Saturday, September 20, 2025

Woman dies from blood poisoning; husband convicted of felony murder, neglect

A Cobb County man has been sentenced to life in prison after a jury found him guilty of felony murder and neglect in the death of his wife, prosecutors announced this week.

What we know:

Gary Williams was convicted Sept. 10 after jurors deliberated for less than an hour, Cobb County District Attorney Sonya F. Allen said. Superior Court Judge Kellie Hill handed down the sentence.

Prosecutors said the victim, 66, was admitted to Wellstar Kennestone Hospital on Nov. 9, 2021, and placed on maximum-level life support. She died the next day from blood poisoning.

An employee with Adult Protective Services reported numerous injuries after visiting the victim in the hospital.

What they're saying:

"This case was not about how she died - it was about how she was forced to live," Allen said. "She suffered slowly, trapped in a body she could not care for, completely dependent on the one person who vowed to protect her. She was left lying in filth - her body was covered in sores and lesions, her hair matted, her nails grotesquely overgrown, her bed blackened with waste. She could not move; she could not help herself. The only person who could have given her dignity, safety, and comfort instead allowed her to endure a living torture until she died."

What you can do:

Authorities urged anyone who suspects elder abuse to call Adult Protective Services at 1-866-552-4464 or contact local law enforcement.

Full Article & Source:
Woman dies from blood poisoning; husband convicted of felony murder, neglect 

New York men charged in $20K scam targeting Seabrook senior


SEABROOK — Two New York men are each facing a felony charge after allegedly attempting to scam an elderly Seabrook woman out of $20,000.

Didi Huang, 47, of Brooklyn, New York, and Li Geng Lin, 58, of Flushing, New York, were both indicted this week by a Rockingham County grand jury on one count each of attempted theft by deception. If convicted on the Class A felony charge, both men face between 7 ½ and 15 years in state prison and a $4,000 fine.

The charges stem from an incident on June 2, when the 76-year-old woman spoke with a person on the phone who claimed to work for PayPal. The person informed her that an overpayment had been made to her account, and other PayPal employees would come to her home to collect the excess funds.

Lin and Huang then allegedly arrived in Seabrook to pick up the money. They were arrested the same day by officers from the Seabrook Police Department, according to a press release from state Attorney General John Formella.

A question about how the department was made aware of the incident was referred to the attorney general’s office, representatives of which did not immediately return a request for comment.

Seabrook police investigated the case with assistance from Calice Couchman-Ducey and Robert Sullivan, investigators with the attorney general’s office. The case will be prosecuted by Senior Assistant Attorney General Bryan J. Townsend II and Assistant Attorney General Nancy DeAngelis of the Elder Abuse and Financial Exploitation Unit.

It was not immediately known if Huang or Lin have an attorney. Both will be arraigned in Rockingham Superior Court on Oct. 2 at 10 a.m.

Full Article & Source:
New York men charged in $20K scam targeting Seabrook senior 

Boston commuter accused of violently shoving woman off MBTA bus faces a judge


By Frank O'Laughlin

BOSTON — A Boston commuter who was arrested in connection with a forceful shove on an MBTA bus that sent a woman flying onto the concrete faced a judge on Thursday.

Luz Pineda, 32, was arraigned in Roxbury District Court on a charge of assault and battery on an elderly person after a startling encounter caught on camera allegedly showed her delivering a violent push that sent the victim face-first onto the sidewalk earlier this month.

A plea of not guilty was entered on behalf of Pineda.

Officers responding to an MBTA bus that was parked at the intersection of Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard and Warren Street on the afternoon of Monday, Sept. 8, found a 63-year-old woman on the ground near the bus suffering from an eye laceration.

Prosecutors told the court that surveillance and cellphone video captured the confrontation, showing the suspect aggressively yelling at the elderly woman and throwing her shopping cart off the bus before the shove.


In the days that followed the alleged incident, prosecutors say Pineda tried to alter her appearance, but with the help of the public, MBTA Transit Police identified and arrested Pineda on Wednesday.

The victim told investigators that she has no memory of the shove, possibly due to a concussion and broken blood vessels that she suffered in the incident.

Pineda’s attorney told the court that his client was transporting her 3-month-old child, who was born prematurely, home from an appointment a Boston’s Children’s Hospital when the incident on the bus unfolded.

Pineda’s attorney also argued that the victim was preventing his client from getting off the bus.

Pineda was ultimately ordered held on $5,000 bail on the conditions that she stay away from the victim, avoid the MBTA, and have no contact with witnesses if she posts bail.

