Saturday, September 6, 2025

Blocked from seeing her son, a Missouri mother fights to change the state’s guardianship law to help others like him

A Missouri mother says her experience with the guardianship system has inspired her to push for changes in state law to protect families like hers.  

by Ceilidh Kern


When Twila Foley brought a Christmas gift for her son, Christopher, to his nursing facility in Plattsburg, Missouri, she was not allowed to enter the building’s lobby.

Instead, she watched him open his gift — a pillow with a picture of his dog, Oakley, printed on it — through a glass door.

Christopher asked the aide who accompanied him if he could go out to hug her. The aide said no. 

“So I watched as he opened his present alone in a skilled nursing facility, and I thought of the Christmas dinners that he used to have, filled with family and friends,” Twila said. “I thought about all the things that he is no longer allowed to do and how that must feel for him.”

Christopher, a 35-year-old with cerebral palsy, died Aug. 19, 2025, from cardiac arrest in the nursing facility where he lived the last several years of his life. He weighed 94 pounds.

The Beacon spoke with Twila on Aug. 6, before Christopher’s death. She hadn’t spoken with him for months after his father cut off communication. Now, she’s advocating for a law that seeks to combat isolation by centering the wishes of people under guardianship.

For most of his life, Christopher, who went by “Topher,” had lived at home. Raised in Osceola and Pleasant Hill by his mother, he underwent 19 surgeries over the course of his life, including the installation of an experimental pump that released medicine into his brain to loosen his muscles.

Between the medicine and physical therapy, Topher was able to walk in a walker and hold down a job at a nearby sheltered workshop. In his free time, he went parasailing, attended concerts and hung out with friends.

From the age of 18, Topher was under the guardianship of his mother, which gave her the legal power to make all of his decisions for him.

“I had no idea, when I obtained full guardianship of him … fully what that meant,” she said. “They said it had to be done so I can continue with his medical care. What they didn’t tell me was the full ramifications of total guardianship.”

Topher’s final years

In May 2020, Twila went out of town for a seasonal job in South Dakota, leaving Topher with a caretaker. 

That marked the beginning of an ongoing he-said, she-said dispute about the last years of Topher’s life and his wishes during that time. 

Twila said she was gone for two weeks to get herself settled before she planned to return to Missouri to get Topher and bring him to live with her there. Her ex-husband and Topher’s father, Robert Foley, said she was gone for over three years, but Twila said that’s not true.

“It hadn’t taken me three years to come back, but three years to find Christopher,” she said.

A week after Twila left, Robert took Topher out of the caretaker’s home and went to court, arguing that Twila had abandoned their son. He got temporary guardianship of Topher in July 2020 and obtained full guardianship by December. 

The abandonment charges were later dismissed, but Robert remained Topher’s guardian.

Topher lived with Robert for a little over a year before he moved into a nursing facility.

“We had been trying to get him into a group home. It was in the middle of COVID still, so that was not a possibility. He started acting up, having outbursts,” Robert said.

“We went to North Kansas City Hospital for a behavioral assessment,” he added. “To this day, I’m not sure what he told the nurses, but I was called in for him to bring his stuff (and told) that he would not be coming back (to my home), per his wishes.”

When Twila couldn’t get in touch with Topher and learned from family what had happened, she said she spent the next several years trying to find him. To do so, she tried to contact Robert, asked friends and family for any information they had and went to law enforcement. But she said the police were not willing to help her until the abandonment charges were later dropped.

“So I decided to go door to door until I found him, and I did just that,” she said. “I went door to door to every skilled nursing facility until I found him.”

But when she came back the next day, she was told by staff that she was not allowed to visit him.

“I requested no visitation because it was not good for his state of mind,” Robert said. “She put this young man through emotional distress multiple times.”

He said Topher had told therapists that Twila “messed with his head too much … promising him things and then not delivering.”

On several occasions since he became his guardian and as recently as April 2025, Topher asked Robert not to let Twila visit or contact him, Robert said.

“When I was asked by the ward not to allow her in his life, I was respecting his wishes,” he said.

Robert said he offered to set up monitored visits, but Twila said no.

Instead, she kept in touch with Topher over the phone. But his behavior started to change, Robert said.

“Outbursts, cursing, arguments with everyone. Mom — he wanted to be with mom. Mom was promising him who knows what,” Robert said. “She created a very hostile place for him, urged him and encouraged him to do whatever he could to get himself removed from the nursing home.”

Twila acknowledged that Topher was having outbursts at this time but said they weren’t the result of their contact.

“The outbursts were because Christopher didn’t belong there and Christopher himself was crying out and reaching out for help,” she said. “It was a manipulated situation where the guardian was trying to keep him in isolation to prevent people from seeing the real facts, taking the focus away from his declining health.”

Twila went to court multiple times, asking to regain guardianship as well as to be able to visit Topher in the nursing facility, but was denied both. 

When Robert became Topher’s guardian, he had his pump removed. According to court documents, it had stopped working. Twila said there had been issues with it before, given the experimental nature of the device.

According to Robert, when he took Topher in for a routine appointment to refill the medicine in the pump in 2022, the doctor told him that the tube connecting the pump to Topher’s brain was causing irritation to Topher’s nerves.

