Follow
Share

My cousin and sister have done many sneaky things to take control of my moms life. She moved in with my husband and I a year ago.
Mom has short term memory loss but understands everything. So when she is reminded of what they have done she gets mad and doesn't want to see them, but then they call or show up and she is loving with them. I don't want to keep reminding her of the bad stuff but I feel like I have to to keep her from being manipulated again. I keep waiting for them to sneak her to another lawyer or doctor and talk her into something that she doesn't fully understand because they omit the facts that would help her make the right decision.
How can we let her continue to enjoy her golden years (she is 95 and in great health) without all the stress of their deceit ?

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Find Care & Housing
when some lawyer tells you that the executor, or trustee has a fiduciary responsibility, bully wooly. That is only if you have an extra 100,000 for the very gender bias lawyer hired who raped the estate and never made a phone call, never got out of his chair. The only thing he did was bill the estate, and he had errors all over the billings, errors to his benefit.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Get a POA and restraining order against those taking advantage if need be. If they live with her, then have them evicted. You will need an attorney. Good Luck! Similar situation happened in my family, but you need that POA to really enforce the issue. It's a real shame that family members can do this sort of thing. If we can't trust our family, who can we trust? Terrible, but I can relate all too well.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

Re: comments in this thread about family members being trustees and all of the hassles: One thing I've learned from my parents' trust and them having named individuals as their trustees and there having been big time exploitation involved with their finances and trust funds by unscrupulous people my dad was associated with (not me--- he removed me as his POA and trustee) is that it's better to go with a corporate trustee, preferably one aligned with a financial advising company, because a corporate trustee not only has no personal gain or familiarity/ties with the beneficiaries, but they are also regulated and have to account to those who oversee and regulate them for all of the activities on a trust. A corporate trustee will execute a trust by the book and in accordance with the wishes of the deceased and won't be swayed by manipulative family members who are trying to get more than they were left. Furthermore, while the person is still alive, a corporate trustee is involved in the trust to the extent that any changes to the trust, especially by people in the vulnerable stage of life (but also with people who aren't considered vulnerable), raise red flags and cause them to investigate the reasons behind the change and the validity of it. From what my husband's and my financial adviser told us, there are alot of levels of checking, reporting, and documentation. And, while an estate attorney may allow the changes to a trust to be made, when it involves the money in the trust, itself, the corporate trustee is informed of the change and initiates an investigation into the validity of the changed estate plan and changes in beneficiaries. And, if that corporate trustee is part of the same company where you do your financial advising, they'll be in contact with your financial adviser to raise the red flag with that person since a financial adviser has a fiduciary responsibility to his/her clients to protect the trust funds from unscrupulous people. The financial advising industry is a very closely monitored and regulated field and financial advisers' activities are very closely watched. So, when it comes to trust funds and corporate trustee-ship, it's a very closely watched industry with lots of monitoring of activity on trust funds. After seeing how my dad was financially exploited and also exploited by his so-called "friends" and associates into changing his estate plan and there being nobody to raise red flags and investigate, my husband and I have assigned a corporate trustee, which is another division of the same company as our financial adviser belongs to, as our trustee and the entity which will both execute our trust when we're gone and which will be keeping an eye out for changes made to our trust, especially as we get older. Granted, there's lots of red tape and lots of hoops we'd have to jump through if we made questionable changes to beneficiaries. But, I'll gladly take this red tape if it means protecting our trust funds from unscrupulous people, especially when we enter the vulnerable adult stage of life.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

waddle1: Your dad's reluctance sounds, in part, like he's afraid to face his own mortality. As people get closer to the end of their lives, death seems scarier. Doing an advanced directive, etc., may seem too final for him and may be frightening to him. So, maybe he thinks that by putting it off and not thinking about it, he doesn't have to think about death or the fact that he doesn't have so many years of life left. Has his dr. discussed an advances directive with him? Even if he doesn't have a will (which sometimes includes the advanced directive along with the POA documents), with the encouragement of his dr(s), he could file an advanced directive at his dr's office. But, you really can't force your dad to have an advanced directive if he doesn't want want. Hopefully, he'll come around, though, so you won't be left having to wonder if the decisions you may be tasked with making are what he really wants. If this becomes the case, you can only take your best guess and do the best you can for him.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Someone wrote earlier that they were amazed at how much of this stuff goes on. I think a lot of it is caused because, what I've seen personally, is people 80+ often times don't want to have signed documents which pertain to their care directive, a living will, their final wishes (death, services, burial), even wills. Even telling my parents it is to assure things are carried out how they wish and to prevent misunderstandings or squables among their children...they still didn't/haven't responded. Even after my father witnessed disagreements between me and my siblings about my mother's health care, and she has passed, he still has not/will not finalize a living will or advanced care directive. Doesn't even want to talk about it. I don't know if there is a will. My gut feeling is...in general, my father is very indecisive and therefore doesn't want to have to make decisions, so he doesn't. Plus, he really doesn't care if we children argue, after he's out of it or gone.

