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My elderly father has fallen prey to several scams but still has his wits about him in terms of functioning. There are no obvious signs of dementia as of current, but he seems to communicate with scammers too often and it puts his safety at risk and the safety of those around him at risk.
He fell in mid-October at his home and laid on the bathroom floor for a few days prior to being discovered. When he was discovered, he was immediately transported to the hospital. He was disoriented the first few days in the hospital. Hospital staff encouraged me to apply for guardianship due to scammers finically exploiting him. So, I applied at the county courthouse.
At first, I thought I alone would be capable of being the guardian. But then I realized my dad never listens to a word I say to keep himself out of danger. So, I bought this to the attention of social workers at the hospital. The social workers told me at the time that they recommended a co-guardian, and they would have several co-guardian candidates contact me. I would be able to vet them and determine who I felt could best perform the duties.
Instead of the several potential co-guardian's calling me I had only one potential co-guardian call me just a few days prior to the guardianship hearing. I did not have much time to vet her, and she ultimately ended up a co-guardian with me once the judge made a ruling on guardianship.
Once she was appointed co-guardian, she was insistent on selling my dad's house despite not even reviewing his finances yet. She verbally noted that she wants to take away his phone.
I did not necessarily agree with her strategy, but she is insistent. I have attempted to get in contact with attorneys to discuss other options but once attorneys in the county she is in learn of her involvement they want no part of talking to me. I have reached out to other attorneys in proximate counties. They either are not interested or are not willing to work in the county where the court is. As for legal advice I feel like I have reached the end of my rope.
He is currently in a nursing home for rehabilitation. I spoke with a social worker and discharge coordinator at the nursing home yesterday. They suggested the co-guardian was derelict since my dad would be released from the nursing home soon and she had no plan for him to go elsewhere. More specifically, an assisted living facility since his home is currently a mess due to the accident (i.e. the fall).
I was finally able to reach the co-guardian via phone. She stated she’s on vacation at the end of this week and I would have to help find my dad and put him in an assisted living facility myself. But I have no experience doing this nor am I comfortable in explaining to him how to get into the facility. He is obviously very resistive to the idea. The co-guardian is telling me to find the facility and take him there and not to explain anything to him except that this is the next step in the process.
So, in summary I cannot find legal help and I am not getting a lot of help from the co-guardian who’s supposedly more experienced. I don’t disagree that my dad may need to be in assisted living, but I don’t want my dad to think this is permanent. Selling his house may give him this idea. I also don’t want to be cold by telling him that “this is the next step” and limit communication between him and the outside world by removing his phone.

Find a lawyer that specializes in elder law or family law. I do not think co-guardianship is helping you. You need to ask courts to let you resume full guardianship. Then, ask social services/ case manager at the current facility for a meeting. Ask about your dad's progress and if he is stable enough to return home alone or with assistance. He will at the least need somebody to check in on him daily. Get his phone set up to block all phone calls except those he would recognize - family and friends. Also put child protective settings on his computer since there isn't a setting to help protect seniors from scammers. If he is not stable enough to return home, ask for list of facilities his insurance will cover and have immediate availability. Then call or visit to make your decision on which will be the best fit for him. Let dad know that he is going to another place for longer term care and rehab - enough truth in that to help him adjust.
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Igloocar Nov 12, 2024
Thank you, Tamara. I have not had to do this myself, but I know you can limit calls on a smartphone and set up parental controls on the computer. Thomas1974 should learn how to do this for his father's phone and computer. This will cause much less disruption than taking both away! The co-guardian should know this, also.

I don't know if this is doable, but perhaps Thomas can tell the court he did not receive names of any co-guardians to vet other than this one, and this one is not satisfactory: he should be specific. That the co-guardian advises selling the home when the father does not have a diagnosis of any cognitive impairment does not make sense! While there are problems, first you clarify hw situation before you fix it! Thomas should arrange for his father to have neuropsychological testing as soon as possible.
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The fact that this co-guardian is married to a lawyer seems to be a conflict of interest. I think you need legal help before your dad is scammed again -- by the co-guardian. And get a lawyer that has no connections with her husband.
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MargaretMcKen Nov 10, 2024
I very much doubt your guess about a 'conflict of interest' and that D may be scammed again because the court-appointed co-guardian is married to a lawyer. After all, that would in your view be a 'conflict of interest' every time the court appointed her to anyone.
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Thomas,

I just spent about an hour online researching "co-guardianship". It's quite unusual and was fascinating to me. Plus I admit to avoiding election day in general.

