My husband and his brother are taking his dad to court on Friday for our temporary guardianship hearing. Dr's report confirms he needs one and this all came about since his girlfriend took him on vacation and had a secret marriage and didn't tell us about it for 6 weeks until he let it slip. We asked her to sign a post nup and she said no. she then took him to put her on all of his accounts and changed his trust fund to her name. He always told us he wouldn't marry her and in the mental evaluation he said he wasn't married. He doesn't even remember it. She shut of his phone and won't give us the number. She has completely isolated him from his kids and his grandkids. In his interview he said his kids want to take all of his money and put him in a home which I am sure she is telling him that. We asked the attorney if we could talk to him on fathers day and they responded that he is mad and we can send him a letter or a card. This is awful. My kids want to see their grandfather and my husband wants to talk to his dad. Now she is fighting us for full guardianship over him. We can only hope the courts can see the truth of what this woman is doing. I guess no question here but just need some support. I don't know how everyone does it. This AD is devastating to all involved. Thanks for listening.
(Have you posted previously about your situation? It sounds familiar. I couldn't find it listed under your profile.)
I hope that the Temporary Guardianship Hearing results are what is best for your Father. Just have all of your "Ducks in a Row" and do not get emotional during the hearing. Be as professional as you can be. Good Luck and God Bless!
So either the change was a forgery, or she convinced your FIL to execute a restated or new trust. If he didn't understand what he was doing and was tricked or coerced, this probably constitutes elder abuse as well as fraud.
How did you find out about the new trust? Have you seen it? If so, was it prepared by an attorney? If so, contact that attorney and make him/her aware of the situation, that your father wasn't competent enough to sign legal documents. If it wasn't prepared by an attorney and looks like an amateurish job, pursue the elder abuse issue.
Your state may have an elder law agency; Michigan does (Elder Law of Michigan). Contact them, or the state or local county bar association and ask about similar agencies that address elder law, and elder law abuse issues. The state Attorney General should have jurisdiction over this issue as well.
Ask the attorney who's handling the guardianship about injunctive relief to prevent her from confiscating or spending any assets. Do that notwithstanding any action on the guardianship.
With a contested guardianship, there's likely to be an outside guardian appointed. Be prepared for that; it will be costly, but it'll prevent the new wife from confiscating the assets b/c the guardian will take over everything financial.
To prepare for the hearing, itemize everything that you can factually support, changes in bank account titles, etc. And bring any letters or statements attesting to his inability to make decisions of a legal or financial nature. Bring copies of the documents if you can get them, including the new signature cards for bank accounts.
BTW, how did you find out about this beyond what he told you? Did your FIL tell you the accounts and trust had been retitled?
Your attorney can ask that the new documents can be admitted into evidence as exhibits. I would be that the new Mrs. is going to come prepared with her own attorney, so you should be as well.
On another issue. When you write that she "shut off his phone and won't give you the number", did she actually disconnect phone service, or did she change the number?
There's a big difference because no elder person should be without phone service. Someone with dementia should have a land line, not a cell or smart phone. If there's no phone service, there's no way for emergency service, and this might be construed as isolation as well as elder abuse.
Otherwise, posters have to use the search function to try to locate any previous threads.
https://www.agingcare.com/discussions/my-story-of-elder-abuse-internet-romance-scams-and-the-devastating-consequences-437197.htm
This isn't Mojo's thread, but she did address the guardianship. For ease of subsequent readers, this is what she wrote 2 months ago:
"Going through it now. My father in law has moderate dementia and we just found out he got married. She wont sign a postnup and they hid the marriage from us. Every attorney tells us we prob wont win but we have to try."
Mojo, could you update us on what's happened since then? On what basis has the "every attorney" opined that you won't win? How many attorneys did you consult, and were their practice areas elder law or contested guardianships?
My Story of Elder Abuse: Internet Romance Scams and the devastating consequences
I'm living a nightmare watching a woman 50 years younger than my 80-year-old father coerce him into marriage, manipulate him and taking his money all in the name of "love". The relationship started as Ghanian romance scam (usembassy.gov/u-s-citizen-services/romance-scams/) and after we uncovered it was a male in Ghana pretending to be an American woman, it eventually led to a Ghanian woman residing in Cuba, showing up at my father's doorstep and coercing him into marriage two weeks later. The story is long, complex, and out of this world so I won't go into it here. We've tried it all: FBI, USICE/immigration, State Dept., AARP, private investigators, the District Attorney, police, adult protective services, elder abuse attorney's and filing for conservatorship. The harsh reality I'm learning is though the crime is so blantently obvious to everyone, I'm told over and over by the authorities that individuals have the right to abuse themselves. My father is showing serious signs of dementia but his executive functioning is still intact and we cannot get him to see a neuropsychologist without a long and painful court battle. To the outside world, he comes accross as just fine, but my normally mild-mannered, extremely rational and brilliant father has had explosive and violent episodes, personality changes, impulsive behavior, and has been induly influenced and taken advantage of over an over again. He cannot see that people are lying to him even though the lies are later revealed to him. I've had a huge reality check just how powerful civil liberties to make bad decisions are in the USA along with the financial rights that coexist in marriage, no matter how corrupt. I'm not writing for advice since I know in my heart my father is not well and is no longer the father I know and love. What I want to know is if anyone else has experienced elder financial abuse in their family, and romance scams or partner abuse in particular. I want to hear your story. I am appaled that though financial elder abuse is rampant throughout the USA, and internet romance scams are only on the rise, there seems to be no major initiatives or policies to protect our vulnerable elders. Thank you.
Father in law with AD secretively got married and now bank accounts have been changed. Any advice?
My father in law has stage 5 AD and went on vacation with his girlfriend and got married but didn't tell his family, only hers. My husband is POA and we just got a letter today that the address of the IRA has been changed. We called and he said he didn't make any changes but then a few hours later talking to the new wife she said they had to make changes. He then yells at us and said we are only after his money and he changed his trust and its none of our business. We just talked to an attorney last week about getting conservatorship and guardianship but all of this has now happened. We wanted an annulment but seems impossible in the state of Iowa. This is such a mess and we are very concerned for his health and well being. I feel for everyone else that has had to deal with this. His psychiatric evaluation 3 years ago came back that he was extremely low functioning. Surely we can get him declared incompetent. She refused to sign a post nup. She has isolated us and tells him we are after his money even though we have been POA for 2 years and never took a dime of his money. Almost every attorney has been telling us not much we can do. Anyone in here in state of Iowa and had success?
On the face of it, one can't imagine how the court would not look sympathetically on the sons' application for guardianship and I wish the family a good outcome.
Either way, I also hope the family is able to get results from their actions and that the abuse described is stopped, by legal intervention.
Someone last year posted about a similar situation; the woman had more than a few husbands and seemed to have some black widow qualities, at least at the level of pursuing men, marrying them, and moving on to another catch after they had passed.
I don't have anything more to offer now, but let me digest the situation. It must be so frustrating for you.
Still, even if he was allowed to marry, dementia would preclude proper and I believe assumption of legality of documents he might have executed.
I've read enough on this website to know he was right:)