Perhaps the next generation will think differently, better about putting your wishes in writing. Until then, we can only ask...and deal with the answers or lack of...
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

I guess it would be trustee. I will have to read it again. My uncle took over as trustee when I told him my sister had moved money to another bank. I found this out at the bank. He was fair when he passed. He had my cousins take over. Big mistake. She has buddies up with my sister. Thank you. I will look into getting a report. Can you go back a few years? Bank accounts closed and life ins policies have been cashed out. This was done by my sister. When she had poa. Any way to get answers to this?
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Your mother and any beneficiaries are entitled to a yearly accounting of your mother's trust, at least in some states. Is your cousin the Trustee/Admin?
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

I'm going through the exact same thing. A cousin and sister. I went to court had a lawyer prove my mom was competent so I could take her out of the nursing home they put her in. She know lives with me. I have poa and health care proxy. I understand the frustration. Listening to my mom talking to my sister. I agree try to keep visits supervised. My question to any one my cousins is on her irrevocable family trust. Not a lot of money left. She refused to send it to me. And says she doesn't have to give me any information about it?? Shouldn't my mom get an annual report if funds??
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

This is such a difficult and insidious problem faced by some unfortunate families like my own. In my case, I live out of state from the rest of my family so have little to no influence or control over any aspect of our mom's medical or financial welfare. My mom has given total control over to my lying, manipulative younger sister, who has finagled about $200k out of her so far, using undue influence, since my dad passed away about 8 yrs ago. So even though I am aware that my sister is exploiting our mom, I feel there is very little I can do to stop it. My brothers are useful idiots and fail to see what is happening before their eyes. I would get APS involved, but it would cause more problems than it would solve, I fear. My mom would be terribly upset and it would totally shatter her sense of stability. She would see it as an attack against her and her favorite child, who she blindly trusts and believes cares about her, not as a protective or corrective measure with her best interest in mind. I almost wish my mom had no money or assets, then there would be nothing for my sister to exploit. I just wish my mom would be up-front with all of her adult children and let us know openly what her wishes are as far as her estate goes. As far as we know she wants us to all share equally, but she has secretly given our sister a quite a chunk of money that we are aware of. So we are getting mixed signals, and also since our greedy, deceitful sister has total control and access to her bank accounts, documents, etc. I suspect that she has had our mom unwittingly name her as sole beneficiary on about $500k worth of annuities, and as POD on her bank accounts. This would mean that those assets would belong 100% to my sister once our mom passes away, even if the will states everything is to be shared equally among the siblings. I dread the time after her death when my vindictive and greedy sister can say "mom didn't want you to have anything" (this would be a huge victory for her since she has always been jealous of me) and my mom won't be around to speak for herself. My sister has always viewed my mom as her personal ATM machine, and it appears she has targeted her as her "retirement plan" as well. I have come to accept it since I feel that my hands are tied. She is not directly hurting our mom, and her stealing our eventual inheritance doesn't directly hurt our mom, since she will be gone before what has been done is revealed. It is just so painful to have to watch it all taking place and feel helpless to do anything to stop it.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Having filed for guardianship, I would advise against it. We have been in court for 14 months, and it is far from over. Six lawyers, all together, and the case is being drug out by two of them, for profit. By the time this is over, my dad won't have anything left. The case is in IL, and they have what is called a Mental Health POA, which would stop anyone else from taking over a POA, if you can get it at this point. Once declared incompetent, the state is totally in control of both you and your mother. If there is a contested guardianship, the state will also take over her finances. My attorney is advertised as an Elder Law and Elder Abuse attorney, but he has been much more abusive than helpful. My dad needs to be in assisted living, but because of this contested guardianship, his funds are in limbo until the court case is over. As guardian of his person, I am responsible for his care and housing, but the state is responsible for the money, and they can't find the time to answer phone calls. It is extremely expensive and frustrating. So far, legal fees are over $25,000, and there are a lot of "probate sharks" out there, so I would advise finding an attorney who can offer a different solution. If your sister is talking your mom out of money, there are laws against financial abuse of seniors, if you find an honest attorney. Good luck!
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