From every single thing I can find it is best for the two in these very unusual circumstances, especially when one is court appointed, to come to agreement.
BUT, if they cannot come to agreement there is one and only one way to address it.
THAT'S the COURT.

When agreement is NOT reached it is a simple matter of the guardians taking it to court. Filing and waiting and filing and waiting and filing and waiting. What an education!
And after all of that: the court will make the decision.

Unless you want this to be ongoing and to spend most of your time in the courts filing actions (you will learn lots about the law for sure), I would suggest trying really hard to come to some agreements here. The court Fiduciary is gonna be WAY ahead of you in how to do all this.

What you have, when you think about it, is kind of a war of two parents over a minor child after a divorce.
You can spend all your time and money in court, or you can come to an agreement about what seems best for poor dad.
Good luck.
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ElizabethAR37 Nov 10, 2024
I definitely picked up on avoiding election day!
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If the scammers are getting to him via his phone, then controlling his phone is the only option to prevent scamming.

I got my Mom a RAZ Mobility phone after her flipphone broke and she was making inappropriate calls. From an app on my phone, I control who can call her (her grandkids, her family, certain stores, neighbors and friends) so, no scammers can get to her. The phone uses large photos of the people who she can call and I can control what hours of the day she can call them. She was able to learn how to use this new phone, but not sure your Dad will be able to. You won't know until you try it.

I'm not sure what you thought a co-guardian would add to the situation. She seems to now just add a layer of complexity. She's not going to be your go-fer to do your guardian work for you.

I think I would see if I could get rid of the co-guardian arrangement but then you are "it" in terms of problem solving. This forum has lots and lots of info to help in that area.

The likelihood that your Dad will fall again is now higher. He is also continuing to lose his executive functioning (and this is why he falls victim to scamming). I'm assuming he had to take an extensive cognitive test to assess the level of his impairment for guardianship. This should give you a good idea why having him live on his own is really not going to be safe for him going forward. With cognitive decline/memory impairment he no longer is able to make good judgments about his wellbeing. Dementia also causes people to lose their ability to have empathy for others, so he won't care that he's running his guardians around ragged trying to appease his now unreasonable expectations.

Assisted living would at least give him social exposure and opportunities for activities. He may actually be a candidate for MC, so please ponder this. No one ever likes the thought of this type of drastic change, but it's necessary to keep our LOs safe when they are a danger to themselves.
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You say attorneys will not see you.
That is, to be honest, impossible.
I think there is here a basic lack of understanding because what I think has happened is that a court appointed Fiduciary is currently acting as guardian because, perhaps, you had a poor idea of how to function as guardian.

I do not know nor have ever in a long career heard of anything like a "co guardian" in the manner to which you describe.
Nor have I ever heard of an attorney paid refusing to see someone because there is a "co-guardian".

Really sorry, but your story isn't making sense to me.
What IS clear is that your father currently has a court appointed guardian.
SO...........................
1. When the nursing rehab center calls you you should tell them the guardian's number. Tell them that they must work out discharge plans with the guardian, and if they feel there is 24/7 care needed that they should discuss this with the court appointed guardian.
2. If your father is discharged unsafe to function you should FIRST call the guardian and tell her he isn't safe. If she's not responsive, call an ambulance for transport to hospitial. If they will not transport, call APS to report as "Emergency Senior at Risk and guardian not responding". If they are non-responsive call the police.

Good luck.
Again,
I have never heard of a "co guardian" appointed by a court.
I have never heard of an attorney who will not see you when you are willing to
pay for his or her time.
Something is missing here; I cannot fathom what that missing piece/pieces might be.
By the way, given your father now likely has a diagnosis of dementia (which you do not mention) as you cannot have ANY guardian without that; courts do not rip a citizen's rights from him unless he cannot operate for himself--I AGREE the home should be sold and the funds should go for your father's care. That is up to the court-appointed guardian to decide. And in absence, given vacation, she should notify the rehab when she will return to place your dad. Meanwhile he will likely become private pay, which is costly to be certain.