The doctor recommended the entire pump be removed, and Topher agreed, Robert said. When asked why a new pump wasn’t installed after, Robert said Topher had asked to not get a new one. 

With the pump gone, Twila said, “His condition deteriorated. He can’t stand up anymore.”

At the nursing facility, Topher was given medicine that Twila said made him vomit, but when he raised concerns, he was forced to take it by staff and his father. 

“I have so many phone calls and recordings of Topher — he would set his phone on speaker and hide it behind his pillow so I could hear what he was having to endure,” she said, adding that things were “so bad, he would call 911 or have me call 911 for an ambulance to come and help him and the ambulance would be refused at the door, per the guardian’s directions.”

Robert said the nursing facility had security camera footage of Topher making himself vomit after taking the medicine and that he’d been able to take the drugs without a problem before he got back in touch with his mother.

“The more communication Topher had with me, the less he was able to have his rights, such as using a cellphone,” Twila said. “His friends tried to go visit him and weren’t even allowed to take him an Easter basket.”

In a legal filing from May 2024, Robert told the court that Topher “has a cellular telephone and other communications devices available to him and is generally able to communicate with whomever he chooses.”

Robert later told The Beacon that he had taken away Topher’s devices “when his behaviors became too excessive, when he kept refusing his medicine.”

“I didn’t want to, but when the communication between her and him got to a point that he was going into the director’s office (at the nursing facility) and starting an argument with her on speakerphone, that’s a little excessive,” he said.

In 2024, Topher had a friend in the facility write several letters to his mother. On one envelope, mailed in July 2024, he had the envelope addressed to Lori Samples, a friend, from “Chris Samples.” He also had the friend mail it while they were at church so it wouldn’t go through the facility’s mail system.

“Thanks, mom, for being so good to me all through the hardships,” he wrote. “I have no phone. Dad called Roger and he took the phone. I guess he really doesn’t know how blessed I am having a mom like you to love me.”

Topher had a friend in the nursing facility write several letters to his mother in 2024, including a card. The envelope was addressed to Lori Samples, a friend, from “Chris Samples.” Topher used a different name and had his friend mail the card while they were at church to keep it from being intercepted, Twila said.

Twila said the isolation Topher experienced in the nursing facility contributed greatly to the decline in his mental and physical health. 

“Isolation can be so damaging to people with a guardian — it’s detrimental to their health. It’s been proven that it lowers life expectancy, and it’s taking away their fundamental right,” she said. “What man has a right to tell another man he can’t make a phone call?”

‘That’s what Topher’s Law is going to change’

Through her experience in court, Twila said, she learned that under Missouri law, “the guardian has all the rights.”

“Until that changes, the situation that’s happening to Topher and so many others in the state of Missouri is not going to end,” she said.

Her experience inspired Twila to push for a change in the law. Her proposal, called “Topher’s Law,” aims to combat isolation by requiring guardians to petition the court to block a person from seeing the ward. 

Under the current law, the order is reversed, and people who have been blocked from seeing a ward must themselves petition the court for access.

Topher’s Law would also codify several rights of wards, including:

  • The right to spend time with family.
  • The right to consent to calls and visits. 
  • The right to express their own wishes in court related to visitation and guardianship restrictions. 
  • The right to access an attorney at no cost to help with visitation challenges.
  • Protection from retaliation for asserting their rights under the law or maintaining relationships with family members. 

“I feel they should have the right to do these things as anybody would have the right to do these things,” Twila said.

While the proposed law was inspired by her own experience trying to visit Topher while he was under Robert’s guardianship, she said: “I’m not doing this to attack him. I’m doing this to attack a flawed system.”

As part of her effort to get Missouri’s law changed, Twila launched an online campaign — which has gathered more than 250 signatures — and reached out to local state lawmakers. 

Sen. Rick Brattin, a Republican from Harrisonville, said he’s heard from Twila and is interested in helping her either by carrying the legislation himself or helping her find someone who can.

“I think it’s terrible that somebody can be there for their child, and the way the system’s set up, they can be ripped out from underneath them. It’s really heart-wrenching,” Brattin told The Beacon. 

“It’s something that we definitely need to address,” he added. “If I’m not going to spearhead it and be the bill sponsor, (I want to) at least be part of the discussion.”

In a later conversation, Twila told The Beacon she’d also received support from Rep. Mike Steinmeyer, a Republican from Sugar Creek, and Sen. Adam Schnelting, a Republican from St. Charles.

Twila said that Topher’s Law focuses on preventing isolation because she believes it is “the most pressing piece,” but she said “there’s so much more that needs to change.”

Asked whether she will continue to advocate for changes to the guardianship law if Topher’s Law passes, Twila replied, “Absolutely.”

“I won’t stop until I fix this. I won’t. I can’t. I promised him,” she said. “We can’t stand here and let this happen to people. I won’t stop, and then I’ll push on. I’ll push for more rights, and I’ll push for it to go federal.”

Changing guardianship statute and culture

Twila’s efforts come after Missouri’s guardianship law was changed in 2018 to codify wards’ rights, including the right to communicate freely and privately with family and friends. 