She is due back in court on Oct. 3 for a pretrial hearing. 

Full Article & Source:
Boston commuter accused of violently shoving woman off MBTA bus faces a judge 

Friday, September 19, 2025

Former Caregiver at Retirement Community in Ashtabula County Sentenced to Prison for Rape


News Release 

9/17/2025

(JEFFERSON, Ohio) — A former caregiver at a Conneaut retirement community has been sentenced to 8-12 years in prison for raping elderly residents, Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost announced today.
 
“This was a horrific case of elder abuse at the hands of a predator masquerading as a protector,” Yost said. “My deepest thanks to the investigators and prosecutors who fought for the victims and brought this abuser to justice.”
 
Wayde Shankle, 36, of Ashtabula, pleaded guilty today in Ashtabula County Common Pleas Court to two first-degree felony counts of rape and was sentenced to prison immediately afterward. Upon release, he will be required to register as a Tier III sex offender for the rest of his life.
 
A grand jury indicted Shankle in July after an investigation found he raped two residents of Villa at the Lake, a residential care community where he worked as a nurse aide. One of the victims was a patient in the community’s memory-care unit.
 
Yost’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit investigated the case with assistance from the Conneaut Police Department and the FBI. The Ashtabula County Prosecutor’s Office prosecuted the case.

The Ohio Medicaid Fraud Control Unit receives 75% of its funding from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under a grant award totaling $15,343,488 for federal fiscal year 2025. The remaining 25% – totaling $5,114,493 for FY 2025 – is funded by the Ohio Attorney General’s Office. 

Source:
Former Caregiver at Retirement Community in Ashtabula County Sentenced to Prison for Rape 

Residential-care facility owner pleads not guilty in felony elder abuse case | NBC 7 San Diego

Maria Delgado is accused of leaving her Mira Mesa facility 'severely understaffed' resulting in residents suffering bedsores, dehydration and malnourishment. NBC 7's Dana Williams was in court and has details on the charges against Delgado. 

Source:
Residential-care facility owner pleads not guilty in felony elder abuse case | NBC 7 San Diego 

Thursday, September 18, 2025

Wendy Williams will be deposed in Lifetime documentary case despite dementia diagnosis: report

By BreAnna Bell

Wendy Williams is expected to be deposed in her Lifetime documentary case despite her frontotemporal dementia and aphasia diagnoses.

The judge presiding over Williams’ case against Lifetime and its parent company, A&E, granted the network’s request to depose the former talk show host in a filing obtained by People on Tuesday.

According to the outlet, Williams is expected to participate in a “de bene esse” deposition, which happens when a witness’ ability to testify later on might decline due to circumstances such as “age, health, fading memory.”

The deposition must take place by Nov. 4 and won’t be longer than three hours.


Williams, 61, will be allowed to testify remotely. Though, people are limited to no more than two attorneys on the case and one of Williams’ attorneys in her guardianship case to the room.

She”ll also be expected to receive sufficient breaks and her testimony should not span longer than three days.

While Williams’ current dementia diagnosis continues to confine her to her guardianship under her conservator Sabrina Morissey, the judge ruled that the former radio personality’s “condition does not insulate her from providing testimony in this case,” citing how the Federal Rules of Evidence “does not contain any requirement of mental ability.”

“It will be up to the jury in this case to decide what weight to give to [Williams’] deposition testimony,” read the legal docs.

A source told the outlet “the attorneys suing A&E said at a Sept. 5 hearing that the docuseries was so horrific that it could no longer be found on the air anywhere. Attorneys for A&E later admitted that they had taken the series down, claiming it was out of respect for the legal proceedings.”

A rep for Williams did not immediately respond to Page Six’s request for comment. 

Williams first launched the lawsuit against the network in February 2024.

Morissey, acting in her capacity as Williams’ legal guardian filed documents against the company claiming they shot their “Where is Wendy Williams?” documentary without first obtaining proper clearance from her guardian in an attempt to stop the film’s release.

Morrissey alleged in the complaint that Williams did not have the legal or mental capacity to authorize her participation in the documentary at the time.

Williams has maintained that she is not cognitively impaired she continues her legal battle to free herself from her guardianship.

The former talk show host recently underwent a second round of cognitive testing, which sources told People in August, that confirmed her previous dementia and aphasia diagnoses.

