Saturday, April 5, 2025

Caregiving can test you, body and soul. It can also unlock a new sense of self

By Kat McGowan 


When it was all over, Amanda Cruz felt like a phoenix, a new person rising from what had been. First, though, she had to go through the fire.

Pre-caregiving Amanda was a talker. When she was 2 years old, she always waved to everyone on the bus. In her 20s, she moved to Denmark for graduate school knowing nobody and loved it. Later, she worked for city government in a job connecting with constituents. She learned to speak Spanish so she could chat with more people.

In 2023, her mom was dealing with a cancer relapse that had progressed into her spine. That July, right before Cruz's parents moved to her neighborhood in South Carolina to be near her, her mom also had a stroke.


She became quieter, and she began to listen more. She was learning to hear beyond the words her mother said to understand what she really meant. Listening to judge whether her mother needed more pain meds, or to figure out what she really wanted at that moment, even if it was just a soda from the gas station. Her own words were saved for the daily rituals of bathing, medicine, questions about pain, and gently encouraging her mother to start saying her goodbyes.

"I must pull myself back to put her forward," she said to herself.

They sheltered together in this pool of quiet while the world seemed to accelerate around them. There was another stroke in November. Afterward, on the way home from the hospital, her mother fell silent. She did not speak at all during dinner that night. Cruz knew in her gut that the words were not coming back.

Now listening became a whole-body experience, to gauge her mom's expressions and anticipate her needs. At times, her mother screamed in pain, and she had to listen to that too.

Along the way she lost herself. "I was erased from myself by caring for this person," she says. "I wasn't my personality. I didn't do things I liked anymore." She was a people person, but there wasn't time or space to engage with anyone besides her mother. To tell the truth, she wasn't even interested. She found it hard to eat. The world seemed to be monochrome.

It's well-known that family caregiving for sick or elderly adults can bring on stress, anxiety and depression. It can also turn you into someone you don't even recognize. Caregivers say it scrambles old habits and patterns, rearranges intimate relationships, and forces you to confront your limits. It can excavate and reorganize the soul, what one caregiver calls mind and body fracking.

Amanda Cruz felt her whole identity was shifting. She felt entwined with her mother, body and soul, but mostly all she could do is watch her suffer. She says now that God was pressing her through her fear. Only after her mother died in December would she find out what was on the other side.


The c-word

In 2009, two researchers proposed an explanation for why caregiving for an adult who is ill or disabled can be so profound. Their argument, simply called "caregiver identity theory," is now widely accepted among psychologists and social workers who study and help caregivers.

The theory addresses a question that stumped social workers and researchers: Why don't caregivers ask for help and use the support that's already out there? Identity theory suggests one reason: People don't think of themselves that way. The c-word doesn't resonate.

But understanding caregiving as an identity transition can help people make sense of this phase of life. Just like having a baby, like getting married or switching careers, for many caregivers, it's all-encompassing, and changes how you see yourself.

The creators of caregiver identity theory, the late psychologist Karl Kosloski of the University of Nebraska Omaha and gerontologist Rhonda Montgomery of the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, outlined five phases in the way caregiving shakes up identity. Often, you start by taking on little things like running errands and raking the lawn, but your life is otherwise the same. By the last phases you might well be helping seven days a week with everything from meals to hygiene. You don't have time for anything else you used to do. Maybe you don't even really want to. Big things, like parenting and work, can fall by the wayside.

At this point, your old sense of yourself as a worker, spouse, parent or friend doesn't match up to what you do all day. The person you care for is no longer simply your spouse or grandparent but also a patient, a care recipient or care partner. The disconnect is disorienting.

It can also make you feel out of step with other people. As a caregiver, you're immersed in a daily routine of essential human needs, dealing with ground truths about life. At some points, Cruz had to decide whether to give her mother enough morphine to silence her pain, or back off on the drug in the hopes that she might be alert enough to talk to her again, to say farewell. In hands-on caregiving, life and death decisions are common. Then, at the office or the store, people are chatting about vacations or buying a new car. It seems unbearably trivial, and you feel even more alone.


You might feel lost, like Cruz did. Or you might feel just "off" all the time, says Donna Thomson, who leads several caregiving-related programs at McMaster University in Ontario and cares for her adult son. You might feel tired but restless, unable to enjoy old pleasures, lonely but unwilling to reach out.

There's often a moment when you realize that there's no going back, says Thomson. "I think it's a transformation for everybody," she adds. "And it's permanent. This idea that you'll go back to the person you were before, that's never going to happen."

Finding the old you in the new you

Given the emotional weight of the role, caregivers are often told to practice self-care: Go for a walk, do yoga. Caregiver identity theory suggests another approach: Think about who you were before, who you are now, and how those two yous relate.