She can complete a durable power of attorney for both financial and medical if she has not already done so. Also, she can complete her advance directives and living will-this will be her voice for medical care if she becomes unable to speak. If mom is living with you in your home, you don't have to let the relative's in, tell them she's napping. Once everything is in place, the way mom wants it, then it doesn't matter what the relatives do or say as long as it doesn't upset your mom or cause some kind of harm. I've seen POA's written up to say it can't be evoked and/or it will remain in effect/kick in when the person becomes unable to make decisions. At her age, she may be eligible for a legal consult. Contact your local area agency on aging and ask them for a legal consult for a power of attorney. This way whoever she names, will be able to assist her in bill paying and managing her funds.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Sister in law who hated my parents, all because my Dad would not give them $100,000. My Dad required she pay him back for loan and as a result she threatened my Dad, days before he died, stating if he did not change will, he would be sorry. My dad asked me what she meant. I never dreamed she would kill my parents. She even controlled the hospital after having my brother moved from the Deaf Dept (State) to the Health Dept Adm. She refused to pay our primary caregiver who gave more than she earned. She controlled Elderly Protection, a State agency that wouldn't even respond to our complaint. From her State office she removed some ten withdraws at some $10,000 or 9,999 each, when she didn't even sign on the Chase bank account. Lawyers we paid just helped her steal the money. They lied to the judge, and took my parents hard earned money. One of the big lawyers in our town told me both of his neighbors were doing the same things. My lawyer's billings had numerous errors.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

I'm sorry, but you can't stop anyone from manipulating your mom. My sis did it and all mom wanted was her children near and visits from them and she wanted to be happy. She got none of it. Sis criticized, lied, stole from mom. Mom passed from negligence on my sis's part. Sis said she was retiring to take care of mom. Mom lived alone, had dementia, hard of hearing and severe other health issues. Doctor specifically stated she wasn't to be left alone - she burnt food while she cooked. Sis emailed everyone that mom is doing fine, her health is good and improving. All a lie. Mom fell down her stairs while taking out the garbage (sis was to do this and where was she). Sis was there when she wanted to be there. She kept mom from some of us with her deceitfulness and lies and that is what is hurting more than anything. Sis raided mom's home less than an hour after her passing in October - took everything she didn't want anyone else to have (incl. her meds, ids, wallet, money, etc). No, you can't control them in any way, they are who they are and won't stop at anything to get what they want. In this world where nothing's still, the people we know are not really real.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

country mouse we did have receipt and used her bank card for everything else so it would be on the statements and there is transparent record.
mom wants me to be poa so no dispute there and we all went to counseling for months and all they did was their slick act and didn't let me speak. So we are done with that. I will be civil and get along for my moms sake. they were welcome at my house anytime until they got in moms face and told her they knew what she wants but they don't have to do it. now they are not. I love my mom and will protect her dignity and her right to make her own decisions till the cows come home. I realize you don't know me but I don't lie steal or cheat and they cant say the same. I would even venture to say they have no moral compass and neither one would want their children doing the same to them but they probably will since they raised them.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

Sorry - financial and welfare issues, I meant to say.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Lynn, this is where it all went t*ts up, if you'll pardon the expression:

"Up till a couple months after she moved in with my husband and I he had always been very fair. As soon as she moved in with me because my sisters son and wife had her there for six months and they couldn't do it anymore he started getting very demanding. He wouldn't pay us for her rent and expenses and was demanding professional invoices and personal info for the 18yr old we had been paying to help around the house and yard for years. When we refused to give him info for a minor and told him that our receipts and hand written list of items we spent our own money were good enough he got REAL sh*tty."

Forgive me, but your receipts and hand written list of items were *not* good enough. If you and your husband were spending your own money on items for your mother and, perfectly reasonably, were claiming the money back, then your cousin needed formal receipts and invoices to refund you. Needed, note, not "felt like making trouble about."

Look at the context. Your sister had already made a hash of things by allowing your mother - of your mother's own free will, that is, I'm not suggesting anything worse - to spend money on your sister and her family. And while that's fine for a mother-daughter thing, it is NOT fine for a POA. Then when your mother moved in with you, without sight of proper accounts, how was your cousin to know that you weren't making the same error? To carry out his responsibility properly, he did indeed need satisfactory details of exactly what money was spent on your mother and what for.