However, Williams told Page Six that she and her attorneys were “highly upset” about the report regarding her health and emphatically vowed she “will get out of guardianship.“ 

Full Article & Source:
Wendy Williams will be deposed in Lifetime documentary case despite dementia diagnosis: report 

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

Jay Leno Praises His Wife Mavis As She Battles Dementia

by James Conrad


It’s been one year since the former Tonight Show host Jay Leno was granted a conservatorship of his wife Mavis Leno after she was diagnosed with dementia. Now, Jay is speaking out to praise his wife of nearly 45 years as her dementia battle continues.

‘She’s Not Suffering…’

“My wife’s got some problems, so it’s just her and I,” Jay, 75, told People Magazine. “But it’s always been her and I for the last 45 years anyway, so it’s fine. I enjoy taking care of her. It’s fun.”

“I mean, I do enjoy it. People think, ‘Oh, it must be horrible.’ No, because she’s not in any pain. She’s not suffering,” he continued of Mavis, 79. “It’s not like a tumor or cancer. It’s just a confusion that comes with Alzheimer’s and dementia. And that’s okay.”

Jay was granted a conservatorship over Mavis in April of 2024. At the time, the judge said emphatically that “she’s in very good care with Mr. Leno.”  

Judging by Jay’s latest comments, it’s clear that the judge couldn’t be more right about this. Indeed, Jay is clearly an extremely devoted husband.

“I enjoy being her rock. It makes you feel wanted,” Jay admitted. “You got a purpose now. So it’s good.”


Mavis Has ‘Still Got The Fire’

Jay went on to tell a “funny story” about Mavis that shows that she’s still the same woman he fell in love with decades ago. The comedian explained that he and his wife were recently watching an old episode of Hawaii Five-O from the 1960s.

“We watched the episode where Stanley Holloway plays a genetic scientist who gets kidnapped,” Jay recalled. “So McGarrett goes to see his daughter, who’s like 40. And he says, ‘What kind of genetic engineering does your husband do?!’ And she says, ‘Well, I’m just a woman. I don’t understand such things.’ “

This didn’t sit well with Mavis.

“My wife was real involved with women’s issues,” Jay said. When Mavis heard the line, Jay added, “My wife’s like [makes growling noises]. She’s just yelling at the TV. She still got the fire. It just made me laugh. Just screaming at McGarrett … But it just made me laugh.”

Jay concluded by saying that when he needs to travel for work performing standup comedy, he always makes sure to return home to Mavis at night.

“I come home every day. I went to Puerto Rico for the day and [the] plane waited and I came right back,” Jay stated. “That’s what I do. I try to be home every night. So that’s kind what I do.”


Jay’s Marriage Vow To Mavis

Jay and Mavis first met in the 1970s, when he was performing at the iconic Comedy Store. They went on to marry in 1980. They never had children together, but they’ve been devoted to one another ever since.

Earlier this year, Jay revealed why he chose to personally become Mavis’ caretaker rather than have someone else do it.

“When you get married, you sort of take a vow: ‘Will I live up to this? Or will I be like a sleazy guy if something happens to my wife, I’m out banging the cashier at the mini mart?'” Jay said while appearing on In Depth with Graham Bensinger. “No, I didn’t. I enjoy the time with my wife. I go home, I cook dinner for her, watch TV and it’s okay.”

“It’s basically what we did before, except now I have to feed her and do all those things,” he added. “But, I like it. I like taking care of her. She’s a very independent woman, so I like that I’m needed.”

Watch Jay talk more about this in the video below. 


In the crazy world of Hollywood, it’s rare to find a celebrity that takes his marriage vows as seriously as Jay does. We should all be so lucky to have a spouse like Jay Leno in our own lives.

God bless you both, Jay and Mavis Leno! 

Full Article & Source:
Jay Leno Praises His Wife Mavis As She Battles Dementia 

See Also:
Jay Leno gets a kick out of wife’s $847 sneakers: ‘Find your moments where you can have a laugh’

Wednesday, September 17, 2025

After 94-year-old Kansan dies, daughter arrested on suspicion of murder, abuse, neglect

By Allison Campbell


A Kansas woman has been arrested on suspicion of murder, abuse and neglect after her mother died in hospice care.

The woman is suspected of interfering with medical care for her 94-year-old mother, who died Wednesday, according to a press release issued by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation.

Last week, emergency medical services responded to a call at a Spivey, Kansas, residence. The caller, a 70-year-old woman, asked for her mother, 94-year-old Betty Oeding, to be taken to Hutchinson Regional Medical Center for medical care. First responders saw that Oeding was malnourished and living in improper conditions, the KBI said in the release. 

