Saturday, March 7, 2015
Adult Children's Applications For Guardianship Do Not Guarantee Justice For The Elderly
NEW YORK (MainStreet) — By the time my 80-year-old father, James Fairley, boarded a flight to New York City in October 2014, the probate court in Bexar County had dismissed my guardianship application.
That's not surprising given the fact that some 37% of judges, court managers and clerks who responded to a Center for Elders and the Courts survey revealed that guardianship filings have increased over the last three years and 43% noted an increase in caseloads.
Judge Tom Rickhoff wrote in his decision that he did not have jurisdiction to require evaluation by a gastroenterologist or pulmonologist.
I was thoroughly exhausted with the pricey Morningside Manor Assisted Living Facility and the Veteran’s Administration’s (VA) Audie Murphy Geriatric Clinic in Texas, where supervising physicians had refused to acknowledge or treat my father's significant weight loss and persistent congested cough.
"A caregiver's refusal to allow visitors is a red flag," said Kerry Peck, attorney with Peck Bloom and author of Alzheimer's and the Law (ABA Book Publishing, 2013). "Dehydration, unusual weight loss, poor hygiene and unsafe living conditions are others."
Once my father was safely settled in my comfortable Manhattan apartment, I secured referrals from a primary care physician on 5th Avenue and set up appointments for him with specialists that were covered by his generous private health insurance.
I avoided the VA Hospital on 23rd Street and First Avenue due to reports that the FBI had opened a criminal investigation of these hospitals after many veterans had died while waiting for medical treatment.
Our first stop was Lenox Hill Hospital for an X-ray to rule out pneumonia.
Pulmonologist Dr. Diego Diaz examined my father’s nasal passages and found that the persistent cough and congestion was caused by a sinus infection and/or drip. The doctor prescribed a nasal spray called Flutinase and over the counter tablets called Coricidin.
We subsequently visited Mt. Sinai Cardiologist Dr. Nicholas DuBois who updated my father’s blood pressure medication by stopping Lasix and prescribing the higher quality Losartan to replace Lisinopril.
The cardiologist also scheduled cardio exams. Between Aetna, Tricare and Medicare, he received 100% coverage for this superior care by not only Dr. DuBois and Dr. Diaz but also gastroenterologist Dr. David Borcich who replaced his prescription for Omneprazole with liquid Carafate.
Within six weeks of living with me, my father was back to his normal happy self with a healthy appetite and positive outlook on life.
The congestion in his chest cleared up, the coughing stopped, he slowly began eating again and looked forward to socializing with other elderly veterans at the Stein Senior Center on East 23 Street. All was well until an appointment at the New York Eye and Ear Infirmary of Mount Sinai that confirmed my suspicion that my father was in fact partially blind.
My father reported that receiving his eye drops was hit or miss back at Morningside Manor in Texas and without receiving medication twice a day, his glaucoma had advanced.
Thinking that I would have better luck with the New York court system in securing guardianship, I filed an application on October 31 as suggested by my attorney.
However, against my father’s wishes, the Judge at 60 Centre Street ordered that my father be returned to Texas despite letters and an affidavit from his New York cardiologist, his primary care physician and pulmonologist stating that his care had greatly improved as a result of my efforts.
"Family members are often pushed aside based solely on allegations or innuendos of theft without any formal police charges or proper investigation," said Elaine Renoire, president of the National Association to Stop Guardianship Abuse in Indiana."
What I have learned is that finding justice and adequate medical care for the neglected and abused elderly is not guaranteed in probate court regardless of the state or region and that trying to protect your aging parent can in some cases backfire.
Full Article & Source:
Adult Children's Applications For Guardianship Do Not Guarantee Justice For The Elderly
Secret daughter in will fight
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| Olivia Mead - Picture: Mogens Johansen/The West Australian |
The secret daughter of billionaire mining
heir Michael Wright has launched an extraordinary contest against his
will, claiming she should be provided with a $2.5 million house, a
$250,000 diamond-studded bass guitar and a $1.2 million
crystal-encrusted grand piano - as well as every other expense she
incurs until age 96.
Ms Mead is suing the estate of Mr Wright, as well as his two other daughters Leonie Baldock and Alexandra Burt and the Voyager business, claiming she has been left "without adequate provision" in her father's will.