As you can imagine, filing again a court appointed guardian is going to be very costly, almost impossible. And I do not know the reasons there IS a court appointed guardian. Only the court knows that.

Given I have to way to know what the situation here is legally, that's sadly the best I have to offer in terms of suggestions.
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Thomas1974 Nov 5, 2024
It is not impossible attorneys will not see me. It is very possible, and it is in fact occurring. The county where the guardianship hearing occurred is remote and in a rural area. The woman who was appointed as co-guardian by the courts has a husband who is an attorney in said county. Every time I mention the co-guardian’s name (i.e. to describe the case & thus the reason to see an atty) attorneys in this rural county seem to not want to be involved either due to conflict of interest or due to their relationship with this co-guardian and/or her husband. As for attorneys outside that county who will discuss this situation are few. Of those attorney’s, few are interested in assisting when I advise them of the case details.

I described above that the woman was appointed a co-guardian aside me. She was appointed by the court; so, you never having heard of it is a moot point here. As I describe above, I lack knowledge on how guardianship works so the idea behind having a co-guardian is to gain direction from a person who is supposedly skilled and has experience doing this. 
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I can’t grasp the legal relationship between you and the ‘co-guardian’. Who calls the shots? She is ‘insistent’ about selling the house, and ‘insistent’ about removing the phone. What are your rights? You have tried to find ‘attorneys to discuss other options’, but once ‘they learn of her involvement they want no part of talking to me’. This sounds like she calls the shots, and they know it. There should be some paperwork which clarifies all of this.

Perhaps what you wanted was a co-guardian who could and would carry out your own ideas - they could call the shots with your father because he “never listens to a word I say”. You also want flexibility to change your ideas in future. You “don’t want my dad to think AL is permanent. Selling his house may give him this idea”. !!! It usually is permanent! In fact your own 'flexible' approach is not 'normal'. Finding attorneys to question all of this is not the way it is supposed to work.

I’m sure that things are not working out well for you with this ‘co-guardian’, but it’s easy to see that it’s a tricky job for her. It might help if you try a counseling session for yourself, to clarify your own ideas. Then you could at least try to get your relationship with her on a more understood basis.
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From a browser search about co-guardianship

"Division of responsibilities:
The court can specify how responsibilities will be divided between the co-guardians, such as one managing finances and the other handling medical decisions."

Perhaps the best solution is for a judge to clarify what roles each of you will play. You may not like this but it is a solution to your situation.
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A Co-Guardian? What is that?
I can not imagine why anyone would suggest such a thing, unless they found you not suited to the task.
I don't understand why you can't find legal help. Find an elder law attorney.
Or just start calling attorneys in your area. Do you have any other family members who could or would help? It sounds from what you have explained that you are totally unsure what to do. You need help. But I doubt an assigned co-guardian who doesn't know your dad is the person to help in this matter.
This is your opportunity to do research and step up and "take charge" of matters to the best of your ability. Most of us haven't prepared for what to do when something like this happens in our life. It's a quick learning process! And you may make mistakes along the way, but all you need to do is keep focused on your dad's best interests and make the best decisions you can in the moment.
You can make different decisions later as needed.
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It would not surprise me if the court appointed a co-guardian because OP did not have clear ideas about what to do or how to do it. Examples are what is involved in going into AL and in paying for AL. Obviously OP was not on the spot or making decisions. 'Co-guardianship' surely would not have happened if OP had been willing and able to “step up and take charge of matters”. Perhaps the court genuinely “found OP not suited to the task”, and thought a co-guardian would do it better? OP's question is "I am having difficulty finding help". These decisions for a parent are usually something that is done by family, not by 'helpers'.

It may not be a good idea to assume that both the court and the co-guardian have got things wrong. OP, please don't accuse the co-guardian or her husband of being a potential scammer. It's defamatory.
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Why would he need a co-guardian? Perhaps OP simply kept saying 'I don't know what to do, I need help, I can't find any help'. That might be what got it to court in the first place - social worker frustration. The co-guardian tells him precisely what to do (sell the house and take him to AL), and he's not sure he likes it.

My first post suggested "It might help if you try a counseling session for yourself, to clarify your own ideas". Perhaps a long term lack of confidence resulting from "my dad never listens to a word I say"?
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TouchMatters Nov 10, 2024
Very good observation / feedback. Thank you. Gena
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