Against the recommendations of the first responders, the press release said, the 70-year-old woman insisted Oeding be taken to Hutchinson Regional Medical Center instead of a nearby hospital. Oeding was admitted to the Hutchinson Regional Medical Center, entered hospice care on Monday and died on Wednesday, according to the press release. 

The Kingman County Sheriff’s Office began investigating Wednesday. They requested the assistance of the KBI the following day, and arrested the 70-year-old woman Friday morning.

The woman has not been charged. The KBI said she was arrested on suspicion of first-degree murder, mistreatment of a dependent adult/elder person, abuse and neglect and interfering with medical care.

Full Article & Source:
After 94-year-old Kansan dies, daughter arrested on suspicion of murder, abuse, neglect 

Man, 27, arrested for allegedly assaulting elderly man

by: Cameron Macedonio


HONOLULU (KHON2) — A 27-year-old man has been indicted for Assault in the First Degree after allegedly beating a 69-year-old man in WaikÄ«kÄ«, the Honolulu Prosecutor’s Office said.

Officials said that the suspect, Helkena Carland, allegedly assaulted the victim on Sept. 1 in a retail store on Seaside Avenue.

“Elder abuse is a deplorable crime and we are committed to pursuing justice in this case,” Prosecutor Steve Alm said. “We strive to ensure that our community is safe, especially for our most vulnerable citizens.”

Carland’s charge is a Class B felony and comes with a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison. However, due to the victim’s age, Carland could be subjected to an enhanced sentencing of a maximum 20 years in prison.

The suspect is being held on a $60,000 bail. 

Full Article & Source:
Man, 27, arrested for allegedly assaulting elderly man 

Tuesday, September 16, 2025

Bond set for second defendant in abuse of a vulnerable adult case

Douglas County deputies arrested the other half of an Omaha couple accused of financial exploitation of a vulnerable adult who lived in their home earlier this year.

Patrick Thornton, 39, and Andrea Heim, 42, are accused of one count each of abuse of a vulnerable adult.

According to court documents, a Hands of the Heartland case worker reported suspicious activity on the debit card of an adult with disabilities who was "the subject of a full conservatorship/guardianship due to medical diagnosis."

Thornton and Heim, a couple who lived together, were "assigned caretakers" who received the adult into their home in March.

Although the couple received a monthly stipend of $755 to offset the adult's room and board costs, investigators reported finding bank records totaling over $2,500 in unauthorized purchases on the adult's personal debit card.

Those purchases included fast food meals, smoking products and clothing. Investigators found security footage showing individuals similar to the suspects making some of the purchases listed on the vulnerable adult's account.

The county issued warrants for both suspects at the beginning of July, and deputies arrested Thornton less than a week later.

Thornton filed a written arraignment and is currently in the pretrial process, with no trial date set.

Deputies arrested Heim Monday morning, and a Douglas County judge set Heim's bond at 10% of $5,000 on Monday afternoon.

Heim's next county court appearance is set for Oct. 24.

Additional court documents and the Nebraska Department of Correctional Services website show Thornton was convicted of terroristic threats in a 2015 case, a felony.

But Hands of Heartland told KETV in a statement "an internal review of the situation confirmed that the contractors met mandated guidelines to contract as shared living providers, including those related to criminal background screening."

Full Hands of Heartland Statement

"Hands of Heartland discovered irregularities within our client’s financial account through routine auditing processes in May of 2025 and reported its concerns to the appropriate authorities in accordance with company and state regulations. The company terminated the relationship with the contracted providers immediately and fully cooperated with the ensuing investigations. An internal review of the situation confirmed that the contractors met mandated guidelines to contract as shared living providers, including those related to criminal background screening. The safety and well-being of the people we support are of the utmost importance to us. We will continue to do all we can to support the Hands of Heartland client that was impacted in this situation."

Full Article & Source:
Bond set for second defendant in abuse of a vulnerable adult case 

Delco women charged in financial exploitation of Montgomery Township nursing home resident, police say

Investigators said the victim, 79, was persuaded to hand over his debit card, which was then allegedly used for unauthorized withdrawals by Myria Sharon Freeman and Jennifer Lynn Patterson, of Chester 

by Fideri News Network Staff

Police news.

