Saturday, September 15, 2012

Lawless America: Murphy McCoy

92-Year-Old Murphy McCoy expresses anger over Elder and Guardianship Abuse to Bill Windsor of Lawless America while in Spokane, Washington.

This is uneditied film. Mr. McCoy is hard of hearing, and he has problems with short-term memory, but he is extremely fit physically and is extremely inteligent.

Source:
YouTube: 92-Year-Old Murphy McCoy Expresses Anger Over Elder & Guardianship Abuse



See:
Lawless America

Salem County siblings charged with elderly abuse after death of their mother

A brother and sister have been charged with elderly abuse and neglect following the death of their 71-year-old mother, authorities said.

Kimberly S. Proud, 45, of Pennsville, and her brother, Timothy C. Proud, 50, of Penns Grove, were both charged in the case after authorities concluded an investigation into the circumstances surrounding Virginia Proud’s death last week, police said Wednesday.

Pennsville Police Lt. Allen Cummings said this was the first charge of elderly neglect and abuse in the township in at least 23 years.

According to authorities, the condition of Virginia Proud at the time of her death and the condition of the Georgia Road home where she lived with her daughter, Kimberly Proud, led to the investigation that eventually resulted in the charges which were filed on Tuesday.

Full Article and Source:
Salem County siblings charged with elderly abuse after death of their mother

Friday, September 14, 2012

Recommended Website: G.R.A.D.E. Guardianship Reform Advocates for the Disabled and Elderly

Our Mission:
Reforming guardianship for the future of the disabled and elderly of Texas. Protecting the Constitutional, Civil and Human Rights of Texas's most vulnerable population. Advocating to ensure that our most vulnerable population are not forced into nursing homes or institutions without the opportunities to exercise all Less Restrictive Alternatives prior to the final and last resort to Guardianship.

In Texas, Guardianship violates the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. Guardianship in Texas can or will remove all rights to life, liberty and property at the presiding judges orders. Ensuring that "incapacitation" is not used at the convenience of the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, The Texas Department of Aging and Disability Services or any of Texas's certified guardians, attorney ad litems, court investigators, judiciaries, and state contract providers.

At present the general public is not aware of what is occurring in Guardianship Law today, guardianship is now a business, guardianship has lost it purpose. The disabled and elderly are becoming victims of a system that does not provided OVERSIGHT for the well being of the disabled and elderly. Family guardians are being stereotyped as perpetrators and the system of guardianship is now encouraging certified guardians are the only people who can protect the disabled and elderly from their own family members at the expense of the taxpayer.

Our goal is to advocate to promote the Quality of Life for Texas's most vulnerable population, the disabled and elderly wards as well as for our own futures.

Source:
G.R.A.D.E. Guardianship Reform Advocates for the Disabled and Elderly

Two accused of exploiting disabled Montgomery County man

Two people hired to care for a disabled Montgomery County man have been accused of exploiting him, officials said.

Detectives are looking for the two - Theresa McElroy, 42, and Michael Wayne Brown 40 - who have been charged with exploitation of a disabled individual.

They are accused of taking items from the man's Montgomery area home, officials said. Some of the items belong to the man's late wife and were sentimental to him, Montgomery County Sheriff's Office officials said.

Full Article and Source:
Two accused of exploiting disabled Montgomery County man

N.C. woman charged with exploiting elderly Surfside Beach woman

A North Carolina woman was charged with exploiting an 83-year-old woman who she was caring for while the victim’s daughter was away on vacation, according to a Surfside Beach police report.

Tammy May Taylor, 21, of Ocean Isle Beach, N.C., was charged with exploitation of a vulnerable adult after she surrendered to police on Monday, according to authorities.

Taylor was released on $5,000 bail on Tuesday from J. Rueben Long Detention Center, according to jail records.

The charges stemmed from Taylor being employed to care for the victim, who lives in Surfside Beach, according to a police report. The victim’s daughter told police that Taylor had a credit card to use for household expenses such as groceries and gasoline for the victim.

The victim was hospitalized in July and the victim’s daughter learned additional charges were made on the credit card while it was in Taylor’s possession, according to the report. The victim’s daughter said more than $2,000 in unauthorized charges were made on the card since July 17.