That will bequested her a $3 million trust fund when she turns 30, as well as an allowance for the intervening years.
But on the first day of a civil trial, the court was told of the astonishing list of items she now claims she is entitled to from the Wright estate. The list includes provision for clothes, shoes, restaurant meals, holidays and bills for the next 77 years.
The statement of claim filed with the court, and pored over in detail by Wright family lawyer Jane Needham, includes a Kuhn-Bosendorfer art case piano - which is inlaid with more than 200 hand-cut pieces of lead crystal in diamond patterns on the case, lid, legs and fallboard - valued at $1.5 million.
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| Mining heir and owner of Voyager Estate Winery, the late Michael Wright. |
Ms Mead said she would need a Ritter Royal Flora Aurum bass guitar - which has a nut made out of 10,000-year-old Siberian mammoth ivory, 24-carat gold inlay and knobs topped with 3.3 carat diamonds - valued at $250,000.
It was also claimed she would need a $2.5 million house, to be refurbished twice at a cost of $500,000, five pairs of $5000 shoes a year, 20 pairs of $300 shoes a year, $40,000 a year for holidays, two cars, $10,000 a year for handbags and fashion accessories and $2014 a year to keep an axolotl - a salamander also known as a Mexican walking fish.
She is also claiming $300 a week for clothes, $800 a week for food and alcohol, $400 a week for restaurant bills and $150 a week for fine wine - all for life.
Sometimes in tears, Ms Mead explained that despite a hoped-for career in public relations, the claimed expenses should be provided by the estate of her late father. "I looked at my needs, how I want to start a family, and what I'd like to do with my life," Ms Mead explained.
But Ms Needham accused her of "thinking of every possible thing you might possibly want and putting it down" in order to inflate the claim against the will.
"There is no lifestyle you are considering that you would need five pairs of $5000 shoes every year for the rest of your life," she said.
Master Craig Sanderson will be asked to rule on the claim, after a trial expected to last a week.
Full Article & Source:
Secret daughter in will fight
San Mateo County Commission on Aging Produces Play About Elder Abuse
WHO: California Department on Aging, Adult Abuse Prevention Committee (AAPC), a standing committee of the San Mateo County Commission on Aging, and San Mateo County Aging and Adult Services.
WHAT: “Making the Invisible Visible,” produced by the Adult Abuse Prevention Committee to build awareness about elder abuse in San Mateo County, is a play illustrating the financial and emotional abuse from a son who takes advantage of his elderly mother. Actors are all volunteers who live in San Mateo County, selected through auditions held by the AAPC. The oldest actor is Marvin Goldman, 93, who plays the role of the son. Audience members are encouraged to participate in a post-performance discussion about elder abuse issues.
WHEN & WHERE:
Sunday, March 1, 2015, 11:45 a.m. to 1:15 p.m.
Congregational Church of San Mateo
225 Tilton Avenue
San Mateo, CA
Thursday, March 12, 2015, 12:45 to 2:15 p.m.
Pacifica Community Center
540 Crespi Drive @ Hwy 1
Pacifica, CA
Friday, June 5, 2015, 10:30 a.m. to 12 p.m.
San Bruno Senior Center
1555 Crystal Springs Road San Bruno, CA
Performances are FREE
“Making the Invisible Visible,” performed as an improvisational play by a cast of San Mateo County residents for the first time in June 2014, originated as an idea of the Adult Abuse Prevention Committee of the San Mateo County Commission on Aging. The goal was to present the concept of elder abuse and what it can look like. AAPC partnered with play director Eyal Rabinovitch, who directs the theater program of the Peninsula Conflict Resolution Center, to train all the volunteer actors in theatrical techniques. The script is a composite of the actor’s own experiences with elder abuse.
“AAPC decided as a whole to produce the play because it sounded like a completely different and exciting way to reach out and build awareness around elder abuse in San Mateo County and try to prevent it,” said Melodie Lew, AAPC committee chair. “We hope the power of the production moves those who attend, to talk to other people and make them aware.”
Protecting older adults and combatting elder abuse are goals for San Mateo County government in 2015 and have been identified as priority areas for Measure A funding by the County of San Mateo Board of Supervisors.