Investigators said the victim, 79, was persuaded to hand over his debit card, which was then allegedly used for unauthorized withdrawals by Myria Sharon Freeman and Jennifer Lynn Patterson, of Chester


A Delaware County woman is facing multiple felony charges after police said she conspired with a nurse’s aide to steal money from a 79-year-old resident of a Montgomery Township nursing home late last year.

Myria Sharon Freeman, 23, of the 1100 block of Highland Avenue in Chester, was charged by Montgomery Township Police with felony counts of forgery, conspiracy to commit forgery, identity theft, and conspiracy to commit identity theft, two counts of misdemeanor access device fraud, and misdemeanor charges of conspiracy to commit fraud, theft, conspiracy to commit theft, and financial exploitation of an older adult or care-dependent person, according to charging documents.

According to an affidavit of probable cause, the victim told investigators that on Nov. 29, 2024, Jennifer Lynn Patterson, 38, of the 1400 block of Congress Street, Chester, a nurse’s aide at the Montgomeryville Skilled Nursing & Rehabilitation Center, approached him in his room asking for money. Patterson claimed she had three children and needed $100 to get her cellphone reactivated, police said.

The victim, who said he normally never lends out his bank cards, agreed to help Patterson and gave her his Citizens Bank debit card and PIN, instructing her to withdraw $100 and return the card, according to the affidavit.

Patterson allegedly made the $100 withdrawal but never returned with the card, police said. The victim later contacted Citizens Bank and learned that in addition to the agreed-upon withdrawal, two more transactions — one for $400 and another for $100 — had been made without his permission, police said.

Detectives said surveillance video confirmed Patterson completed the first withdrawal at a Wawa store in Middletown Township, Delaware County. The subsequent transactions, investigators said, were carried out by Freeman at Wawa in Radnor Township, using the victim’s debit card.

Video allegedly showed Freeman driving up in her red Volkswagen Jetta and conducting the ATM withdrawals while looking at her phone.

Police said the total loss from the unauthorized transactions was $500 beyond what the victim had consented to. Citizens Bank canceled the card and opened a fraud investigation.

Patterson, who allegedly initiated the scheme, is listed as a co-defendant in the case. A summons was issued to Freeman on Sept. 3, according to court records. No bail or arraignment information is available.

A preliminary hearing for Freeman is scheduled before Magisterial District Judge Andrea Duffy in Montgomery County on Dec. 2.

All suspects and defendants are innocent until proven guilty. This story was compiled using public court records. 

Full Article & Source:
Delco women charged in financial exploitation of Montgomery Township nursing home resident, police say 

Tuscaloosa Woman Charged With Stealing $24,000 from Veteran at Group Home


A Tuscaloosa woman was arrested this week after an investigation found that she allegedly exploited an elderly veteran living at the group home she operates for more than $24,000.

In a deposition filed on Friday, police said Shawanda Taylor operates a residential care home for veterans in West Tuscaloosa.

Police said an advocate from an outside organization contacted the Tuscaloosa Police Department and said they suspect Taylor had stolen a large amount of money from an elderly man living there.

TPD found that Taylor allegedly accessed the patient's financial accounts and spent $24,112 of the man's Social Security money.

The victim reportedly has a conservator, whom Taylor reportedly bypassed before fraudulently obtaining power of attorney and accessing his financial accounts. The 53-year-old Tuscaloosa spent the money on personal expenses and other things unrelated to the patient she allegedly exploited, police said.

Taylor was arrested and charged with first-degree financial exploitation of the elderly, a Class B felony, and first-degree exploitation of assets, a Class C felony.

Her combined bond was set at $7,500, and Taylor has been released from custody since her Friday arrest. 

Full Article & Source:
Tuscaloosa Woman Charged With Stealing $24,000 from Veteran at Group Home 

Monday, September 15, 2025

Cottonwood Heights woman charged with neglecting elderly mother, contributing to her death

By Pat Reavy 


COTTONWOOD HEIGHTS — A Cottonwood Heights woman was charged Tuesday with not properly caring for her elderly mother, which investigators say may have contributed to her death.

Lori Meers, 53, is charged in 3rd District Court with manslaughter and aggravated abuse of a vulnerable adult, second-degree felonies.

In March, a woman went to visit her 77-year-old twin sister, who prosecutors say "was nonverbal and had dementia" and "found W.P. on the floor covered in feces," according to charging documents. Some of the feces was determined to be a few days old, police said. The woman is only identified in court documents as W.P.

W.P. was found lying on a basement floor and was "ice cold" when her sister found her, according to the charges.