I get how irritating and even humiliating all this can be. My sister has POA for my mother and to begin with it was such a cauldron of conflict. She wanted receipts and itemised accounts of everything, and then there were endless niggles about silly things like my "overtipping" a hairdresser, or including a café bill which she felt should have come out of general household expenses - ugh! I now get everything billed by invoices which I send direct to my sister, and I've set up a separate bank account for my mother's petty cash and send the monthly statement to her too, and so far - touch wood - that's working all right. But it's still a pain in the unmentionables. I do understand.

But sneaky? This isn't sneaky. This is your cousin, having been asked to do a job, trying to do it properly. And to manage your mother's finances conscientiously, he also needs to have full control of what's going on. He is accountable for what happens to your mother's money: how does that work if she's writing cheques to you and nobody is keeping a transparent record of what they're for?

Unfortunately, what you now have is a full-blown dispute about who your mother wishes to have power of attorney for her on both medical and welfare issues; and that dispute is spilling over into terribly sad and emotional areas such as spoiling your mother's birthday - it's a breakdown in communications. The family needs to get together and go back to the drawing board before this all gets totally out of hand. Bite the bullet and call a meeting.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

I would go with her and get "Power of Attorney" for yourself over her finances etc. and that would give you the power to make all the "right decisions" for her and NOT have to worry about the rest of the family. It just amazes me how many people go through this. You are definitely not alone on this!
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

A POA can be voided by the mother anytime she wants and make someone else the POA.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

This is how I took care of this problem. I had my mother redo her will giving all 4 children equal share of whatever is left. I am the sole trustee and durable POA. now that all the legal issues have been addressed I encouraged mom to call her other children knowing they couldn't take any more from her. Mom has yet to call - waiting for them to do it. My siblings have not spoken to mom since before xmas. They didn't even call her on her birthday. Mom is failing. If they refuse to keep in contact with her and something happens it will be their issue - not mine. I protected mom.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

I got POA over six months ago because first my sister(only sib),who got on moms bank account years ago, to be helpful, was POA. I never even thought about any of this. She was letting mom pay for too much stuff. Family lunches and dinners and ATM withdrawals of at least $200 a month.
So mom and I talked my cousin into taking over. He stated at that time that he agreed there were some alarming things on her bank statements and told my sister to stop letting mom pay for everything and knock off the ATM withdrawls. Thats when we found out she had her own debit card for moms account too.
Up till a couple months after she moved in with my husband and I he had always been very fair. As soon as she moved in with me because my sisters son and wife had her there for six months and they couldn't do it anymore he started getting very demanding. He wouldn't pay us for her rent and expenses and was demanding professional invoices and personal info for the 18yr old we had been paying to help around the house and yard for years. When we refused to give him info for a minor and told him that our receipts and hand written list of items we spent our own money were good enough he got REAL sh*tty. Mom asked us how she could solve this problem so I told she can pay her expenses herself. She wrote us a check but that day cousin Rich went or called her bank and transferred money out so her check would bounce. My parents NEVER bounced a check and it upset mom when we found out. She transferred it back and we got paid.
The worst and the reason I took over was wentn they ruined her 95th birthday by taking her out all day when we had agreed to we would share the day. My friends had come over with balloons, signs, presents and cake. But no mom. Then they uncharacteristically had her spend the night (on the couch no less). The next day she had an appointment with her primary doc who has seen her for many yrs and needed labs taken. I just happen to call that office (not sure why, but I think my deceased dad was looking out for her) and found out that my cousin went too and they had gone to a social security office to pick up a form for the doc to fill out (doc statement of patients capability to manage benefits) so while mom was out of the room they told the doc how she couldn't handle basically anything and he partially filled out the form checking the "no" box saying that. Then Rich went to SS and using that form became her representative payee!
So we got the same form and took it to her neurologist. He filled it out (completely) checking the yes box. We then had to go to our SS office to undo his payee status. After becoming POA of medical and financial I had to change banks to stop his access. He had called ahead and informed the bank manager that I was manipulating my mom so I was treated like a thief and had to endure this several times to change banks. Somehow Rich is so slick he can get her lawyer, doctor and bank to believe him making everything difficult. Just two weeks ago he said they were going to lunch and he took her to her lawyer and saying only " don't you want both your daughters to make medical decisions for you?" got her to add my sister back to the medical POA. I am waiting for the next trick (they lied and did many small things also including sending a sheriff over here) causing my husband and I anxiety worrying about how to protect her without having anyone declare her incapable because I would never do that to her. The primary that filled out the form saying no has since apologized and said he would call her condition "age related cognitive decline"
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