While the law guarantees access to loved ones, it also clarifies that access can be limited by the guardian if they believe contact with a particular person could harm the ward.

Jennifer Hulme, co-founder of advocacy organization Alternatives to Guardianship, said cutting off visitation can often be the result of serious concerns, but sometimes “it can be out of convenience for the guardian.”

“We would like to think that’s not something that happens, but in reality, it does,” she said. “The guardian just has to say, ‘This person is causing the ward undue anxiety or undue stress,’ and they can block that communication.”

The decision can come after friends or family raise concerns about care, she said.

“If the family or friend steps in and starts to call the guardian and say … ‘They weren’t very clean, it didn’t look like they had changed their clothes for a few days,’ and they keep reporting those concerns, sometimes it’s seen as them rocking the boat,” she said. 

David English, a law professor at the University of Missouri in Columbia and co-chair of the Missouri Working Interdisciplinary Network of Guardianship Stakeholders, has helped to shape guardianship policy in Missouri and elsewhere.

“The idea behind all recent legislation is that guardianship should be the absolutely last resort, because you’re appointing someone who literally succeeds to all the individual’s rights,” he said.

He said guardianship is often seen as the only solution when alternative approaches might get a ward the care and support they need while also preserving their rights.

“My great concern for adults with developmental disabilities is that oftentimes, it’s automatic,” English said. “It’s been part of the culture for decades.”

There are currently more than 35,000 Missourians under guardianship, according to data from the Office of State Courts Administrator. That number includes older people, people with disabilities and others that courts across the state have decided need help making decisions.

According to English, an ideal system would allow for a complete evaluation of a person’s capacities and needs and an exploration of all possible solutions — like supported decision-making, a less restrictive alternative — before a guardianship is pursued.

He said that although progress has been made on guardianship, a 1988 report by the American Bar Association calling for reforms to the guardianship system included many recommendations that “are still current today.”

“These problems aren’t new,” he said. “Things are getting better, but slowly.” 

Full Article & Source:
Blocked from seeing her son, a Missouri mother fights to change the state’s guardianship law to help others like him 

Friday, September 5, 2025

Oklahoma Unprepared for Looming Guardianship Crisis

by JC Hallman


In May, a headline caught the eye of Rena Denton, 96.

Denton was seated in her small, spare cinderblock room in Pauls Valley Health and Rehab, which she shares with her daughter, Karen Koonce, 76. It was a pleasure whenever mother and daughter received the latest edition of the Garvin County News Star.

But that headline, it hit home.

Eldercare Nightmare: A Tragic Family Story Raises the Specter of Widespread Guardianship Fraud.

“Well, it was a repeat of what we’ve lived out,” Denton said.

Not exactly, but the story of Rena Denton in Pauls Valley, and the story of Estelle Simonton in Harrah, suggest inadequacy in Oklahoma eldercare law in scale, implementation and awareness of existing statutes as the state’s aging population surges toward a crisis point.

A Nightmare All Their Own

After Denton finished reading the story about quadriplegic Vietnam vet Leroy Theodore, who was taken from his family in April and installed in a nursing home in Midwest City, she called Kive Kerr, who has been helping Denton and Koonce navigate a guardianship nightmare all their own. Kerr contacted Oklahoma Watch, which originally published Theodore’s story, and a visit to mother and daughter was arranged.

“I go over it and over it in my mind: why did he do this to me?” Denton said. “Why did he take everything I had?”

She meant Billy LeMay, a one-time family friend and former Halliburton executive who now operates a lawnmower repair store in Pauls Valley. Before March, Denton had lived in the same house since 1949, but there came a moment, she said, when she was unable to care for her daughter, who had begun to show signs of dementia. Koonce, in turn, was unable to care for her mother.

They turned to LeMay for help.

From there, versions of the story differ.

Kerr said LeMay got a doctor to sign papers saying the mother and daughter couldn’t care for themselves; he took their phones and hired a lawyer to draw up wills and secure power of attorney to take control of about $1 million in assets, Kerr said.

Kerr also said LeMay falsely told the women that their only living blood relatives, a pair of nieces in Georgia, did not want to hear from them; the lie was revealed when Denton got her phone back and called Kerr, he said.

It took months and vast resources to head off a legal assault that came close to robbing Denton of everything; even obtaining transcripts of legal proceedings in which an Adult Protective Services investigator accused LeMay of criminal behavior has been a slog, Kerr said.

For his part, LeMay claimed that staff at Norman Regional Hospital encouraged him to obtain guardianship over Denton and Koonce; the hospital provided him with instructions on how to do so, LeMay said. He said the APS investigator lied about him in court and that his role in the saga was about love, not money.

“I have not profited a nickel from this thing,” LeMay said.

Now, Denton’s nieces have been awarded guardianship.

The Most Fundamental Problem

Kerr claimed that in addition to the conflict with LeMay, the administrator at Denton’s nursing home also offered to become Denton’s guardian, an accusation the administrator denied.

Title 63, Oklahoma’s public health and safety laws, and Title 30, which governs guardianships, both specify that no court-appointed guardian can also be the owner or administrator of the nursing home in which a ward is housed unless the guardian is the spouse or close relative of the ward.

But ignorance of the law is the root of the guardianship problem.