“Financial abuse often goes unreported,” said Supervisor Adrienne Tissier, who represents the Board of Supervisors on the San Mateo County Commission on Aging. “Bringing awareness about elder abuse to all ages is an important step in making the public aware that this is a widespread problem and not always physical.”
Full Article & Source:
San Mateo County Commission on Aging Produces Play About Elder Abuse
Friday, March 6, 2015
The Vegas Voice, Rana Goodman: Private Guardians vs Family
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| Rana Goodman, Political Editor |
If you recall, I wrote of a veteran who had been hospitalized for a short time in California.
He came home and discovered his wife had been placed under the care of a private guardian she neither needed nor wanted. Legal action was instituted after several attempts to rid themselves of the private guardian failed.
Within days after our February “Special Edition” about private guardianships came out, the vet’s attorney was contacted with an offer to drop the opposition’s legal fees from $14,000 to fees from $14,000 to $5,000 – and more importantly, no more guardianship authority or control. A victory indeed.
I’m sorry to say the other family we featured (who were legally kidnapped one evening by their guardian) has not fared as well.
Last month, they were moved from an assisted living facility to a much smaller one. The couple went from a two room apartment to sharing one tiny room.
Visitation with their only child had been limited by their guardian and the mother ended up in the hospital where she currently remains. Her daughter also was hospitalized and is now slowly recovering. Our prayers go out to them and we hope the family can have some semblance of unity soon.
In the interviews we conducted over the past few weeks, I thought about what the “experts” had to say.
Although some of the people were well-meaning, it still hit me that most of the time, the assumption was that the family member was always looking for a way to abuse or steal from the senior, and the guardians were always good and caring.
I feel certain that most of us were raised to honor and respect our elders and we do just that. I believe there are far more people that have cared for their parents and family members (as I have) and, as in the case of child abuse, elder abusers are the minority among family members.
Full Article and Source:
The Vegas Voice: Special Report Part II -GUARDIANSHIP: Now Get Angry!
See Also:
The Vegas Voice - Rana Goodman: What Would You Do?
Ask the Lawyer: How can I learn more about a bad lawyer?
Q: My father died almost a year ago and we are very upset with a lawyer hired by the family to handle his estate. How do we find out about his background?
— M.R., Carson
A: On the website of the California State Bar (www.calbar.ca.gov), go to the attorney search box at the top left of the page and type in the lawyer’s name. If you click on your lawyer’s name, you should see a summary about him. Toward the bottom of the page should be a section titled “Actions Affecting Eligibility to Practice Law.” If the attorney has ever been disciplined, suspended or the like, this will provide basic information.
You also can write to the State Bar for paperwork. Mail your written request to: State Bar Court, Discipline Copies, 845 S. Figueroa St., Los Angeles, CA 90017-2515. Provide the attorney’s name and, if possible, bar number. There is a charge of 50 cents per page, a certification fee of $1, and file retrieval fee (if any) of $3. You can also contact 213-765-1400 for further instructions. Finally, if you call at least 24 hours in advance to make an appointment, you can set up a review of the file in person.
Q: I hear a lot of people complaining about lawyers — he didn’t do this, she didn’t do that, calls not returned, overcharges, etc. Just what does attorney malpractice consist of?
— J.H., Hermosa Beach
A: Professional people — doctors, lawyers, contractors, automobile mechanics and the like — have a duty to be careful and to perform their work consistent with the standards of that particular industry. If their work falls below the standards, and that conduct causes harm to a customer, malpractice may have occurred: a lawyer misses a statute of limitations; a doctor prescribes the right medication but gives the patient the wrong one; a contractor fails to secure the floor properly; an auto mechanic fails to fix the brakes correctly.
Not all mistakes are malpractice. A lawyer not returning calls might not be malpractice; it just might be bad, unacceptable practice. Some conduct by lawyers may be unethical, but also might not be malpractice. An example would be failing to turn over the client’s file. If failing to do so prevented the client from taking required actions, and the client was harmed, malpractice might then be a viable claim as well. Typically, before launching a malpractice action, it is important if not critical to have someone well qualified go over what happened to help determine if malpractice with provable damages occurred.
Full Article & Source:
Ask the Lawyer: How can I learn more about a bad lawyer?