"(The sister) asked Meers what was going on, and Meers said that W.P. had not eaten in four days. (The sister) asked Meers if she had called anyone, and Meers said 'no,'" the charges say.

The sister then called 911, and paramedics responded.

"(The sister) stated that every time the paramedics moved W.P. she cried out in pain. (She) stated that when she saw W.P. three-and-a-half weeks before this, she could talk, and (three months earlier) W.P. was still moving around and in good spirits," charging documents state.

Doctors determined W.P. was in "poor medical physical shape," the charges allege. She was diagnosed with "severe sepsis with septic shock, skin sores, pancreatitis (and) transaminitis" in addition to other injuries to her hips and legs.

She died nine days later.

An autopsy "revealed W.P. had significant trauma. The pancreas was acutely inflamed and infected, which was the most likely cause of the infection causing septic shock. W.P. had multiple decubitus ulcers (pressure sores) on her chest, back, and lower extremities. (The medical examiner) noted that malnutrition and decubitus ulcers can increase the risk of developing infections and septic shock," the charges state.

The manner of death was determined to be natural, "and the immediate cause of death to be septic shock due to acute pancreatitis."

Meers was W.P.'s primary caretaker, according to investigators.

The sister "wanted to find W.P. a permanent care facility but Meers was dragging her feet and not following through with it. (The sister) stated that a few weeks prior, Meers had told (her) that she had called the elder abuse hotline on herself because she was tired and not able to take care of W.P.," according to the charges.

Another family member told police "that while Meers was his grandmother's primary caretaker, Meers would often stay at a neighbor's house, leaving his grandmother alone."

The family member also said Meers was "struggling with her own health conditions, which affected her ability to care for his grandmother," according to the charges. (The grandson) expressed his belief that his grandmother was neglected, particularly in terms of physical care, and Meers would often leave food on the ground for his grandmother when she couldn't lift her back onto the bed."

When questioned by police, Meers allegedly told them, "This is nerve wracking because I'm not stupid. I know exactly what you guys think or were told. And I don't blame the hospital for wanting an investigation to be done either because they saw the condition of my mom and it's sickening, and it's very sad and embarrassing."

Meers said she never called the elder abuse agency.

"I'm not saying that there was never abuse, there was, not abuse. Wrong word, neglect, me allowing my mom to play in her own crap, is neglect. I don't care. Yeah, there might be reasoning behind it. There might be, you know, to me, justify not, maybe not justifiable, but, but there was reasoning behind it," she said, according to the charges.

Cottonwood Heights police say when they arrived at the residence they "noted a foul odor of old urine and feces mixed with food and filth," the charges state. "Each step leading upstairs was carpeted and covered in a thick film of dirt, grime, and what appeared to be feces. The upstairs bathroom had dirty toilet water, and the shower had grime on the walls, tub and curtain."

"We have a legal, ethical, and moral responsibility to take care of and support our vulnerable adult elders. When someone is criminally negligent, abuses or causes harm to them, we will hold them accountable for such abuse," Salt Lake County District Attorney Sim Gill said Tuesday. "If you are struggling to care for an elderly person in your life, we ask that you reach out for help, and if others offer it to you, please accept it."

Gill reminded residents that Utah is a "mandatory reporter state."

"This means that any person who has reason to believe that a vulnerable adult is being abused, neglected, or exploited must immediately notify Adult Protective Services or the nearest law enforcement office."

Suspected abuse or neglect of senior citizens or adults with disabilities can be reported 24-7 at daas.utah.gov/adult-protective-services/

Full Article & Source:
Cottonwood Heights woman charged with neglecting elderly mother, contributing to her death 

Memphis caregiver arrested for abuse of vulnerable adult, TBI says

by Grace James


A Memphis woman has been arrested following an investigation by the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation’s Medicaid Fraud Control Division.

TBI agents began looking into allegations against Shanda Michele Jackson, 47, after a referral from Adult Protective Services on September 3. Investigators determined Jackson, who was working as a caregiver, became involved in a physical altercation with a TennCare recipient under her care.

On September 9, TBI agents, with help from the Shelby County Sheriff’s Office, arrested Jackson on a charge of Abuse of a Vulnerable Adult. She was booked into the Shelby County Jail and later released on a $5,000 bond. 

Full Article & Source:
Memphis caregiver arrested for abuse of vulnerable adult, TBI says 

Sunday, September 14, 2025

City Attorney Halts Conservatorship Filings – and Looks to the County to Step Up

San Diego City Attorney Heather Ferbert abruptly reassigned an attorney helping the city push for conservatorships.   

by Lisa Halverstadt 


San Diego City Attorney Heather Ferbert has paused her office’s conservatorship petition filings in Superior Court, an unconventional tactic that her predecessor pursued to try to force the county’s hand. 