William Whited, a former investigator with APS in the Oklahoma Department of Human Services, is now the state’s long-term care ombudsman, a role that was integrated into the Office of the Attorney General in 2024 to enhance the ability to investigate complaints and advocate for residents’ rights in nursing homes and assisted living facilities.

For Whited, this facet of Denton’s story involving the administrator was characteristic of a broader trend in Oklahoma eldercare law: the nuances of existing laws were not widely understood.

Whited had additional concerns. Oklahoma’s aging population loomed as a logistical crisis that would emerge as the number of guardianship proceedings rose.

“I know that this taxes the system,” Whited said. “It’s one of those things where maybe not everything that should be reviewed is reviewed. And I don’t know the answer to that.”

The human capital aspect of the problem had already arrived.

“There’s not enough judges to read all the reports,” Whited said. “There is not an entity or system that is set up to review those guardianships.”

The most fundamental problem of all was ignorance; staff members at hospitals, nursing homes and APS and DHS appeared to be unfamiliar with relevant statutes.

“I don’t think that they all do know the laws,” Whited said.

This Guy Cares About His Mother

“Basically, they kidnapped her,” Rep. Justin “J.J.” Humphrey, R-Lane, said of APS, in the case of Estelle Simonton, 91.

Humphrey’s interest in DHS had more to do with Child Protective Services than APS, but his office had received several complaints about guardianships, including one from Matthew Simonton, the son of Estelle Simonton.

“Lord knows, it’s been a lot of trouble for him,” Humphrey said. “The guy cares about his mother, that’s how it appears to me.”

Oklahoma law requires judges to seal guardianship cases, with only the existence of a guardianship not considered confidential. Everything else is available only to the parties involved and the judge.

Cases such as Simonton’s demonstrated the need for greater transparency in government, Humphrey said.

“When you find something like this case, and they’re not going to talk to you because it’s confidential, then how can we correct it when it’s wrong?” Humphrey said. “If they can hide everything because it’s all confidential, then who can hold them accountable?”

DHS has refused to comment on all of Oklahoma Watch’s reporting on guardianship abuse. In the case of Estelle Simonton, DHS Public Information Officer Carrie Snodgrass offered to provide a statement or arrange an interview, but only if Oklahoma Watch provided questions in advance.

Did Not Meet the Criteria

Estelle Simonton’s problems began as far back as 2003, when she became a widow.

Always a collector, Simonton’s Del City house became cluttered and more difficult to manage as she grew older, her son, Matthew Simonton, admitted. Her diabetes didn’t help, and manifested in her behavior if she didn’t eat properly.

She became friendly with her neighbors. Oklahoma Watch spoke to one neighbor who recalled Estelle Simonton’s frequent, amenable visits; another remembered a friendly, independent woman who bothered no one.

Nevertheless, someone started calling APS. Matthew Simonton said that he suspects another neighbor, but he doesn’t know for sure.

Matthew Simonton was granted durable power of attorney for his mother, limited to health care powers, in March 2023.

Relations with DHS grew strained. Matthew Simonton recorded video interviews in which Estelle Simonton related harrowing details of what she endured while in the care of others; he uploaded them to YouTube, only to have a judge order that they be removed from public view.

In June 2024, Matthew Simonton said, a confrontational ambulance call presaged another report to APS. DHS again visited Estelle Simonton’s home, alongside members of the Del City police department.

A subsequent DHS petition for an involuntary emergency protective order claimed that the home was found to be filthy, lacked air conditioning, and reeked of urine.

However, a police report on a welfare check at Estelle Simonton’s home a few days later concluded that her living conditions did not meet the criteria for an emergency order of detention.

Nevertheless, the following day, DHS conducted what Matthew Simonton characterized as a raid on his own home when his mother was visiting. After a tense confrontation, Estelle Simonton was taken to Wolfe Living Center at Summit Ridge in Harrah, where she has remained ever since.

A Dramatic Confrontation

Oklahoma Watch’s May story about Leroy Theodore documented a dramatic confrontation as nursing home staff in Midwest City called police in an attempt to prevent Theodore’s family from visiting him. The staff were unaware of a 2015 Attorney General opinion that expressly stated that legal guardians — APS or otherwise — were not empowered to restrict visitation with nursing home residents without a specific court order.

Midwest City police officers listened to all parties involved before overruling the nursing home staff and permitting a visit. On Father’s Day, Theodore’s family once again drove two and a half hours to visit him.

In early August, Oklahoma Watch learned that Theodore died while still under an APS guardianship. Theodore’s family members said they were not directly notified of his death; one of Theodore’s daughters learned of her father’s passing in a phone call with a reporter.

Nearly a month later, calls placed to APS, the hospital where Theodore died and the morgue where his remains are being held revealed that arrangements to return him to his family have not been made. Once again, a lack of familiarity with what the law provides when an individual dies under guardianship appears to have hobbled the effort to provide dignity and peace for the remains of a military veteran. 

Theodore’s remains continue to be held in a legal and logistical limbo.

I Should Have Some Rights

On August 4, the confrontation in Midwest City repeated almost exactly in Harrah when Oklahoma Watch accompanied Matthew Simonton as he attempted to visit his mother, Estelle Simonton.

