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Hi,
I live in CT. I've lived with my dad for years and the past few years he has needed more help, after getting over Covid I hired a friend to stop by to make sure he was awake and get his breakfast, help him with errands and appointments, and also come back at 6 to make sure he had dinner. Friends would stop by during the day. I was able to work full time and enjoy time with my father.
In August, a former employee of his came to visit. She had nowhere to stay and no job. While here, my dad happened to have a fall and fell ill with a 24 hour flu and she looked after him. He told her she couldn't stay, but eventually he wanted her too and she took over all the caregiver duties.
Flash forward to now. Some things built up slowly, the worst we learned about last week. His cognitive skills have declined (He didn't know the day 3 times last week). She is controlling his medication and I overheard them arguing about it. Myself and several people have observed her drunk in the house. She argues and speaks rudely to me and anyone else in the house other than my father. He has fewer visitors, including myself. I found out he allowed her to use his debit card to make deposits at the ATM. I set up his banking, so I went in and looked at the account. It went from a handful of deposits to numerous ATM withdrawals, Best Buy, liquor store charges, day after day. My father never leaves the house. When confronted my father said he didn't recognize them, then said he gave her the card, then she flipped out and started yelling at me and my brother who came in from out of town. She has accused me of hacking her phone. We asked her to leave, my father doesn't seem to understand why and wanted to give her two more weeks. Immediately I didn't feel comfortable with an extra 2 weeks. One day in she informed me "I ain't leavin". Do I call the police or Social Services?. The house is in my name and I have POA. I'm taking time off work because I can't focus to be there and worry about him with her.
You can probably tell, I could rattle off more issues.

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1. Report dad's cards as stolen

2. Freeze his credit.

3. Call dad's bank and have all of his accounts closed and re-opened with new acct numbers.

4. Call Adult Protective services and report financial abuse of an elder.

5. Call the police and report theft. While she is being booked, call an emergency locksmith and have the locks changed.

6. Call your dad's lawyer and ask if this is the correct way to proceed.

Is she has changed her address to dad's she may have rights and will need to be evicted.
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You say that the POA is already in your name. You need to cancel the charge cards; they will need copies of your POA to do so.
You need a diagnosis of dementia and the correct paperwork.
You need an account on which you pay the bills, the paperwork (or online access) needs to be yours as POA. Leave a small spending account with your Dad's that is his to manage.
If neither you nor this person lives with Dad it may be time to get Dad into care. Coordinate with his MD.
You are likely going to have to do eviction from YOUR home with a landlord/tenent attorney.
You should open an elder abuse case with APS using your POA papers to do so.
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1, Report the credit card as stolen and report all the fraudulent charges. Think about changing all the banking info and accounts so this person doesn't just switch to another method of getting his money.

2. Call the authorities (aka police) to have this person removed from the home. Place a restraining order on this person so they can not come back.

3. File charges against this person for fraud and elder abuse.

4. Get your father help either by placing him into assisted living or hiring certified home health care aides through an agency.

5. Hug your father and let him give you hugs back. You and he are going through a difficult time and need to encourage each other. You and he can get through this.

Hugs!
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Sounds like she's over-medicating herself and dad.

You need a lawyer. Yesterday. Start eviction proceedings against her. Yes, send her out and change the locks.

Perhaps dad needs to go for a month's respite at a local AL while you straighten this out.

Just so you know, if she is exchanging caregiving for a place to live, that's illegal. You are in violation of labor laws and she could make a complaint, I think.

If dad is going to remain in the home, I would get those meds and secure them in a pill safe in YOUR part of the house. From now on, only you dispense pills, morning and evening. Once her access to them is cut off, she may move on.