Because, if the existential pain of caregiving is due to a gap between who you think you're supposed to be (your old self), and who you are now (caregiver self), you need to bridge the gap.

That might mean, for instance, hiring someone to do tasks that conflict with how you see yourself. You might hate helping your mother with bathing, because you're also still her son. Maybe you can pay a shower aide to do it.

Or, you can focus on ways your old self flows into the new one. Aaron Blight, a professor of public health at Shenandoah University, created worksheets and questionnaires that help people think this through.

Thomson coaches caregivers to make a pie chart of how they spend their days, graphing what activities they do and for how long. They're often blown away by how much time is devoted to caregiving, and it helps them see the shape of their own life more clearly.

Just embracing the label can provide some relief. Research shows that people who adopt the identity feel better about what they do and are able to identify what support they need, and how and where to ask for it. "It's very important to be able to name it and describe it, even just in your own head," says Thomson.

Pulling threads from your past selves into the present can also help, says Allison Applebaum, a psychologist and geriatrician who leads a new center for caregivers at Mount Sinai hospital in the Bronx. At her previous position at Memorial Sloan-Kettering hospital, she developed "meaning-centered therapy for cancer caregivers," which among other exercises reminds people to embrace aspects of themselves that endure — their sense of humor, or artistic sensibility, for instance.

It helps people see that caregiving builds on your life story, rather than tearing it down.

"I'm just the daughter"

Since she was a teenager, Carla Velastegui has cared for her mother, who has early-onset Parkinson's disease. She'd go to all the doctor's appointments to translate for her mom, who is from Colombia and speaks mostly Spanish. Velastegui sometimes noticed signs in the waiting room about caregivers, but she didn't think it applied to her. "It never crossed my mind," she says. "I would think: I'm just a daughter. I'm helping out."

She says that's partly cultural. In her community, it's not "caregiving" so much as love, honor, what family does. "When my mom got her diagnosis, we all got that diagnosis," she says.


It didn't help that doctors and nurses didn't see her that way either. They sometimes questioned her, even asking her to leave the exam room because she was young. The enormous responsibility she held didn't have a name. It was just how things were.

About eight years ago, when she was in her mid-20s, a new doctor took her aside: "How are you, the caregiver, doing?" Velastegui protested: I'm not a caregiver! I'm just a daughter. No, said the doctor. You're here, you're coordinating her medication, you're involved every day. You are the caregiver — acknowledge it and own it.

Surprised, she went home and did some Googling. Now, it clicked. And this simple word changed her. "It gave me the confidence to speak up, to ask questions, to advocate for her needs," she says.

The word helped her connect her with support groups, ask for help, and begin advocating for others like her. More than that, she says, "it completely changed how I see myself." "Caregiver" validated her reality, her grief, and her sense of purpose.

The label doesn't always exactly fit: Some people feel more like a "care partner," or an advocate. Whatever term you use, it's a way to acknowledge that you share an identity with 53 million others in the United States, people who will recognize what you're going through and reflect back this new sense of self.

Along these lines, a new project from The Joint Commission, a nonprofit health care accrediting organization, and the caregiver-focused company Archangels lets unpaid family caregivers sign up for a Care Badge, a way to announce their status online to potential employers and everyone else.


Caregiving is now a core part of Carla Velastegui's identity. She now works in health care technology to fix some of the system's problems. She sits on advisory groups as a patient representative and volunteers for organizations like the Parkinson's Foundation. And when she walks in the door to the doctor's office, she says: "Hi, this is Gina. I'm Carla, her caregiver and daughter."

The phoenix takes flight

During all the changes in Amanda Cruz's life, through all the difficulties, her husband, Johnny Cruz, had been by her side. In the last days of her mother's life, he stepped in. The grief and the strain had become too much for Cruz. Her husband urged her to go home, and he took over. He stayed there with her mom, sleeping by her side, holding her hand as she died.

He is a veteran and former police officer and had carried the memory of death for many decades. Caring for Cruz's mother as she was dying changed him too. It broke him and it redeemed him, he says. It brought something back to him, making him feel more human again.

After her mother died, Cruz fell apart, body and soul. She had migraines, arthritis, bronchitis, every system rebelling. The broken part of her soul died along with her mother, Cruz says. But parts of the experience remain. Some new part of her was forged during her mother's illness, turning her into Amanda 2.0. She feels like a phoenix, born from the ashes.

Helping her mother die was terrifying. Now, she finds fellowship in suffering and loss. When someone else is struggling, she feels like she knows what to say.