Once again, nursing home staff appeared unaware of the 2015 attorney general’s opinion; manager David Carey claimed he was following instructions from APS, and called the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office in an attempt to restrict access.

Deputy sheriffs arrived, listened to all parties involved, and, as Del City police officers had done, facilitated a visit despite objections from highly agitated Wolfe Living Center staff members.

Estelle Simonton was palpably elated to see her son, clutching at his arm as though hanging from the edge of a cliff.

“I just want to go home,” Estelle Simonton said. “Do you understand my feelings? I don’t want anything from them. I just want my freedom.”

Throughout a prolonged visit, Estelle Simonton spoke in lengthy, complex sentences, demonstrating comprehensive awareness of her surroundings. She was uncertain of her age, but described vivid memories from more than eight decades previous. She recalled the circumstances in which she had been living when APS secured guardianship.

“I wasn’t crying and going on,” Estelle Simonton said. “I was taking care of my little dog, and we had some chickens. I was happy to take care of the place. I don’t know why they took me out of my house. I don’t know.”

Estelle Simonton understood both her limitations and what she believed her rights should be.

“If I have to, I’ll run away from here,” she said. “I don’t know exactly what I’ll do, but I should have some rights as an American citizen. It’s the law that is taking me away from my family, who I dearly love and haven’t seen in a while. It’s not right. It should be changed.”

It’s All We’ve Got Left

William Whited offered details on a pair of projects already on the books that could mitigate Oklahoma’s looming guardianship crisis.

Court-Appointed Advocates for Vulnerable Adults, detailed in Title 30, and the Office of Public Guardianship, part of DHS, offered promise, but neither was properly funded, Whited said.

CAAVA folded because no state appropriations were dedicated to it, Whited said; the Office of Public Guardianship was used only limitedly, yet in addition to eldercare, it applied to younger people with severe mental illness or profound physical disability.

Estelle Simonton did not complain about the care she was receiving at Wolfe Living Center. It’s a good place to be if you have to be taken care of, and the home didn’t do anything she believed to be illegal, she said. But she was angry that they were keeping her away from her son.

Rena Denton did not complain about the care she and her daughter were receiving at Pauls Valley Health and Rehab either.

“It’s peaceful here, they are good to us,” Denton said. “It’s our home now. It’s all we’ve got left.”

Denton had that, alongside the wisdom conferred by a life of experience.

“Beware of somebody coming and telling you that they’re going to take care of you and be your guardian,” Denton said. “Steer clear.”

Ed. Note: This story was updated on Sept. 4, 2025 to clarify WIlliam Whited’s work history. 

Full Article & Source:
Oklahoma Unprepared for Looming Guardianship Crisis 

Thursday, September 4, 2025

Detroit News: Detroit Judge Teamed With 2 Criminals to Help Buy And Sell Homes of the Vulnerable

by Allan Lengel

Detroit 36th District Judge Andrea Bradley-Baskin, who is the focus of an FBI investigation, allegedly teamed up with two criminals to help buy and sell homes belonging to vulnerable individuals in the probate court system for far less than the properties’ market value, The Detroit News reports, citing records.

The FBI investigation began before the judge was elected to the bench last November and is apparently focused on her work as a lawyer.

Robert Snell of The News reports:

The judge, Andrea Bradley-Baskin of 36th District Court, and other targets of the FBI investigation were involved in the sale of at least five homes owned by the estates of incapacitated people, the elderly and those with mental health problems in Metro Detroit since 2020, property records show. In several instances, those homes were sold to the boyfriend of a court-appointed guardian after Bradley-Baskin proposed the sale or drafted the deeds, including a Dearborn Heights ranch that was flipped in less than a month for a 72% profit.

Property records and probate court filings reveal how the lives of vulnerable people struggling with physical and mental health problems intersected with the judge and four others under investigation by the FBI. That includes two convicted criminals: court-appointed guardian Nancy Williams, president of Guardian & Associates in Oak Park, and her boyfriend, Dwight Rashad.

Bradley-Baskin, 46, and Nancy Williams, 58, did not respond to messages seeking comment from The News. 

Her bio before she was elected judge last November said:

Bradley-Baskin is a graduate of the University of Detroit Mercy School of Law. She currently serves as the general counsel for the 36th District Court. Prior to this role, Bradley-Baskin was an Administrative Law Judge for the State of Michigan and City of Detroit; was a law clerk to Governor Granholm and Wayne County Corporation Council; and founded a law firm. She is also an Adjunct Professor of Law at the University of Detroit Mercy School of Law.

Full Article & Source:
Detroit News: Detroit Judge Teamed With 2 Criminals to Help Buy And Sell Homes of the Vulnerable 

Wednesday, September 3, 2025

Whistleblower says Shapiro admin retaliated after he raised alarms about elder abuse system failures

By Angela Couloumbis


HARRISBURG — A high-level Pennsylvania Department of Aging staffer claims the agency is retaliating against him for being a whistleblower and raising alarms about the state’s failures in protecting older adults from abuse and neglect. He’s now notified top Shapiro administration officials that he intends to sue.