Please lawyer up.
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KPWCSC Feb 2022
I would think that eviction proceedings would not be necessary unless they had a contract. Sounds like she came as a visitor and they should be every right to say she is no longer welcome. If she refuses, yes call the authorities and even get a restraining order... I would hope the authorities will have suggestions of where to go from here.
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I am going to add one more piece of advice to all the others. Dad is scared that no one else will take care of him. You need to have a plan for caregiving for Dad and assure him of this is how he will be taken care of. What is your plan?
Dad sees her only as someone to care for him. He ignores or forgets any of the negative issues.
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Ella2021 Feb 2022
That's so easy. Start over with another person and you buy what they need.
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If you are his POA, you say where the money goes. In fact, you are liable if someone takes advantage of him. Tell her that you are calling elder abuse and she can be arrested and charged if she misspends his money. His having dementia is your way of saying he is not competent to agree for her to have it.
Call both, or get an elder attorney to speak for you. They have a way of scaring them into compliance. But seriously, tell her that you are liable legally, and that she is putting you in that position. Change his bank info and move his money, get only yourself on the card. We had someone like that with my dad and took his life savings down to $5000 before we could stop her .
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Thank you AlvaDeer and BarbBrooklyn. Its solid advice based on other info I've been given.
1. I've secured his cards, and bank account.
2. I ended up having to call the police yesterday. My dad was VERY groggy all afternoon and a friend stopped off to visit who had hemmed his pants. He gave her some money and the aid went nuts. It was so loud I had to investigate. If she wasn't drunk, she must have a manic personality disorder the way she was yelling at ME. I videotaped most of it. She was laying on my father, grabbing his arm so he would put it around her yelling out
"You won't take anything else from me"
"I LOVE this MAN!"
"most of those charges were for him and he said I had permission!"
"YOU just want his MONEY. I TAKE care of him 24-7"------I
"He just wants me out so he can put you in a nursing home!"
When she stood up and he was trying to stand up and she was pushing on him and yelled at her to get off is when I called the police.

3. Police couldn't remove her because she is a private employee with no contract.. He said its equal to moving in a gf and since my dad't didn't complain. He kept saying everything was fine and I was just overreacting. The officers said I would need to evict her since I'm the homeowner. Since I have my own area of the house he suggested I just stay away that night, but I was surprised they felt comfortable leaving him in her care. She really didn't calm down

I'm deciding between calling Adult Protective Services and filing police charges just to get her out. I'm also visiting his doctor Thursday, it helps that we both have the same family doctor for the past 30 years who we know socially as well. They called me with some concerns the first time they saw the new caregiver as well as yesterday. Apparently she called in asking for refills on his Vicodin and Xanax. That set off alarm bells over there. She had no problem calling me when we left the house today all friendly "oh, hey, don't forget to stop by the doctor's office after the accountant to see if they left his refills in an envelope on the door".

Thanks for listening, this seems like a friendly place to rant. I know I can't keep doing it to my friends.

Today I took him to the accountant and our new Shake Shack. In the car he said to me "you promised I could keep making my own decisions and I want her to stay, who else is going to take care of me?" He was much more lucid today. I said "After what she did yesterday, laying on you, yelling at me". I had to show him the video and he didn't want to watch, but he didn't remember it.

This is ripping me apart. She has isolated him so much, he hardly gets any friends and relatives to stop by. My step brother and sister live out of state. He doesn't believe me when I told him people don't come over specifically because of her. His one friend he listens too loves to talk, but then when push comes to shove will say "its a family decision" I really wish some of the older male relatives in my family would step up and say something. I'm almost fifty, but I know in his mind I'm still a kid, so he doesn't want my advice and if I take her away all on my own I'm gonna be the bad guy.
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lealonnie1 Feb 2022
Can you send this lunatic 'caregiver' on an errand to go pick something up at the store for dad? Then have the locks changed while she's gone. No joke. It's ok to be the 'bad guy' in dad's eyes, as long as you get her OUT of the house for good. Then you can call the police again and show them the video and maybe get a restraining order against this woman also. Also get eviction papers going in case you need them.
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Who do you report elder abuse to in CT?
To make a report, call Protective Services for the Elderly at the Department of Social Services during business hours at the toll-free line: 1-888-385-4225. After business hours or on weekends or state holidays, please call Infoline at 2-1-1.
Change your locks and call the police if she shows up.
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The house is in your name? She’s out. That’s all there is to it. First though I would immediately cancel the debit card and tell your father that until she is gone you will be doing the shopping. Once she’s out you can reorder the card.
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I would call the police with deed in hand. If the house is in your name, she must vacate. Move in temporarily to protect your Dad, hopefully with brother as support, until this is resolved. Have Dad's mail forwarded to your address. Get the debit card back or have the bank issue a new one. Take charge of all his banking by adding your name to his accounts. Ultimately, you will feel most secure if you get a lawyer's consult to know what to expect, what steps to take, and all your options. Please let us know the outcome.
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