She is still slow and quiet, but it's no longer a retreat. It's a way to connect. The same way she learned to step back and listen to her mom, she tunes in to all kinds of people. It's a gift delivered by heartache. "I want to hear what people are trying to say, so I can hear more deeply," she says. She thinks about the force of grief, how near it is to love and how it has its own purpose.

And as she goes through her daily routine, she finds herself swelling with empathy for all sorts of people. "I look at people in the gas station, or the grocery store, and I think how pretty they are, how beautiful, their eyes, their hair." She listens. She pays attention.

Kat McGowan is a caregiving reporter based in Berkeley, Calif. This story was supported by the Rosalynn Carter Fellowships for Mental Health Journalism.

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Caregiving can test you, body and soul. It can also unlock a new sense of self

Minnesota end-of-life bill reintroduced, faces stiff opposition

The bill would allow adults with terminal illnesses to choose to end their lives with medication, but it faces stiff political opposition. 


Author: Danny Spewak

SAINT PAUL, Minn — DFL lawmakers in the House and Senate re-introduced the End-of-Life Options Act this week in both chambers, a measure that would allow adults with terminal illnesses to choose to end their lives with medication.

Ten states and the District of Columbia have passed similar laws, including Oregon, which serves as the model for Minnesota's proposed legislation. Under the bill, a person would need to have six months or fewer to live and must be deemed mentally capable of making medical decisions, along with a diagnosis from two independent providers.

"We've seen from other states that most people who choose this option, do so not because they're in physical pain," House sponsor Rep. Mike Freiberg (DFL - Golden Valley) said, "but because they want to maintain control, avoid unnecessary suffering and preserve dignity in the face of death."

Freiberg said he has carried the bill for at least nine years now. However, with committee deadlines looming on Friday and political opposition from Republicans, the bill still has little chance of passing in 2025.

"We're not going to go away," Freiberg said at a news conference on Thursday alongside the advocacy group Compassion & Choices. "I'm going to keep fighting for it. I'm hopeful we can get there this session, but many times legislation can be a multi-year battle. If that's what this ends up being, I'm willing to take as many years as it takes."

Tom Albin and Becki Sinks also joined the news conference to lend support for the bill. Albin was diagnosed with ALS in 2022, while Sinks' husband, Brad took his own life in 2020 during a battle with brain cancer.

"I strongly believe I should have the right to have a say in my life," Albin said.

Sinks added: "I've always loved in obituaries, where they say 'surrounded by family and friends.' But that option was taken away from Brad."

Despite support from many in the DFL, the bill still did not pass the Senate last year and is unlikely to pass the House, where Republicans share power with a tie this session. Last year, under DFL control, the bill advanced through four House committees.

"I am a firm pro-life believer, from conception to natural death, so it's disheartening that it's back again," Republican Rep. Krista Knudsen (R - Lake Shore) said. "A lot of times, people are seeking this option because they feel as though they are a burden at the end of their life on their families. And all life has value."

The bill also faces opposition from groups such as Minnesota Citizens Concerned for Life and the Minnesota Alliance for Ethical Care.

Jessica Rodgers with the Patients Rights Action Fund, a national group that works to defeat similar legislation, called the proposal in Minnesota "dangerous."

"I grew up in a state where it's legal and I saw first-hand, when a patient has a terminal diagnosis, having assisted suicide as an option changes the relationship between doctors and patients," Rodgers said. "We see red and blue states all across the country continuing to reject it. No new state has passed it in four years."

Full Article & Source:
Minnesota end-of-life bill reintroduced, faces stiff opposition

Friday, April 4, 2025

NC nurse indicted on sexual exploitation of 3 mentally, physically incapacitated patients

Currituck County jurors indicted a nurse anesthetist on charges of sexually abusing patients, including a 16-year-old, under the pretext of medical treatment. 

Source:
NC nurse indicted on sexual exploitation of 3 mentally, physically incapacitated patients

Man sentenced to 10 years in prison for exploitation of older person

SAPD: William Holliday stole a 65-year-old man’s identity and opened fraudulent accounts in his name

by Rocky Garza


SAN ANTONIO
– A man was sentenced to ten years in prison after he exploited an older person and made a false statement to obtain property, according to the Bexar County District Attorney’s Office.

The incident happened last August, as William Holliday, 54, was arrested for using another man’s forwarded mail to steal their identity and open up 66 fraudulent accounts.

The accounts included the purchase of a Mercedes-Benz, two apartment leases and credit cards.

Holiday also attempted to sell the 65-year-old man’s home, San Antonio police said.

Authorities added that the older person didn’t notice the fraud until debt collectors contacted him about outstanding bills.

With the sentencing, the district attorney’s office said it marks a significant step in their fight to protect vulnerable older people from financial exploitation.

