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My mother has dementia. Paranoia is one of her chronic symptoms. She gave the last 2 rent money orders to a homeless person who she thought would out it in box. She gets paranoid when she does it herself and will keep asking if she put it the correct box. She must have trusted this woman more than most. She must have received one of the notices since she told me about one court the day I give her the money orders every 1st of the month. The homeless woman was able to cash money orders made to her building By the time I wa able to get bank to trace money orders the hearing happened and she now has judgement for eviction. How long until the constable gets here. Is there anything I can do. I don’t have the whole $1600. I have half and they will only take the full amount

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Your mother is not able to live alone any longer . Call her local County Area of Aging to come out and do a needs assessment to help get her placed in a facility where she can have 24/7 supervision . Or call APS.
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Danny, are you in the UK?


Is your mom's doctor aware of her dementia? Perhaps s/he can intervene with the constabulary/local council?
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Yes, there's something you can do. Stop giving a paranoid old person with dementia money orders to pay her rent with. You pay your mother's rent directly to whoever is supposed to be paid. When the constable arrives (I'm assuming you're in the UK because here in the U.S. we call them cops or police) tell him what's going on and that your mother had dementia. They may be able to help with this situation by putting you in touch with social workers and the right people who can help your mother.

Next, speak to the police in your mother's area and ask them to start doing regular wellness checks on her. They will stop by a couple times a week to check on her if you ask for it.

Clearly your mother has dementia and is not in her right mind. She cannot live alone anymore or have access to money. This is what Adult Protective Services is for. It is to protect vulnerable adults by keeping them safe.

It's good that the bank traced the money orders. The homeless woman they were given to would have had to put her name on them and show proper identification at the bank for them to be cashed. So she can be arrested for theft, fraud and forgery which will likely be a prison sentence. You'd be doing her a favor. A prison cell beats sleeping on the street and if she gets in the system she will be on social services' radar and can get help. So press charges. This woman is obviously local if your mother knows her and has given her the rent money twice. Have her arrested and press charges.

You will probably have to petition the court for emergency guardianship/conservatorship if your mother has nothing in writing.
She has to either be in a care facility or living with a caregiver for her own safety.
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Isthisrealyreal Feb 29, 2024
Social services in the USA is off the table for felons. So going to jail is not a way to get help. Especially with charges of financial exploitation of a vulnerable senior, fraud and who knows what else.

I do agree charges should be filed and pressed, this behavior needs to be stopped before she finds another victim and she will, that's what predators do.
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If a judge has ordered eviction, there’s nothing you can do. The agent of the court will show up, all her property will be placed outside for 24-48 hours (after which it will be taken to the dump), and she will be locked out.

The money is irrelevant at this point, the judgment has been made.

She shouldn’t be living alone anyway. She’ll need to be placed in a locked facility, where she should have been in the first place.
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BurntCaregiver Feb 29, 2024
@Zippy

Really now? All places on earth do not have the same eviction rules. For example in my state a person can be served with eviction during the winter months but they don't have to leave until spring.

Also, eviction is a process. A person has to be served with legal eviction papers from the court and they are delivered by a sheriff. The person gets a certain amount of time (my state is 90 days sometimes more) to vacate the property. Evicted people often go to court and get extentions on the time. Then there's the folks who 'squat' and stop paying the rent entirely. They cannot be legally removed without several court orders.

The 28-48 hour timeline then the mother's stuff gets put on the curb probably isn't entirely accurate. We're not living in the 19 century anymore. Renters actually have rights today.
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A person with dementia should NEVER handle paying bills because they can’t. Your mother has been evicted and now she has to find a new place to live. This sounds like good news though because she shouldn’t live on her own, for very obvious reasons listed here.
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