Full Article and Source:
N.C. woman charged with exploiting elderly Surfside Beach woman

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Florida Brain Injury Center Fights Order to Move Patients

A Florida brain-injury facility accused of abusive and substandard practices is fighting a state order to move out scores of patients, saying regulators are overstepping their authority.

The Florida Institute for Neurologic Rehabilitation, located 50 miles southeast of Tampa in rural Wauchula, told the state Friday that it would not begin the process of discharging any patients until a judge hears an appeal it filed on Aug. 28.

That action, before the Division of Administrative Hearings, alleges state regulators exceeded their authority in ordering the removal of patients and acted in an “arbitrary and capricious” way.

The dispute stems from a surprise inspection last month by three state agencies. Regulators moved in after Bloomberg News reported on dozens of cases of alleged abuse and neglect at the for-profit facility, known as FINR. Patients’ families or state agencies have accused the center’s staffers of abuse or care lapses in at least five residents’ deaths since 1998, two of them in the last two years.

State investigators determined FINR was breaching its license by treating 50 patients who weren’t brain or spinal cord injured. That represented more than half of the 98 patients whose records the state reviewed.

The state ordered FINR to submit a plan to relocate those patients to facilities “appropriate to meet their needs.”

In its response Friday, FINR said it would begin that process only if its legal challenge is unsuccessful.

The state is exceeding its authority by trying to enforce a narrow definition of brain injury limited only to patients who suffered a traumatic event, such as a car accident, FINR said. Such an interpretation unfairly denies treatment to people with other kinds of brain injuries, the company’s filing said, without specifying the injuries in question.

FINR said it was acting to address other concerns raised by regulators, including an allegation it was keeping patients too long. The company said its chief medical officer will review the length of stay for all residents to ensure appropriateness. It said such a review of current patients found they all required the treatment they were receiving or were making progress in their rehabilitation.

After initially balking at providing investigators its internal reports on incidents involving patients from the past year, FINR said Friday that it had recently made those records available.

Full Article and Source:
Florida Brain Injury Center Fights Order to Move Patients

See Also:
Allstate Sues Florida Brain Injury Center, Claiming Fraud

COMMENTARY: Declining fortunes affect boomers' futures

Lots of baby boomers face a bleak economic future as more approach retirement, and that won’t help President Barack Obama’s re-election chances.

A recent AARP report showed that those age 50 and older are carrying more mortgage debt than ever, and the increase in the rate of serious mortgage delinquency of older Americans from 2007 to 2011 has outpaced that of younger homeowners. “As the mortgage crisis continues, millions of older Americans are struggling to maintain their financial security,” the AARP report said.

The report found 3.5 million loans of people age 50 and older were underwater. In that age group, about 600,000 loans were in foreclosure, and 625,000 more loans were at least 90 days delinquent.

Also from 2007 to 2011, more than 1.5 million older Americans lost their homes because of the mortgage crisis. Unemployment among older workers is high, and they have a tougher time finding jobs.

They also have to live with lower wages, increasing property taxes and fixed incomes. But how did older people in this country — once one of the most financially secure because of nearly 80 years of Social Security, solid savings and interest earnings, pensions and about an 80 percent homeownership rate — become so vulnerable?


Full Article and Source:
COMMENTARY: Declining fortunes affect boomers' futures

Deputies search for suspect in elderly exploitation cases

Deputies are searching for a Jacksonville Beach man who is wanted on exploitation of the elderly charges, according to a St. Johns County Sheriff’s Office release.

Detectives believe Bryan Keith Ruby, 42, has taken more than $4,000 total from three people, according to the release. Ruby is believed to be involved in other cases of elderly exploitation, but he has only been charged in connection with two cases.

In July one victim, a 67-year-old Ponte Vedra Beach woman, told deputies that Ruby told her he could replace the back seat of her golf cart for $360. She said she paid and never got the seat, according to the report. Ruby had been landscaping the lawn at her home at Lake Julia Drive South when he reportedly told the victim he could replace the seat. The victim later found out that he had been fired from the landscaping company.

Also, an elderly couple from Ponte Vedra Beach reported in August that Ruby told them they needed a piece of pool equipment and that he could buy it for around $1,000, according to the release. They said they paid Ruby, but he did not buy the equipment or return the money.

The couple said, before the thought they were being scammed, they also loaned Ruby $3,200 because he told them his wife needed an insulin pump. They said they had only received $400 back since May.


Full Article and Source:
Deputies search for suspect in elderly exploitation cases