“Today’s sentence sends a strong message that those who prey on seniors will be held accountable for their actions,” Bexar County District Attorney Joe Gonzales said. “It’s crucial that we continue to protect older adults and ensure they have the resources they need to safeguard their finances.”

Full Article & Source:
Man sentenced to 10 years in prison for exploitation of older person

We can all do our bit to prevent financial abuse

Those who work in professional services are often best placed to spot early warning signs, allowing action to be taken

The Financial Conduct Authority recently revealed survey data showing that just four in ten vulnerable customers had made financial services providers aware of their specific needs. It also found a lack of training to address such needs, and ineffective monitoring once identified.

Yet ironically, those employed in professional services are often best placed to spot signs of financial abuse — and without their vigilance, the perpetrators can escape scrutiny.

And financial abuse is increasing. Hourglass, a specialist charity that targets abuse and exploitation of older people, cites a nearly 50 per cent rise in calls from victims. Likewise, the Society of Trust and Estate Practitioners (Step) reports that 70 per cent of its UK members, including solicitors and those helping clients with estate and wealth planning, have observed instances of actual or suspected financial abuse. About 40 per cent of those surveyed by the society said that instances of financial abuse have increased in the past two years.

In my practice I see daily the devastating impact of financial abuse, commonly including misuse of powers of attorney and coerced debt. Once the signs have been spotted, there are several steps that can be taken to protect victims and recover funds.


However, victims are often older people and there are cases where the financial abuse does not come to light until after they have died. Although legal action can then be taken to recover assets on behalf of the estate, that offers no benefit to those who suffered the abuse.

It is incumbent on all of us to do what we can for those around us who are less able to protect themselves from abuse. Step’s “spot the signs” campaign aims to help identify financial abuse. Signs can include lack of financial records from a care home, a new person showing unusual interest in a person’s spending habits, isolation from friends and family, a decline in living standards, assets being suddenly transferred without a clear reason, or even a sudden betterment of lifestyle of someone close to the vulnerable person. If spotted, action can then be taken.

The financial watchdog’s report also highlights measures that professionals who work in the financial sector and professional services can take. Essentially, it is vital that they are trained to spot the signs of financial abuse, so that action can be taken to safeguard victims as soon as possible.

Full Article & Source:
We can all do our bit to prevent financial abuse 

Thursday, April 3, 2025

Guardians care for some of Minnesota’s most vulnerable adults. But they lack proper oversight and training.

A new Legislative Auditor report on Wednesday recommends that guardians receive more training, oversight and accountability.

By James Walsh

In 2022, Bev Roland touched the urn of her late husband, John Roland, who she was barely able to see in the last year of his life due to what she viewed as the abusive actions of his guardian. (Renée Jones Schneider/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

The lives and care of nearly 35,000 vulnerable adults in Minnesota have been put in the hands of court-appointed guardians who often wield broad powers over their lives.

Yet, there is inadequate oversight, nonexistent training, limited accountability and few consequences when any of the state’s 41,000 guardians fail to meet their responsibilities, according to a new report released Wednesday by the state Legislative Auditor.

Minnesota also doesn’t adequately ensure that guardians are appointed only when appropriate, said Caitlin Badger, who managed the evaluation for the Office of the Legislative Auditor, a nonpartisan office that audits state government.

The result, she said, is a system in dire need of increased attention and improvement.

“Given the magnitude of issues we identified throughout our research, we believe that it’s time for the Legislature to take some substantial steps to bolster the administration and oversight of adult guardianship in the state,” Badger told members of the Legislative Audit Commission in St. Paul.

Recommended steps

First, Badger said, the Legislature should establish a centralized “entity” to administer and monitor guardianships. Currently, such work falls to each of 10 judicial districts, which take different approaches and dedicate varying amounts of staff time.

“Moving guardianships under a single entity will help the state to unify the responsibility for ensuring the proper performance of staff,” she said. “It’ll help reduce the number of staff working on guardianship and hopefully improve accountability and consistency within the system overall.”

For example, she said, the Legislature could consider centralizing this work within the state court administrator’s office. One way to do this is setting up a separate board within the judicial branch.

Or, Badger said, the Legislature, could consider moving the work to the Executive Branch through something like a licensing board.

Currently, she said, the system relies on the people subject to guardianship to file complaints when they believe guardians are not acting in their best interests.

“That’s flawed,” she said. “People subject to guardianship are often vulnerable individuals, and it’s important, we think, that the state ensure their safety and well-being.”

The Legislative Auditor’s Office is also recommending a process for systematically reviewing adult guardianships, she said.

