He is very mad at me because I moved him from arizona to california into an assisted living. (A top of the line one) He hates it because he says everyone is too old. He changed the poa from me to his ex girlfriend who hates me.He is now threatening to call the police because he says i stole everything and wants to move back to arizona from california. My hands are tied.
Take care of yourself,
Carol
My guess is that this is the pattern he has used with family forever - petty and vindictive. If this is the case, and you think he will take you to court, then please go to see an elder care attorney so you have someone at the ready to represent you. You need to take care of yourself first and foremost. Whatever the case, please take the time to write down a time-line of what you did and your concerns for dad (eg went to Dad's house 1/15 gas was on in kitchen; 2/1 Dad called upset that mail was being opened by neighbors; 6/10 XYZ sent letter about unpaid bill Dad refuses to pay).
long and involved, when it is a total surprise that u r removed as POA- it is like a slap in the face-no more than that- abusive- and disrespectful, mean and a disperate need to control- . it certainly doesnt show any concern about the parent involved-how is that a demonstration of what is best for your parent-frustrating and
it can destroy u-
we must take care of ourselves-try to figure what our main concerns are-
and if they are realistic--i imagine your family is like mine- and the surving ones are still
fighting old battles, hearing old tapes in our head,as we heard when we were little-
and hopefully at some point,we mature and are able to at least try to accept this is
for what it is- and that is not going to be a fair ,
there must be some way when we finially can grow into a place where all that anger
and hurt can be put in its place, and not destroy or rule the person who u are-
love and patience- cry and smash pilows- sometimes it helps, i send u millions of hugs . i know how u feel, im still trying to figure this one out- this site is the best-
these guys know from experience and are loving and gives hope,.
keep posting- love k
Was it that you had to go to probate to get it transferred from her name? Did she die without a will or was the will contested? Did the property have issues of clear title left over.....like from when she owned it with your dad and he preceeded her in death? Did the house have a lein on it? I'm just curious.....thanks.
The reason I asked about probate is that MERP (Medicaid Estate Reinbursement or Repayment or Recoup Program - the name varies by the state) does this through probate in most states. My mom is now on Medicaid (in TX) and upon her death MERP will file their claim in probate court. I've been executrix twice before but this was before MERP was in force, so those probates were different.
So for your mom, if I got this correct, she owed the "state" 80K (or was it $800K??) for what the state reinbursed the NH for. The 80K was whatever was the difference in what her personal resources paid (like her SS checks, annuity, whatever you all paid privately) and what the billed costs ($ 80K) - were. (Yes I know these are just so overinflated, it makes you want to scream but that's another topic...). So a lien was placed on her only tangible asset - her home. The house was owned by her free & clear and in her name only and was probably appraised at over $ 300,000K. Or was is much higher, 500K...700K?
She was admitted to the NH after 2005 or 2006, right?? - before that MERP was not required by the feds for the states to do.
Is this pretty accurate?
If you don't mind me asking, was the lien placed by the State of NY; the State of NY and the specific NH or just the NH? Or was it done by a law firm? The firm would be a contractor hired by the state to do recoup - the papers might not read that they are a state contractor. How did you find out there was a lein? Were you able to negotiate the amount "owed"?
I'm trying to figure out how states are doing MERP, what is the $ amount triggers MERP to act and the timeframe that things are done and if they negotiate. Each state does this differently. Like in TX if the house is over 500K in value, they can't go on Medicaid - the house HAS to be sold to qualify or be appraised at under 500K; while in other states $ 750K is the maximum value for the home other states have no ceiling on the home's value. In TX, MERP sends out a letter within 10 days of getting a letter from the state vital data registry to whomever is listed as the responsible party on the NH resident info sheet that MERP recoup will happen against the deceased estate. Then you have 30 - 45 days to respond with a list of whatever expenses you have spent on the deceased home with receipts. Then MERP decides whether to persue the recoup claim. It seems that if it's under 100K in recoup, no MERP.
MERP is pretty, new maybe 5 years for most states. It seems that it's only recently that states have been going after recoup. I don't know if this is due to states not having as much revenue OR states have outsourced doing this so law firms are now doing this aggressively OR just what. I'm just trying to figure this out.
Appreciate any more insight and details you can give on this. Thanks.
I answered on your wall but will post here as well. I wish I could do more. Maybe some others can fill in if there's something I left out:
Cher, I'm so sorry. This has to hurt horribly.
