not unusual. “Basically, you're being held
captive, while people are just charging your estate,” says Marcia
Southwick, director of the National Association to Stop Guardian Abuse.
“It's as if you become a cash cow.”
The New Jersey Judiciary is now looking into possible
reforms to the state’s guardianship system. A working group has come up
with a list of 13 recommendations, including adopting a bill of rights
for people placed under guardianship, and clarifying procedures for
people like Cohen, who want to get their rights restored.
Cohen says reform can’t come soon enough. “I just
don't want, God forbid, anybody else to go through what I've been
through, and what I'm still going through,” she says.
Full Article & Source:
KIYC: Woman held in guardianship against her will says it cost her more than $250,000
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