“Guardians right now have significant authority and latitude to act with little guidance or oversight,” she said. “And we think a system to review guardianships would help the court to receive accurate, objective and sufficiently thorough information about the person subject to guardianship and the extent to which the guardians are fulfilling their duties.”

The evaluation’s extensive list of recommendations also included:

  • The Legislature should establish specific duties for the oversight and enforcement of adult guardianship requirements.
  • The Legislature should amend state law to require that the key state entities investigating guardianship complaints share information.
  • The Legislature should require guardians to report annually on the actions they took to meet the needs of the person subject to guardianship.
  • The Judicial Branch should establish a process for systematically reviewing adult guardianships.
  • The Legislature should establish a guardianship complaint process.
  • The Judicial Branch should ensure that it completes guardianship complaint investigations in a timely manner.
  • And the Legislature should require all guardians to complete training prior to their appointment as guardian.

Currently, Badger said, training is not required for someone to be named a guardian. The Judicial Branch has just a 23-minute video that guardians can watch, she said.

“It’s optional. You know, 23 minutes is a pretty low barrier to entry,” she said. “And so we think they should be required to receive at least some level of training.”

After Badger’s presentation, Sen. Scott Dibble, DFL-Minneapolis, said it seems that the issues relating to guardianship are not only legal in nature —requiring a court to rule someone incapable of making their own decisions — but carry a human services function as well.

The courts, too, acknowledged fixing the flaws in guardianship require legislative action.

In a 10-page response attached to the end of the evaluation, Supreme Court Chief Justice Natalie Hudson and State Court Administrator Jeff Shorba wrote that the judicial branch has already taken steps to improve data collection, record-keeping and complaint investigations. A more comprehensive system needs legislative funding and support, they said.

The Office of the Legislature Auditor has been reviewing how guardianship training, complaints and oversight are handled as part of an increasing emphasis on the system. That includes a task force that will look at ways to increase qualified guardians, establish licensure or certifications and expand less-restrictive alternatives.

Last year, guardians lost their immunity from personal or financial liability if something goes wrong with someone under their charge.

The change stemmed from the sexual assault of 77-year-old Jean Krause by an assisted living facility employee in 2016. Her family sued, saying the guardian did not tell them about the assault. But the courts determined guardians are immune from liability for negligence.

Legislators said Minnesota was the only state with that level of protection for guardians.

Full Article & Source:
Guardians care for some of Minnesota’s most vulnerable adults. But they lack proper oversight and training.

Mass. man accused of embezzling more than $300K from elderly family member

“This case illustrates one of the most common forms of elder abuse, the financial exploitation by a trusted family member.”


By Dialynn Dwyer

A Chelmsford man was arraigned Monday on charges he embezzled more than $300,000 from an elderly family member, authorities announced. 

Eric Borghetti, 51, pleaded not guilty to five counts of embezzlement by a fiduciary, the Middlesex County District Attorney’s office said in a statement. 

Prosecutors allege that in September 2019, Borghetti was living with the elderly woman at her Chelmsford home when a fire destroyed the house and injured the victim. Shortly afterward, she allegedly appointed Borghetti to serve as her fiduciary, acting in her best interests, with a Durable Power of Attorney. 

“The language of the DPOA did not authorize Mr. Borghetti to receive compensation or gifts in connection with his duties under the DPOA,” the DA’s office said. 

Shortly after the appointment, Borghetti allegedly added himself to the victim’s bank account. Prosecutors allege that after the woman’s insurance company deposited $175,750 to her account, Borghetti used transfers, deposits, and withdrawals to embezzle the woman’s money from four different accounts, including one single alleged withdrawal of $84,000. 

Borghetti is accused of embezzling $328,500 before his family member realized what he was allegedly doing and reported it, officials said. 

“This case illustrates one of the most common forms of elder abuse, the financial exploitation by a trusted family member,” Middlesex County District Attorney Marian Ryan said in a statement. “While these violations of trust may not initially be suspected among family members, this case shows the importance of acting quickly if you are concerned. Here, this defendant seized an opportunity following a large insurance settlement and was able to embezzle a huge amount of money in a matter of a few months.”

Following his arraignment, Borghetti was released on his own personal recognizance on the condition that he not travel outside New England, surrender existing passports, and not apply for any new passports. He will return to court on April 24. 

Attorney information for Borghetti was not immediately available.

Full Article & Source:
Mass. man accused of embezzling more than $300K from elderly family member

Woman arrested in Spring for Exploiting the Elderly


By Montgomery County Pct. 3 Constable

In October 2024, detectives from Constable Ryan Gable’s Criminal Investigation Division were alerted by the Pawtucket, Rhode Island Police Department about a case involving the financial exploitation of an elderly person. The perpetrator impersonated a bank employee over the phone, misleading the victim into believing they needed to transfer their funds to a new account due to a security breach of their current one. Bank records provided by the Pawtucket Police identified the suspect as Dylesiya Maqwon Jackson, a resident of Spring, Texas.