I'm afraid that the only thing you can do is talk with an attorney, preferably one who specializes in elder law. You could try talking to the attorney who did your dad's paperwork - he or she should have known that he wasn't competent to do this, but you may not get anywhere (client confidentiality). Then, you'd need someone else.
The main thing is that your dad really has shot himself in the foot but your mother is affected too. It takes a long time to go to court and prove them incompetent - money, as well. You may have to let them stumble along until they are in enough trouble for Social Services to step in.
Whatever you do or don't do, do not feel guilty. You've done so much and it may be all you can do for now.
Please keep us posted,
Carol
On the other hand, it's pointless and stupid not to inform a person that he or she is no longer required to act as POA so why on earth would anyone do that? It can only cause inconvenience and ill-feeling among all concerned. Sorry, Cher - no idea what he was trying to achieve!
They have been incapacited since July 2012. Dad broken palvis in three place. How?? from roller skating. (Don't ask) Mom spetis in Dec. 2012 because she is a pre-diabetic and she decided that she was not going to change her needle in her testing kit. They brought her back to life but when she came to she did not know what a door knob did or what to do with her dentures or a tooth brush. Does not know how to use stove or mico-wave anymore. So they go out to eat all the time.
Than also in 2012 they found out that Mom had kidney cancer. All the doctor wanted to do was take out her kidney at the age of 88. Well forget that. Mom lived with us for 7 monthes until June 2013...June 24th, 2013 Mom broke her hip and went into the hospital the same day that Dad went into the hospital with pneumonia. (I mean the same day) Him in ICU and her getting a new hip. Dad had DNR on him but they brought him back with drugs also. Neither one remember being in the hosptial for those visits. Making a long story short.
Mom and Dad both on Medicare. Mom has medigap insurance since she was in her 60's but Dad refused to get it....So Mom's Medical bills paid but in full and Dad owned 20% of his. What I am trying to say is that I have been active on POA for almost 2 year. Mom always make out the bills for 65 years of their marriage so Dad never had to balance a checkbook or write a check. Now Mom with dementia can not do it either. Dad started to write out checks from canceled checkbooks that were closed more than 10 years ago. Of cause all checks balanced. You get the idea. Mom's medigap insurance he almost let lapse so I had it scaned out of the checkbook so all he had to do was subtract it. (went right to insurance company) well he did not understand this even thou he was saving 2 dollars exta a month plus money on stamps. He tried to change it so he would have to write out checks again but they would not let him. He will not talk to me now and that is when he went to the bank and took my name off of POA. Afraid that they are going to lose their house because he will not pay the taxes. He also does not want to pay the 20% that he owes for his pnumonia bill. Going to stop here because need to sleep.
To answer your question he wants to be in control but think that I am going to have two homeless 90 year olds on my hands. They will not consider AL.
Thanks for your response. Signed Frustrated and Depressed. Cheryl
Wow. I have to say - this has nothing to do with the question, but - your Dad is AMAZING. Poor old boy had a nasty fall - did he trip over his slippers? Nope - roller skating. Wow!
His discovery of the merry-go-round of spending money: also amazing but not in a good way. You'd better get all your documents together and head off to the Elder Care Lawyer, hadn't you? - ideally taking a social worker with you, if that can possibly be arranged.
The thing is, there's financial naïveté, and then there's the way your Dad is behaving, which actually - do forgive me if I'm out of order - hints at… could there be some kind of disability there? Like you get in the autistic spectrum, where there's no concept of money? Which would be one explanation of why your mother kept a tight grip on the family finances, and a better explanation than her being a control freak who kept her husband under her thumb? The fact that it's been, essentially, a lifelong issue for them would suggest this has nothing to do with typical older age incapacity; but that doesn't mean he can't be considered incompetent for other reasons, which might give you something to go on in terms of protecting your parents' best interests.
If I were you, I'd call APS and then call the Elder Care attorneys. Don't let them fob you off, either, because this is stunningly atypical and they ought to get involved. Make them concentrate on the full story, don't let them interrupt you and say "your Dad is a grown up, he can please himself" - like I did back there. If you know of a diagnosis or assessment from the past, have a look at that, too. Go back to your mother's bank, lawyer, anyone you can think of and try to find out how she managed things. You have to act to protect your mother: your father's neglect of her best interests and welfare should also work to your advantage.
Wow. Gird your loins. Good luck! And (forgive me, I know I don't have to cope with him) I am SO impressed with your brilliant nightmare Dad. Big hug.