If you have POA and your mother has clarified her health care wishes, preferably in writing, and all the legal paper work has been completed...then you don't have anything to worry about in that regard. From my experience, similar to yours, my only comment would be it's a good thing that you've had this time to figure out the relatives and their intent, before some decisions have to be made for your mother because she is incapable. You have received a forewarning. In my case...when some important medical decisions had to be made about my mother's care, my sister and my manipulated father, did some things under the radar, which IMO cost my mother her life. Decisions based on my sister's skewed opinion. Didn't find out about it until it was too late...after my mother passed. If I knew then what I know now, I would have fought for my mother. Had no reason at the time to think my sister was so devoted to her opinion that she would let it overshadow her decision making, good judgement, and then lie about it.

You know, from your report here, what these relatives are capable of. Keep your eyes and ears open when they are around. But, don't prevent them or your mother from seeing one another. For what it's worth...
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

I had a similar family situation. So, I got a lawyer for my mother and got POA for her. She is competent and able to make me her financial POA. Also, in agreement with her and her lawyer, we hide all her account numbers, check books and such. That way, even though she forgets that people have taken advantage of her, she can't accidentally give them checks or access to her accounts.

Of course, she does forget and says "yes" to their requests for money, only to find out that she had forgotten that she agreed that she can't give more out. We have a little angst between the two of us when she does this, but it is what it is. She feels embarrassed having to remind them they shouldn't ask her for money, but they've been told by her lawyer that they can't ask her directly for anything, any longer - to call her lawyer and he'll bring the subject up with her. We threw in that layer to make it clear that they shouldn't try to trick her - that those days are over.

She agreed to all of this, even though she doesn't always remember. When she asks me why she doesn't have her check book, the conversation sometimes takes the turn that I end up telling her why. I try not to volunteer it unless she specifically asks. While I don't like these people, she does enjoy having contact with them. This way, she gets to have contact without worry that they'll take advantage of her.

With that said, she doesn't see these people without me present. They don't take her out, for example. So, I don't know what would happen if they took her and got her to sign a new POA. I think they could confuse her into it, and it might not really be enforceable, but I suppose it could cause some problems. If you were to get your mom a lawyer, you might ask that question.

By the way, what is really sad about this is that my mom has almost no money. The people who have preyed on her are preying on someone with so little that it's truly shameful. She hates paying the lawyer with the little money she has, but I see no other way to handle this. I can't guard every letter and phone call she makes to keep her from making this kind of mistake, and I'm not sure it would even be appropriate for me to try to do it that way, either.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

A great hint to coming fraud: No transparency. Applies to lawyers as well as other trustees, executors. Almost all of the codes that family lawyers use were violated. We were too grieved to report all of the fraud. A local R/E guru offered my brother a contract to kill my sister to get her out of the way. My brother wanted to get out of paying that contractor which kept the kill deal from going through. This will not stop until the corrupt lawyers are stopped.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

I have been through a sister in law who used my brain damaged brothers to liquidate most of the assets. What assets I managed to get our share (and I had to borrow and use my share to hire some crooked lawyers) and to keep the courts from knowing any of our side of all of the fraud a secret, to keep the abuse of my parents. My sister and I were allowed to watch from a distance the horrible treatment of all the caregivers while the sister in law (lawyer too) used the cash and liquidated policies and annuities not even in her name. Although she notarized fraudulently, used our ID, signed checks and electronic checks where only my brother signed on account. 5 lawyers, all corrupt. So not only do you have to have 2,500 for each lawyer but each of those lawyers will do nothing for each of those 2500.00. It's called the first one to break the law, gets away with theft, euthanasia, stolen inventory, cruelly ending my parent's lives. Affected judicial was Calcasieu parish, east baton rouge parish.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

What "sneaky things" have your sister & cousin done to "take control" of your mother's life? Have they done these things after she moved in with you?

How do they "manipulate" her into things?