Following an extensive investigation that included examining the suspect’s social media and gathering surveillance footage from local banks, detectives were able to obtain arrest warrants for the charges of Exploitation of an Elderly Person and Theft from an Elderly Person, both categorized as third-degree felonies. Dylesiya Maqwon Jackson was arrested on March 31, 2025, and booked into the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office Jail.



Full Article & Source:
Woman arrested in Spring for Exploiting the Elderly

Wednesday, April 2, 2025

Bodycam in Connecticut house of horrors shows suspect after stepson's fiery escape

Kimberly Sullivan allegedly held her stepson in captivity for 20 years in Waterbury, Connecticut

By Peter D'Abrosca

Police question Kimberly Sullivan at scene of fire

Kimberly Sullivan tells police her stepson, whom she allegedly locked in a storage closet for 20 years, was free to leave the room as he pleased. (Courtesy: Waterbury Police Department)


Bodycam footage from the Waterbury Police Department shows suspected Connecticut child abuser Kimberly Sullivan denying that her stepson, who was allegedly locked in a storage closet in their home for 20 years, was imprisoned in the house. 

According to the footage obtained by Fox News Digital, one of Sullivan's two daughters arrived at the scene shortly after authorities on Feb. 17, when police said her 32-year-old stepson set fire in the house to escape decades of captivity and abuse.

Sullivan's daughter picked her up in a black Acura, where they waited nearby as firefighters extinguished the blaze, and as Sullivan's unnamed stepson was rescued from the home.

In the footage, which is partially redacted, Sullivan, 56, explains to an officer what happened after the fire started. 

‘MALNOURISHED’ MAN HELD CAPTIVE BY STEPMOM FOR DECADES SET FIRE TO HOME TO ESCAPE: ‘I WANTED MY FREEDOM’

Kimberly Sullivan was arrested after allegedly abusing her stepson in their Waterbury, Connecticut home. (Jim Shannon/Hearst Connecticut Media via AP)


She said that she thought the fire started from a TV her stepson plugged into the wall, and said that she came out of her bedroom when she smelled smoke and called out for him.   

"I was trying to go into the room but it was just – there were just flames – he came out of the room, eventually woke up and came out of the room," she said. 

Sullivan said that her son couldn't escape the room because there were flames, but that he must have walked through them eventually.  

"Was the door locked on his room, or no?" the officer asked. 

"No," Sullivan replied.

"OK, is it normally locked?" he asked.

"No," she answered. 

"And he has free rein to go out of there whenever he wants?" the detective asked. 

"Yeah," Sullivan said. 

But police allege that Sullivan was lying during that exchange.

This photo provided by the Waterbury Police Department shows Kimberly Sullivan, who was charged Wednesday, March 12, 2025, with kidnapping and cruelty for allegedly holding her 32-year-old stepson captive for more than 20 years.  (Waterbury Police Department via AP)


Sullivan was arrested on March 12 and charged with first-degree assault, second-degree kidnapping, first-degree unlawful restraint, cruelty to persons and first-degree reckless endangerment. She is free on $300,000 bond, and pleaded not guilty to all charges on Friday. 

According to an arrest warrant for Sullivan, the victim, identified as "Male Victim 1," was held in a windowless 8-foot by 9-foot storage closet with no air conditioning or heat and without access to a bathroom for 20 years. He was kept inside the closet 22-24 hours per day.

He was allowed two sandwiches and two small water bottles each day, one of which he would use for bathing. He disposed of his waste using water bottles and newspaper. The man weighed less than 70 pounds when first responders found him after the fire.

That warrant also says that Sullivan's stepson told them he set the fire on purpose, because he wanted his freedom.

Kimberly Sullivan is taken into custody by the Waterbury Police Department on March 12. (Waterbury Police Department)


Fox News Digital also obtained Sullivan's distraught 911 call reporting that her house was on fire.

LISTEN: Kimberly Sullivan calls 911 to report house fire


 More bodycam footage shows a police officer arriving to the scene and yelling at an unidentified person through a window, telling the person to exit the home. 

WATCH: Waterbury officer yells at person to exit burning home


In a heavily redacted portion of the bodycam footage, police officers can be seen standing outside the ambulance looking in at the victim, who is blurred and being tended to by a paramedic. When audio reemerges from the redaction, one officer tells another that the victim said he hadn't showered in a year. 