In a demand letter sent to Gov. Josh Shapiro and other high-ranking officials late last week, Aging Services Supervisor Richard Llewellyn alleges department brass thwarted his efforts to assist investigations by outside agencies, including the Office of State Inspector General, into the quality of older adult protective services around Pennsylvania.

Llewellyn also alleges that top department officials purposely suppressed or manipulated data to shield problems when responding to public records requests. One top aging official, Llewellyn contends, even bragged about his ability to exploit loopholes to dodge having to turn over complete and accurate data.

When he objected to and later reported the alleged wrongdoing to other state officials, Llewellyn said he was subjected to a “campaign of retaliation,” including targeted administrative complaints and investigations. He said he was also stripped of work duties — notably, gathering accurate information in response to Right-to-Know requests.

“These and other actions were undertaken to intimidate Mr. Llewellyn, deter him from legally protected activity, as well as personally and professionally harm him,” Llewellyn’s lawyer, Bryn Mawr attorney Mark D. Schwartz, wrote in the demand letter. It was sent to Shapiro; Shapiro’s top lawyer, Jennifer Selber; and Aging Secretary Jason Kavulich, among other top Pennsylvania officials.

Spokespeople for both Shapiro and Kavulich said they do not comment on pending litigation or personnel issues.

In Pennsylvania, county-level agencies investigate allegations of abuse and neglect involving older adults and come up with service plans to keep them safe. The state Department of Aging funds and oversees them, and monitors the quality of their work.

A more than yearlong Spotlight PA investigation found that many of those agencies are woefully slow in completing investigations after learning an older adult may be in harm’s way, despite strict state-mandated timelines for action. In some instances, these significant and persistent failures have led to devastating or catastrophic outcomes.

At the same time, the number of older adults who have died while their abuse and neglect cases were under investigation has increased dramatically over the past seven years, data analyzed by Spotlight PA show. Despite this, the department under Kavulich stopped tracking why those older adults died — and whether the system failed them.

Some former employees have also criticized his administration over policy changes they believe defang the department’s oversight powers.

Demand letters are formal, written notices of impending civil litigation. They provide a broad description of the allegations that would be leveled in a lawsuit, and give the prospective defendants the chance to avoid lengthy and costly litigation and resolve a dispute outside of court.

In his demand letter, Llewellyn said he seeks unspecified compensatory and punitive damages. He wants to be reinstated to his position within the department, where he supervises staff who assess how well county-level aging agencies fare in keeping older adults safe.

Llewellyn is also asking for changes to the department’s protective services protocols and its senior management “so that the Commonwealth will perform its statutory mandate to protect the elderly,” according to the demand letter.

In an interview this week, Schwartz said what Llewellyn “really wants is for the [department] to fulfill its mandate of serving older adults in need of protection” — a mandate he asserted the state is failing to meet.

Kavulich, who was appointed by Shapiro in 2023 to helm the department, has said he has reformed its policies to hold counties more accountable and publicize more information about their performance.

The department, for the first time, began placing key performance data on its website over the past year. Kavulich has also said he intends to establish clear penalties for county aging agencies that chronically fail to comply with state regulations.

Yet Kavulich, who once ran Lackawanna County’s aging agency, has also been criticized by some former aging employees as being too soft on the counties, and for making it easier for counties to appear compliant with the rules — an assertion Kavulich denies.

This year, Kavulich replaced the old system of monitoring county aging agencies with a new assessment tool that critics say could mask failures in keeping older adults safe.

The new tool, called CAPE for short, eliminated the weighted system of scoring county aging agencies, meaning counties are no longer graded more harshly for serious investigative failures, Spotlight PA has reported. The department now equally scores relatively minor problems — such as poorly kept paperwork — and more serious deficiencies, such as failing to swiftly complete abuse and neglect investigations.

Several months ago, Auditor General Tim DeFoor’s office launched a special performance audit of the Aging department’s protective services programs, with an emphasis on the CAPE system, according to emails and other documents reviewed by Spotlight PA. The full scope of the probe is not known, but the office does make public findings from such audits.

The Office of State Inspector General was also investigating the Aging department’s protective services system as recently as last year, records reviewed by Spotlight PA show.

But the office has repeatedly refused to release findings, or even say whether it produced an investigative report. Those reports are not always made public, although the governor typically receives a copy.

Llewellyn, according to the demand letter and other documents reviewed by Spotlight PA, was a witness in both investigations.

Those documents show Llewellyn told investigators — as well as top lawyers in the Department of Aging — that he was concerned the department improperly withheld data in response to a public records request by Spotlight PA.

Last year, the news organization requested historical data showing whether counties had complied with state regulations in keeping older adults safe. Spotlight PA later determined the department did not disclose complete and accurate information, an omission that created a false impression about how frequently those offices complied with the rules.

In July, Llewellyn was suspended for 60 working days without pay. Schwartz, his lawyer, said the suspension followed “spurious” allegations that triggered an ongoing — and unnecessarily prolonged — investigation.

The demand letter does not describe the allegations that led to the suspension. Documents obtained by Spotlight PA indicate Llewellyn was reported to the governor’s Office of Administration, which oversees personnel issues, for allegedly deleting data sets, even though he told Aging officials those data still exist and were accessible. Llewellyn was not told who reported him.

Llewellyn is separately being investigated for a Facebook post he made this past March that was perceived as being critical of Kavulich. That probe, also launched in July, is ongoing.

Earlier this year, records show, the department also investigated Llewellyn on allegations that he violated the department’s technology policy, but he was cleared.

Full Article & Source:
Whistleblower says Shapiro admin retaliated after he raised alarms about elder abuse system failures 

Tuesday, September 2, 2025

Three women charged with stealing over $90K from 88-year-old woman with dementia, records show

FOX13 Memphis News Staff 


MEMPHIS, Tenn. - Three women were arrested last week for stealing more than $90,000 from an elderly woman with dementia who they were trusted to take care of, records show.

Sally Baggott, 71, Jennifer McLemore, 49, and Melissa Stewart, 48, all are facing multiple charges, including theft, identity theft and financial exploitation of the elder, court documents show.

According to court documents, Stewart and McLemore are caregivers for an 88-year-old woman with dementia who lives at an assisted living home. Baggott is the woman's "attorney in fact," records show.

Court records allege the three women wrote themselves checks from the victim's account to buy a car and used her debit card to make purchases from Amazon, Temu and more.

Records state the investigation started after an employee at Memphis City Employee Credit Union reported to police on September 3, 2024 that "she was concerned" that the victim's bank account was missing $52,000.

Records allege that the victim lost a total of $91,454.24.

McLemore's bond was set at $200,000, while Stewart's and Baggott's were set at $75,000 and $50,000, respectively, according to court records.

Protect your aging loved ones

A spokesman for the Better Business Bureau of the Mid-South recommends family members keep a close eye on their aging loved ones' accounts.

"It happens all the time," said Daniel Irwin, a spokesman for the BBB of the Mid-South. "It's just so sad."

When possible, family members should have a few trusted people with eyes on the account.

The BBB recommends inspecting financial accounts weekly, if not daily. 

"If you're not checking on them, something like this can happen," he explained. 

Full Article & Source:
Three women charged with stealing over $90K from 88-year-old woman with dementia, records show 

'Roadshow' to Help Idahoans Avoid Cybercriminals

By AARP Bulletin


Financial fraud has gone from criminals seeking “small money grabs” to “industrialized financial-crime machines” involving thousands of employees.

That’s the assessment of John Yaros, securities bureau chief for the Idaho Department of Finance, who wants Idahoans to understand that they might not be communicating with friends or potential romantic partners online. Sometimes, the people on the other end of the line are working for well-organized cybercrime outfits that work “all day, every day” to go after your life savings, he says.

Yaros and other financial experts will spread the word at the Senior Fraud and Financial Exploitation Prevention Roadshow, offering tips on how to avoid being targeted by cybercriminals.

AARP Idaho is a host of the roadshow, which has four stops:

  • Idaho Falls Public Library on Wednesday, Sept. 24, 1–3 p.m.
  • Twin Falls Public Library, Thursday, Sept. 25, 1–3 p.m.
  • McCall Public Library,Wed-nesday, Oct. 8, 1–3 p.m.
  • Coeur d’Alene Public Library, Friday, Oct. 10, 1–3 p.m.

Each event will have a reception with refreshments and prizes. Go to aarp.org/id to register.

The sessions will highlight red flags that can signal a potential scam — like a new online friend who cultivates a relationship, then nonchalantly mentions a cryptocurrency trading opportunity and creates a sense of urgency by saying there’s a limited window to score big.

These events will provide information on other exploitative methods criminals use, such as posing as a government official or a tech-support worker.

According to the FBI, Idaho consumers lodged more than 3,000 cybercrime complaints in 2024, with more than $63 million in losses. That’s up from more than 1,800 complaints in 2021, with $17.7 million in losses.

—Rita Beamish 

Source:
'Roadshow' to Help Idahoans Avoid Cybercriminals 

Monday, September 1, 2025

Pizza delivery driver saves elderly woman who fell in her Warren home

A Jet's Pizza delivery driver in Warren went above and beyond his duties when he found an elderly woman had fallen inside her home and couldn't get up. 

Source:
Pizza delivery driver saves elderly woman who fell in her Warren home 

Fairhaven rescue dog helps save life of elderly man Thursday during trail walk

By Annie Todd 

Roach, a six-year-old pit bull mix, who was out for a morning walk with his owner off the Interurban Trail near Happy Valley Park in Fairhaven knew Thursday morning something wasn’t normal on their daily route.

He’d spotted shoes in the mud and brush, but his owner, Martin Petelinz, 42, pulled him away from his find, thinking it was trash.

Seven hours later, around 4:30, back on the trail for an afternoon walk, Roach wasn’t going to let the shoes go.

“He really wanted to go the same way,” Petelinz said. “He kept pulling to go to that trail… This time, he wasn’t really letting me lead and when we got really close, he actually started growling at them, not barking.”

When Petelinz went to investigate further, he found the shoes attached to the body of a 74-year-old man facedown in the mud with a leg injury. With his adrenaline racing, Petelinz thought he had found a corpse. But after some forceful prodding, the man let out a moan.