Since 2021, the city attorney’s office has assigned at least one lawyer to the Lifesaving Intervention For Treatment program. The program focuses on people police and firefighters are constantly responding to, regularly churn in and out of jails and hospitals and often have complex physical and behavioral health challenges. 

For years, the city’s last-ditch effort to save people they argued could otherwise languish or die was to go to probate court to seek a conservatorship after other efforts to aid a person failed. City attorneys would appear before a judge and face off against the county, which could then potentially be forced to provide care for the person. 

County officials detested this approach. Now the city attorney has decided to halt her office’s probate court filings – at least for now. 

Late last month, Ferbert abruptly reassigned the attorney most recently dedicated to the LIFT program, triggering concerns from city officials who work with the program and at least one who once did that some people could die without legal intervention. 

The change comes three years after Councilmembers Marni von Wilpert and Jennifer Campbell successfully rallied for a $546,000 budget allocation to bolster staffing for what they described as a homelessness-focused conservatorship and treatment unit.  

In a statement following questions from Voice of San Diego, Ferbert’s office wrote that her team decided to halt the conservatorship filings “due to several factors, including changes at the county management level and resource challenges” tied to a tight city budget. Her office also noted that the conservatorship petitions were “resource heavy” and had come with “significant challenges.”   

“We look forward to continuing to work with the county on its approach to conservatorship petitions as the newly shaped Board of Supervisors selects the next county counsel,” Ferbert’s office wrote. 

Her office also wrote that Ferbert “looks forward to finding ways to work with the county to do this work without the city needing to expend substantial and limited resources on conservatorship petitions.” 

In the meantime, Ferbert’s team said her office would continue to advise staff on the LIFT Program, noting that three attorneys provide legal support to the Fire-Rescue Department that houses it. 

All this represents a shift for Ferbert, who said during her campaign that she expected to bolster the program. 

“It is an incredibly important program and as the next city attorney, I plan to continue to expand that work,” Ferbert said during a Politifest debate last October. “And I think on the other side of it, the City Attorney’s Office and the city as a whole really needs to engage the county in trying to put more resources to programs like this because these are the people we see on the street who really break our hearts.” 

Ferbert, a Democrat, noted at the time that the city filings weren’t ideal and that she wished the city and county could work together to support LIFT patients. 

Now, with a Democratic majority on the Board of Supervisors and the appointment of an acting county counsel following the abrupt retirement of the previous one, Ferbert seems to think that might be more possible. 

County spokesperson Tim McClain said Monday that county staff were unaware of changes to the LIFT program and will continue to work with the city. 

“Helping those struggling with mental health issues, substance use disorders, and alcoholism by linking them with the right services for their unique needs is challenging and also the heart of the county’s mission,” McClain wrote in an email. “We thank the members of the city’s team for their tireless effort in this space.” 

The LIFT program first began in 2021 under former City Attorney Mara Elliott. Her office quickly grew frustrated with the county’s response to it. 

John Hemmerling, a former assistant city attorney who retired in 2022, said the program was spurred by conversations about an increase in repeat misdemeanor offenders who also had constant encounters with the city’s Fire-Rescue Department. 

For some, the City Attorney’s Office decided conservatorships would be appropriate. Hemmerling said county officials soon stifled the office’s efforts to pursue mental health conservatorships. Hemmerling eventually discovered another way to push the issue: probate conservatorship filings in Superior Court. 

“I found legal authority to be able to file those, and we did, and it pissed them off,” Hemmerling said. 

McClain did not respond to Voice’s question about how county officials viewed this tactic. 

By early 2023, the LIFT program had ramped up. 

In a March 2023 presentation to the City Council’s Public Safety Committee, Elliott and two other attorneys described efforts to first try to link patients with other programs. These patients included a person with schizophrenia and developmental disabilities who’d had more than 50 detentions for potential short-term mental health holds since 2015 and forgot “new information 10 minutes after being told.” Another had more than 220 emergency room visits from 2020 to 2022, harassed neighbors, vandalized her apartment complex and struggled with both schizophrenia and serious medical conditions. 

When LIFT program staffers were unable to successfully connect them to lower-level services and remained concerned for their safety, city attorneys asked the county to consider mental health conservatorships.  

As of March 2023, Elliott said her office had referred more than 20 people to the county for mental health conservatorships and when that didn’t work, sought probate conservatorships for some of them. 

“The county has opposed every petition we have filed,” Elliott said at the time. 

The city attorney later dialed back staffing for the program, and the city moved the program to its Fire-Rescue Department. 

Deputy Fire Chief Becky Newell said a LIFT program manager in the Fire-Rescue Department has since then coordinated with health care providers, case managers, the patients themselves and others to try to document what care a person has received and where they need more support. The program manager makes referrals to agencies such as federal Veterans Affairs and county Adult Protective Services.  

When those efforts weren’t successful in the past, details the LIFT staffer collected helped a city attorney prepare a probate court petition.  

Since 2021, the Fire-Rescue Department reports that the LIFT team has successfully argued for 26 probate conservatorships. Only two were officially denied. The program has served 81 people since its inception. 

“LIFT exhausts all other options,” Newell said. “Nobody here wants to take anybody’s rights to make their own decisions away. In the case of filing for conservatorship, it is because they’ve done multiple assessments to show that the person is not able to make decisions on their own.” 

Now the LIFT program manager is operating without the help of a dedicated city attorney who can file those petitions. She and others who work with the program are concerned. 

Jared Wilson, president of the San Diego Police Officers Association, said he met last week with the LIFT program manager, a sergeant on the police department’s Homeless Outreach Team and the city’s behavioral health officer. All were upset about the city attorney’s reassignment and what it could mean for vulnerable San Diegans.  

“This was a great tool for holding the county accountable for dealing with the worst cases out there and without it there is not a good means to do that,” Wilson said. 

Wilson, whose organization reached out to the City Attorney’s Office after the meeting, said the Police Officers Association was assured that Ferbert’s office supports initiatives like LIFT and is “figuring out ways we can make them effective.” 

Hemmerling was caught off guard by the City Attorney’s Office change, which he said means fewer solutions for people whose lives are at risk who are also draining public safety resources. 

“Putting forward a few staff members to reduce that front-end inefficiency was the whole point of it,” said Hemmerling, who argued the city attorney should be expanding the program even during tough budget times. 

Von Wilpert, a longtime advocate of the LIFT program, wrote in a statement that she is hopeful that the county – rather than the city – will step up now in the advent of behavioral health reforms at the state level. 

“In light of Proposition 1 passing and CARE Court being implemented, I look forward to the county’s new leadership fulfilling its responsibilities to help San Diego’s most vulnerable residents,” von Wilpert wrote. 

Campbell, who also championed the expansion of the LIFT program, struck a similar tone. She’s hopeful that sitting county supervisors, including those who make up the Democratic majority, and a new county counsel will shift the county’s approach. 

“The county should step up,” Campbell said. “I think we’re waiting to hear from them now: Are you going to step up and take this on?” 

Ferbert’s office said it remains focused on prodding the county too. 

“From the start, one of our office’s goals in supporting LIFT has been to motivate the county to fulfill its responsibilities to care for people who cannot care for themselves,” Ferbert’s office wrote in a statement. “The city attorney is still very much committed to this goal.”  

Full Article & Source:
City Attorney Halts Conservatorship Filings – and Looks to the County to Step Up 

Houston County K-9 saves elderly woman

by: Jessica Gauthier 


HOUSTON COUNTY, Ala. (WDHN)– A 75-year-old woman with dementia was safely located on Saturday, after she went missing from her home earlier that morning, thanks to the efforts of the Houston County Sheriff’s Office (HCSO) K-9 Team.

According to the HCSO, Deputy Weeks and Corporal McKinney responded to a request for assistance from a neighboring county after the woman, who had a significant medical history, was last seen leaving her residence around 11:00 a.m.

The K-9 team arrived on the scene with K-9 Colt, a trained bloodhound specializing in tracking and trailing. K-9 Colt immediately started following the scent trail from the woman’s home. The trail led down a steep hill toward a pond, then onto a four-wheeler trail, where investigators observed scattered personal items consistent with the woman’s path.

As the team continued their search, the trail took them through a barbed-wire fence and across a dry creek bed. K-9 Colt eventually lead his handler directly to the missing woman. She was found sitting on a log near the creek bed, approximately 10–15 yards from the trail. 

Emergency responders were on hand to provide immediate medical assistance. The woman was safely reunited with her family and K-9 Colt was rewarded with an ice cream treat for his hard work.

Full Article & Source:
Houston County K-9 saves elderly woman