WATCH: Kimberly Sullivan’s stepson interviewed by police in ambulance


Another video shows a frantic Sullivan asking to go back into the house to retrieve her purse and her keys, so she can put her dog inside her car.

WATCH: Kimberly Sullivan frantically asks to retrieve purse from burning home


Police previously released footage showing Sullivan's stepson being carried out of the home and into an ambulance. 

Fox News Digital reached out to Sullivan's attorney Ioannis Kaloidis through a spokesperson.

Full Article & Source:
Bodycam in Connecticut house of horrors shows suspect after stepson's fiery escape

See Also:
Conservator for Waterbury man held captive for decades wants case file sealed

New details emerge after man held hostage for 20 years in Waterbury

Why Kimberly Sullivan Made A SHOCKING 911 Call


Tuesday, April 1, 2025

Wendy Williams Originally Asked for a Guardianship, but Didn't 'Think Her Whole Life Would Be Taken Away' (Exclusive Source)

A health care advocate tells PEOPLE that Williams wanted the court to protect her financially. Now she's protesting her guardianship with #FreeWendy movement

By Danielle Bacher

Wendy Williams speaks onstage during her celebration of 10 years of 'The Wendy Williams Show'. Photo:

Paras Griffin/Getty

  •  Wendy Williams’ health care advocate Ginalisa Monterroso tells PEOPLE that the former talk show originally wanted to be in a guardianship despite her desire to end it now
  • Monterroso claims Williams “passed” the mental capacity exams during her hospital visit on March 10, adding, “She was alert and oriented, and we were satisfied with that”
  • Williams will hold a protest against her guardianship in New York and Los Angeles on Tuesday, April 1

Wendy Williams recently amped up her demands to be free of a restrictive guardianship that she alleges controls every aspect of her life. But her desire to end it wasn't always this way. Three years ago, Williams allegedly agreed with the courts to be overseen by her court-appointed legal guardian Sabrina Morrissey.

Since May 2022, the former TV host, 60, has been living under a legal guardianship that oversees both her finances and health. Williams is currently living in a luxury high-rise assisted-living facility in New York to address her cognitive issues and dementia diagnosis in 2023. Morrissey is the only person who currently has unfettered access to her. Williams' family told PEOPLE last year that she can call them, but they cannot call her themselves.

However, Williams’ health care advocate, Ginalisa Monterroso, exclusively tells PEOPLE that Williams initially wanted to be placed in a guardianship with the courts. She claims her client didn't know all her rights would be taken away — including having no access to the Internet or a cell phone.

In early 2022, Williams' 24-year-old son Kevin Hunter Jr. and her ex-husband, Kevin Hunter, were the subjects of public scrutiny when court filings showed that Wells Fargo froze her accounts after her financial adviser at the time, Lori Schiller, alleged that she was of “unsound mind." In a letter to the court on Feb. 4, 2022 — and obtained by PEOPLE — Williams claimed Wells Fargo had "denied [her] any access, whether online or otherwise, to her financial accounts, assets, and statements" for more than two weeks. 


Hunter Jr. was Williams' power of attorney and reportedly took a large sum of money from her account, ultimately raising flags at the bank. The bank successfully petitioned a New York court to have Williams first placed under temporary financial guardianship that turned into a full guardianship under the state laws of New York.

The court documents stated at the time that Wells Fargo had "several million dollars" of Williams' funds in its possession. The bank, in its filings to the court, said it froze the funds because "Wells Fargo has strong reason to believe that [Williams] is the victim of undue influence and financial exploitation." It did not specify who or what is exploiting or unduly influencing Williams.

Monterroso now claims that Williams thought that because Wells Fargo flagged the account — and that it went through the courts — they would protect her financially. "She wanted to make sure nobody's in her money and she would be fine," adds Monterroso. "She kind of felt like, 'Hey, I have the court. They're going to sign me a money person. I'm going to be good.' In no way did she think that our whole life was going to be taken away from her."

A month after the guardian was appointed, Williams was caught on camera passed out at a Louis Vuitton store, drunk. She entered a wellness facility starting in September 2022 and has been living at another facility in New York for the past few years.

"A lot of people would be like, 'Well, I would question [the guardianship] more. But when everything is happening so quickly and the bank is saying, 'Somebody's trying to take your money and there's something going on, you're just trying to kind of save yourself," says Monterroso. "Why would you not trust the courts, right? Why would the courts become your enemy?"

But under Williams' guardianship, she can no longer decide where to live, how to spend her money or have a bank account. She can't vote, marry or decide the doctors she'd like to use or what friends can visit her at the facility. She has to get special permission from Morrissey and sometimes even Judge Lisa A. Sokoloff, who is overseeing her affairs, to travel out of state. "You have no rights," says Monterroso. "Somebody in prison has more rights than a person put under a guardianship."