Martin Petelinz and his dog Roach. The two were out for an afternoon walk in Fairhaven Thursday when they found an unresponsive 74-year-old man. (Photo courtesy of Martin Petelinz)

Petelinz called 911 at 4:37 p.m. Because Petelinz and Roach were off-trail, Petelinz had to meet the first responders on Cowgill Avenue and bring them to where the man was.

EMTs told Petelinz that the man had dementia and no awareness of where he was.

“He couldn’t walk out on his own and he was near hypothermic because of the rain and the cold,” Petelinz said. “They said if I hadn’t gotten to him before it got dark, he was probably not going to make it.”

Petelinz said the man had wandered away from his care facility Thursday morning. It’s unclear which facility in Fairhaven the man came from. Brookdale Senior Living, Mt. Baker Care Center and Solstice Senior Living each told Cascadia Daily News the man was not a resident.

The Bellingham Police Department said they had received a missing person’s report around 4:17 p.m. from the 2800 block of Old Fairhaven Parkway. The patrol officer was able to determine that the man found in the brush was the same subject as the missing person’s report.

No silver alert was put out for the case, according to BPD.

The man was transported to PeaceHealth St. Joseph’s Medical Center. His condition was not immediately released.

Roach came into Petelinz’s life three years ago when he adopted the pitbull-mutt from the Whatcom County Humane Society. Roach turned six in January.

Petelinz described Roach as defensive when he thinks his owner is being threatened, but overall is the most loving dog.

“[Pit bulls] get a horrible rap, so if anything else, this helps instill that pit bulls are awesome pets,” he said. “He’s the biggest cuddler and the biggest couch hog ever.”

For his Lassie-style heroics, Roach got a little bit of steak for dinner Thursday night and a little extra love.

“It was all the dog,” Petelinz said. “He was the one that brought me back. He was the one that pushed me to check out the shoes. It was totally him who saved a life.”

Full Article & Source:
Fairhaven rescue dog helps save life of elderly man Thursday during trail walk

Sunday, August 31, 2025

Wendy Williams doesn’t want to return to TV as a host, but could go on speaking tour to expose ‘abusive’ guardianship system

By Carlos Greer


Sources tell Page Six that Wendy Williams has no interest in returning to television as a talk show host –and is now focusing on advocacy for people under guardianships, and could go on a speaking tour.

In a new interview with “Extra,” Williams’ power attorney, Joe Tacopina, said Williams has spoken to him about wanting to expose what she sees as an “abusive” system.

“It’s just so unjust, and quite despicable,” Tacopina said. “What she said to me… more than once, is, ‘Joe, I wish I weren’t in this situation… but if someone is going to be in this situation, better me with a platform, so I can expose the system,'” the lawyer said.



Tacopina added that his famous client told him better her, “‘than some individual, who is caught in the vortex of a horrific guardian situation, where you can’t get out.’ She said that if it was going to be somebody, she’s happy it’s her, because hopefully it will put an end to what she calls abuse.”

Pals of Williams echoed her attorney, telling Page Six that the National Radio Hall of Famer has expressed interest in going on a speaking tour about her experience.


“It’s just an idea, but she thinks it’s important. She wants to maybe do panels, and help facilitate it and [talk about how] to protect families from guardianships. She wants to talk about how to get out of it, and all of the red flags,” one source told us.

“If there’s one thing Wendy knows how to do, it’s talk. She wants to bring this issue to the stage,” they added.

Williams, of course, has to first get out of her own guardianship: She seemingly suffered a setback earlier this month amid a report that recent medical results indicated she has frontotemporal dementia and aphasia.

Williams has denied having mental health issues, and Tacopina told “Extra” he believes it’s a fake report that Williams’ guardian had something to do with leaking.


“Clearly [Williams’ guardian was involved]. People can tippy-toe around it. They won’t say it. No one has seen this report yet. Not even Wendy. Not us. Not her guardianship attorneys,” he claimed.

Williams hired Tacopina, who has defended clients like A$AP Rocky and President Donald Trump, to fight for her in case she has to go to trial to get out of her guardianship. He says the next steps will be for her to complete a medical exam “by a neutral physician,” he stressed.

“Then, hopefully the guardianship attorneys will push this judge to make a ruling, and if it’s the right ruling, then game, set match. And if it’s the wrong ruling, I’ll get involved in a big way because we are going to need a jury to resolve this,” he said.

“Do I sound like I have dementia to you?” she recently asked Page Six during one of her New York outings. 


Williams seems to have faith in her legal team.

We caught up with her before she entered dinner at Tucci a couple of weeks and she told Page Six, “I will get out of guardianship.”

Williams’ guardian hung up the phone when we reached out for comment. 

Full Article & Source:
Wendy Williams doesn’t want to return to TV as a host, but could go on speaking tour to expose ‘abusive’ guardianship system 

See Also: 
Wendy Williams ‘wants back in society’ as she fights to rid herself of conservatorship, tells us, ‘Do I sound like I have dementia to you?’

Wendy Williams Attorney Discusses Her Allegedly ‘Abusive’ Guardianship and If She’ll Return to TV

Wendy Williams hopes to expose her allegedly ‘abusive’ guardianship.

Full Article & Source:
Wendy Williams Attorney Discusses Her Allegedly ‘Abusive’ Guardianship and If She’ll Return to TV