Bill to protect elderly from theft, abuse passes House
A measure aimed at limiting people’s ability to steal from or abuse vulnerable adults cleared the state House Monday.
House Bill 1316 would require people to be arrested without a warrant if they violate temporary protection orders banning them from contact with vulnerable adults, such as the elderly or disabled.
Pierce County Prosecutor Mark Lindquist said the change would prove particularly helpful when someone is suspected of gaining access to an infirm or elderly person’s bank account.
Right now, a victim or a victim’s family member can apply for a temporary protection order against someone they suspect of taking advantage of a vulnerable adult.
But it can take up to a few weeks for a court to hold a hearing determining whether a permanent protection order is warranted in such cases, Lindquist said. And during that waiting period, police are not able to arrest someone for violating the temporary court order unless they go to court and get a warrant – a process that also takes time, he said.
“We want to be able to move quickly before the bank account is bled dry,” Lindquist said.
Police are already able to arrest people without a warrant for violating a temporary protection order in domestic abuse cases. Lindquist said he thinks the same rules should apply to temporary orders protecting vulnerable adults.
The legislation, sponsored by Republican Rep. Melanie Stambaugh of Puyallup, passed the House 97-0 Monday.
“There is a serious oversight in current law, where those who are susceptible to abuse are not protected,” Stambaugh said in a statement. “This bill is a critical step in preventing abuse of the elderly, and I was happy to see it pass the House unanimously.”
Lindquist said an increasing number of elder abuse cases in Pierce County now involve financial harm rather than physical harm.
Of the 70 elder abuse cases Lindquist’s office prosecuted in 2014, more than half involved financial fraud, he said.
ead more here: http://www.thenewstribune.com/2015/03/02/3666139_bill-to-protect-elderly-from-theft.html?rh=1#storylink=cpy
Full Article & Source:
Bill to protect elderly from theft, abuse passes House
Thursday, March 5, 2015
Throw Back Thursday from 2009: Is Kathleen Simane Now Kathy Larson?
NASGA recently received a comment to a post from July 22, 2009 which reminded us that every once in a while, we should participate in "Throw Back Thursdays."
The comment: Anonymous said...
"This diabolical person, whose name I don't want coming out of my mouth, has bullied and harassed her neighbors and landlords and people she barely knows. There is a path of devastation and chaos, with numerous victims in Minnesota, wherever K.S. goes. Her pattern is very predictable- if you challenge her, question her or tell her NO, she files a restraining order on you with false claims or she files an erroneous police report against you. Filing restraining orders all willy nilly would be quite costly for the average person. Is she using the welfare system to her advantage? Perhaps.
I believe there is a bright side to everything. I am sincerely happy that a number of her victims have found each other. This site has proved immensely helpful in getting all the victims together. Please if you have any dealings with her, beware and be aware. One second you think she would never hurt you, the next second she is calling law enforcement because she says you have threatened her life. I heard her say in court that Sundowner Retrievers is NOT a business. Why lie about a business you are promoting? Why does she have recent ads promoting the business via the internet and her newly improved advertising on the truck? What is the reason she lies about Sundowner Retrievers? Fraud?
She is a con artist that does not care who she hurts or what she lies about. I used to be surprised that Greg Larson stayed with her through all the drama that she fabricates. Either he has the same criminal mind or he knows what she is capable of and is afraid of her...?"
The original post:
From TV to Prison
Elder Abuse: A Silent Shame
Award Winning Newspaper
ASA Honors Elder Abuse Series
Elder Abuser Series Honored
Profile of a Sociopath
Source:
Is Kathleen Simane Now Kathy Larson?
See Also:
Helen Fabis, Wisconsin Victim
The comment: Anonymous said...
I believe there is a bright side to everything. I am sincerely happy that a number of her victims have found each other. This site has proved immensely helpful in getting all the victims together. Please if you have any dealings with her, beware and be aware. One second you think she would never hurt you, the next second she is calling law enforcement because she says you have threatened her life. I heard her say in court that Sundowner Retrievers is NOT a business. Why lie about a business you are promoting? Why does she have recent ads promoting the business via the internet and her newly improved advertising on the truck? What is the reason she lies about Sundowner Retrievers? Fraud?