As far as Williams' family petitioning to be her guardian in the interim, Monterosso says that her client "really didn't want her family to be involved. She didn't want to kind of burden them with anything," she adds.


"How did she go from this aunt or sister that we love and is healthy one minute to this person who’s in and out of the hospital?” Williams' sister Wanda Finnie asked in PEOPLE's February 2024 cover story. “How is that system better than the system the family could put in place? I don't know. I do know that this system is broken. I hope that at some point, Wendy becomes strong enough where she can speak on her own behalf."

But now Williams has a voice. "Wendy feels as if she has a voice and change to get out, so she doesn't have to try to get an alternate plan," Monterosso continues. "She's able to get counsel, everybody's looking at the case — and there's movement. People are listening to her now, so she's confident that she's going to continue to fight."

On Thursday, Jan. 16, Williams was in tears as she begged to get her out of her guardianship and return to life outside the walls of the wellness facility in New York City in which she's been ordered to live. Appearing on The Breakfast Club for a rare interview, she spoke out about her situation to host Charlamagne Tha God.

"I am not cognitively impaired but I feel like I am in prison," Williams said. "I’m in this place with people who are in their nineties and their eighties and their seventies... These people, there's something wrong with these people here on this floor. I am clearly not."


Two months later, Williams pressed a handwritten note to the window of her luxury high-rise assisted-living facility that read “Help! Wendy!” This resulted in police and medical personnel intervening and sending her in an ambulance for evaluation on March 10. She was then escorted out of the building, and EMS transported her in an ambulance to a local hospital “for evaluation,” a spokesperson for the New York Police Department told PEOPLE at the time.

Monterroso claims that the note was "more of a joke" but that she and Williams planned the call with 9-1-1 the day before to attract media attention and get another evaluation for her client. After filing a complaint with Adult Protective Services earlier this month, Monterroso says Williams is "excited" for a jury to determine if her guardianship should be terminated following additional mental competency testing.

"I wanted to make awareness to the public that this is very serious and it is a crime to keep somebody isolated," Monterroso continues. "And so I just said [to Wendy] 'We're going to call the police. “It was just more of a strategic move to just kind of get more evidence because this case has been stuck,” she explains. 

She adds the decision to transport via ambulance was made because they could “at least do a short mini-assessment” at the hospital and “have some documentation from somebody else outside of this guardianship that can attest” to Williams not being incapacitated. Monterroso further claims Williams “passed” the mental capacity exams at the hospital, adding, “She was alert and oriented, and we were satisfied with that.”


After the brief hospitalization, Williams went out to dinner with her niece Alex Finnie and headed back to her unit wearing a pink fuzzy Versace robe and waving to onlookers. Although Williams has in no way given up her fight for more freedom, the police were called after she was reported missing at her facility. (A police report was filed but Monterroso claims it was a "misunderstanding").

Investigative journalist Diane Dimond — who released a book about the guardianship system, We’re Here to Help: When Guardianship Goes Wrong, in September 2024 — told PEOPLE last year an estimated 2 million people are presently living under the court's control.

"A guardian can be a family member, it could be your best friend, it could be a perfectly trustworthy commoner, so to speak," Dimond said. "After investigating this for eight or nine years now, judges are overlooking family members, they're overlooking friends and they're going immediately to these professional, for-profit appointees, and they're complete strangers to these wards of the court. So within that, the ward of the court loses all their civil rights. They have no more rights to decide anything about their personal life or their financial life."

Recently, Williams called into The View, saying she wanted Morrissey to “get off my neck."

"Wendy has expressed her frustration and desire for freedom on multiple occasions, stating publicly: 'I feel like I’m in prison,' " a source close to Wendy tells PEOPLE. "No one should feel imprisoned in their own life — especially not someone who has proven time and again that she is capable, intelligent, and deserving of dignity. This movement is about dignity. It’s about voice. And it’s about justice."


Bicoastal rallies for Williams will be held at Coterie Hudson Yards in New York and the Hollywood Walk of Fame in Los Angeles at Williams' star on Tuesday, April 1 beginning at 10:00 a.m. local. A GoFundMe has also been launched to raise $50,000 to support Williams' legal fight.

The same source says Williams will be cheering supporters from inside the window of her New York facility until 2 p.m. ET.

Full Article & Source:
Wendy Williams Originally Asked for a Guardianship, but Didn't 'Think Her Whole Life Would Be Taken Away' (Exclusive Source)

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Wendy Williams wants ‘to move on with my life’ despite guardianship: How she got here