If you were more specific about the things that they have done, it might result in better feedback from members of this site.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

I agree with desert192 on the no unsupervised visits. Given that your mom lives with you and it's your house, you can determine who visits, when, and how often. If you observe/hear manipulation, immediately end the visit--- after all, it's your house, your rules. I also like and agree with New2this's suggestion about setting up the phone to ring to your cellphone and denying your sister and cousin access to your mom when you're not there. Of course, the latter doesn't stop them from showing up at your house when you're not there and your mom opening the door and letting them in.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

I agree with Wintersun. Let it be. I am the youngest of 3 kids who has been accused of being a manipulator of our mother. I'm also the only kid who is here with her, everyday, doing my best with what I have to help her. I'm not in the least bit interested in the control of her estate, money, etc. That job was assigned to my sister before Dad passed away. Funny how people/relatives can turn so controlling and ugly when it comes to money. I keep a journal. I have for the last 4 yrs (since my father's passing/moving back home to be with mom). It helps with sorting out my feelings, describes the ins and outs of daily life with mom, and also validates the crazy behaviors of my siblings and other relatives. If you are concerned about what your relatives are doing, why don't you talk to them about it? Like wintersun said, "how do you know that's what they are doing to her?" Take time to confront the relatives privately. You might find your worries put at ease!
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

no unsupervised visits seems to be easiest way. If they ask to visit at a time you are not able to be there - just say "That's not a good time and suggest a time when you can be there" Lock up the check book/credit cards/ and legal documents.
Be sure you have her Trust/will - POA - Health Care POA, etc.
If they are up to no good (been there done that) they will disappear soon enough when there is nothing to be gained.
If they are truly there just to see your Mom they can surely understand that a short visit will make her happy without tiring her out.
You are the one who has to deal with any negative stimulus they cause (after they leave) since she lives with you and you are providing care. That means you call the shots as to what keeps Mom happiest.
Visits are great - you don't need to explain anything to Mom (she will forget)
Let her enjoy the company -
Just keep an eye on family as you would anyone who is dealing with your impaired Mom
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

I'd let bygones be bygones for Mom's sake, let her have the visits, but not without supervision if you think they are trying to get something out of her. Set the phone up to ring over onto your cell while you are out, plain deny them access to her while she is alone. If they are after money or upsetting her though I'd try to scare them with the threat of legal action tell them I was going to get a restraining order or file elder abuse charges against them. That ought to keep things on the "up and up". :-)
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

I agree with both Countrymouse and Mon2014 (document everything that's going on with your sister and cousin as pertains to your mother). Also, someone stated that the standards for determining mental competency are very low--- right on the mark there, also. Given that your mother falls into the vulnerable adult category just on the basis of her age alone, and exploitation of vulnerable adults often is done by family members, I'd suggest a few things here if you believe that your sister's and cousin's exploitation could potentially have bad financial results (which could ultimately also affect her medical well-being if they get access to your mom's finances and drain them to the extent that she doesn't have money to cover/pay for her medical care and needs). First, contact your mom's estate attorney and apprise him/her of what's going on so that if your cousin and sister try to get your mom to change her estate plan, her attorney may be able to head that off. Perhaps, there's a way for her atty to give you a heads up of when/if your sister and cousin or your mother make appointments with the attorney about the estate plan so that maybe you could also accompany your mother to each of these meetings with her atty (or, maybe there's a way her atty could require that you also be in attendance as your mother's daughter?--- I don't know if this is possible). Second, consult with an elder law attorney about what's going on and seek some advice from this person about how to proceed with protecting your mother and what your options are. Third, if you believe that your sister and cousin are exploiting your mom and there's a real potential for harm to your mom at anytime, now or down the road, report this and present your documentation of specific incidents/incidences to APS (Adult Protection Services) and maybe even to the police--- maybe the police first and they'll work with APS. Some police departments employ investigators who focus on investigating financial and other forms of exploitation of vulnerable individuals. It may be worth your while to see if your local police dept. has someone who does this sort of thing.

Please also realize that undue influence in the form of manipulation on any level is a form of exploitation of a vulnerable individual and should be reported in order to protect the vulnerable person. Granted, you don't want to cause a family rift and you don't want to tear your mother and your sister away from each other at this time in your mother's life. However, your mother is a vulnerable adult and needs to be protected, even if it's from her own daughter and niece/nephew. So, if you believe that your vulnerable mother is being manipulated, even if it's not currently having negative impacts on her (but it eventually is likely to), be proactive now and nip it in the bud before your mother is hurt by your sister and cousin. Take this action silently without advertising to your sister, mother, or cousin that you're taking any of the actions I mentioned above-- you don't want to forewarn them so they can get their ammo lined up ahead of time.

And, I agree with others who have stated that you shouldn't bad mouth your sister and cousin to your mother. It only confuses her and will force her to split her loyalties and may drive her more toward doing your sister's and cousin's bidding and falling into their manipulations.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter