My brother has taken her away from us and kept her to himself for over two years and now can we see her. He will let no one in the hospital, he has taken over all her money, house and made her sign forms she didn't know, he has lied to here he is here POA or the next one higher than POA
Rosella, if your mother wants to see you then your brother, or the hospital staff, should facilitate that.
What you can do without causing trouble is telephone the hospital and leave your contact details in case your mother asks to see you. If you put it very nicely to them, you might even be able to persuade the staff to let your mother know that you called and to pass on a message to her. They cannot discuss her with you, though, as I am sure you realise.
Other than that, if your brother is your mother's legal guardian, I can't see what more you can do. Your brother's activities as your mother's guardian will have been subject to scrutiny by the authorities. It's not an easy thing to grab guardianship, exile your blameless siblings and run off with your parent's money, you know.
But we don't know the story. I'm sorry there have been these sorrows in your family, and I hope you get to spend time with your mother.
Something that has always creeped me out about hospitals is how wide open they are. Anybody can walk in pretty much anytime.
Did you try to just walk in to see your mom?
Our experiences with our parents and siblings run the gamut. I have a sister who I would love to keep from my mom. When she shows up, she's loud, bossy, controlling, and berates my mother for her memory loss. Now that my mother is in a nursing home, not knowing what day it is, suddenly, my sister wants a relationship. She says she'll come to my town once a month is she can stay at my house (and run up my heating and food bill). NOT HAPPENING!! Maybe she could say I'm "keeping" my mother from her, but she's free to get a cheap motel. Of course, she won't because she's only interested in getting something for nothing. Has seen my mom like 6 times in last 15 years while I have done all the caregiving. Sorry for the rant. Just want to illustrate that so often, siblings are a problem!
Which one - POA or guardian - makes a huge difference. If he is her guardian, he has gone through a pretty detailed legal process and been appointed by the court to act in her behalf & with reporting to the court. Removing someone who is guardian is difficult. The ? if this is the case is, just where was other family in the guardianship hearings. They could have placed themselves to be appointed but didn't. Why or why not?
If he is named to be POA, then the ? is more when was it done and was mom competent & cognitive at the time. If he has been POA for a good period of time, then it is going to hold up to be valid.
If you don't know which one your brother is for mom, that in itself is an issue.
What do you want now? Just to see your mother? Or are you trying to change other things as well?
Sounds like the brother has been the caregiver, now the mother is dying and now the OP wants to be involved.
Would love to hear the whole story, I have a feeling the OP is the do nothing sibling, otherwise how did 2yrs go by and no action taken, now it's an issue.
Hmmm.
Where was the OP the last 2 yrs? Why the concern now? Come on, the brother has been dealing with mom for the last 2 yrs, she is dying, now all of a sudden the OP is interested in mom.
And concerned about the brother being in charge of the finances. Where was the concern 6 months ago, 12 months ago, and 18 months ago.
I have said it before and I will say it again, the minute the elderly parent is dying(for sure) here comes the do nothing sibling concerned about their cut.
If she really wants to see her mother go to the hospital. It may already be too late.