She is a con artist that does not care who she hurts or what she lies about. I used to be surprised that Greg Larson stayed with her through all the drama that she fabricates. Either he has the same criminal mind or he knows what she is capable of and is afraid of her...?"
The original post:
From TV to Prison
Elder Abuse: A Silent Shame
Award Winning Newspaper
ASA Honors Elder Abuse Series
Elder Abuser Series Honored
Profile of a Sociopath
Source:
Is Kathleen Simane Now Kathy Larson?
See Also:
Helen Fabis, Wisconsin Victim
Bradenton attorney reprimanded by state
TALLAHASSEE -- The Florida Supreme Court has suspended a Bradenton attorney's license for three years and a Sarasota attorney's for 90 days, according to the Florida Bar
Richard Lee Buckle was suspended three years retroactive to April 28, 2014, following a Jan. 27 court order. Buckle was admitted to practice in 1973.
According to a news release from the Florida Bar, Buckle sought to have a judge removed from his case by filing a frivolous motion for appointment of a new judge on the eve of his trial. He impugned the judge’s qualifications and integrity, and in his motion, knowingly disparaged the judge based on ethnicity, gender, religion, marital status and perceived sexual orientation, the release states.
Also, Andre Keith Roger Charbonneau of Sarasota was suspended 90 days, effective 30 days from a Jan. 22 court order. He was admitted to practice in 1999.
According to the Bar, Charbonneau received money from his aunt to purchase a home. When filling out the loan application, he indicated the money was a gift from his aunt, who also signed a gift letter. After closing on the house, Charbonneau signed a note indicating the money was a loan, as his family now indicated he needed to repay the monies, the news release states.
Charbonneau never took steps to notify the lender of the change, the release states. Later, Charbonneau filed for bankruptcy and did not list his aunt as a creditor. Charbonneau subsequently revised the bankruptcy petition to correctly include his aunt.
The Florida Supreme Court in recent court orders disciplined 26 attorneys, disbarring four, suspending 17 and publicly reprimanding five. Four attorneys received more than one form of discipline. Two were placed on probation and two were ordered to pay restitution.
Read more here: http://www.bradenton.com/2015/02/26/5659839_bradenton-manatee-attorneys-reprimanded.html?rh=1#storylink=cpy
Full Article & Source:
Bradenton attorney reprimanded by state
Is That Really a Five-Star Nursing Home?
Consumers
will be able to get more accurate ratings of nursing homes under a
revised system that the federal government put into effect on Friday.
The
change is a step toward ensuring that a five-star rating really means
that the home provides exemplary service and is not simply inflating its
scores by lying about its performance. Perhaps, not surprisingly, the
overall ratings of nearly a third of the nation’s nursing homes dropped
under the new rules.
The
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services uses three main criteria —
staffing levels, performance on certain quality measures, and annual
inspections by state and federal inspectors — to rate homes from one to
five stars over all and on each of the three categories separately. The
results are posted on its Nursing Home Compare website. The old system
relied heavily on self-reporting by the nursing homes of their
staff-to-patient ratios and their quality measures. As The Times reported in August, even homes with a history of serious problems received high ratings based on their unverified self-evaluations.
The
rule changes were aimed primarily at the recalibrating the
quality-of-care measures, such as the percentage of patients with new or
worsened pressure sores and the percentage of patients who report
severe or moderate pain. The system still relies on self-evaluations of
quality, but it raises the bar on an array of these measures, thus
making it harder to get top ratings.
It
also added new measures on the use of anti-psychotic drugs, reflecting
concerns that some homes overmedicate patients to make them easier to
manage. And it adjusts mathematical steps used to calculate staffing
ratios. Before the change, about 80 percent of the nation’s nursing
homes received a four- or five-star rating on their quality measures;
afterward, about 49 percent did. The number receiving only one star for
quality rose to 13 percent after the recalibration, from 8.5 percent.
Two-thirds of the homes dropped stars from previous ratings.
Although
the nursing homes will still be evaluating their own quality, the
federal government will have state agencies conduct on-site surveys
starting this year to check on the accuracy of quality statistics at a
sample of homes across the nation. It is imperative that those surveys
be as rigorous as possible to help determine if even stronger measures
are needed.
Full Article & Source:
Is That Really a Five-Star Nursing Home?
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