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Los Angeles County Judicial System Corruption |
Why should we have to pay taxes on the judicial branch of our government that is totally corrupt! |
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The Probate MurdersPart One: The War on the Vulnerable Through the Courts
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This story raises serious issues. The commandment to “honor thy mother and father”is obviously being gutted here, with “honor thy mother and father’s cash” replacing the Fifth Commandment. And where is the legal and judicial oversight? And why is the one individual who acted with honor now demonized and under attack? Unfortunately, it appears that this story is hardly singular. In probate courts across our nation, teams of lawyers and conservators are gaining control of the finances and very lives of elderly and vulnerable men and women, and bleeding the estates in their own pursuit of wealth. The victims of this process are often isolated, without significant family. When there are heirs, the heirs are often pitted against each other and mercilessly exploited for the personal gain of the lawyers/conservators. According to her daughter-in-law, Lee Peters had been an exceptional woman. Stunningly beautiful, she had made her career in costuming for TV and film. Following her husband’s death, she had raised her four children, eventually re-marrying a man eighteen years her junior. In the mid 1990’s Lee began to exhibit signs of dementia and started to lose her sight. Her marriage fell apart and her husband left her. Her son Casey took over a care-giving role, taking Lee to medical and other appointments. He moved back into the family home in order to better care for his mother. The two other sons (the sole daughter had died some years prior) began to attempt to manipulate Lee to revoke her will and sign other legal documents in order to ensure their financial future. They set up a Trust, naming as Trustee the wife of Stephen
Peters and an unrelated attorney, Nora Hamill, who was a close associate
and advisor of son, Michael Patrick Peters. Hamill had previously been
suspended from the Illinois Bar for misconduct. When this proved unsatisfactory, Lee moved back home and was immediately threatened with eviction by her own offspring. Nora Hamill withheld Lee’s social security check. “They were trying to starve her out,” reflects Marilyn Peters. In an effort to protect Lee from further threats of eviction, Casey Peters applied in Los Angeles Superior Court to be conservator of her person only. He would thus have no access to Lee’s money, but would be able to impact such matters as where Lee would live. Lee had repeatedly stated she wished to remain in her own home, and Casey and Marilyn were, at that point, caring for her in her own residence. In this manner, Casey believed he would be able to protect his mother from threats of eviction and unwarranted moves. A reasonable gesture, this turned out to intensify the problems, as the State’s guardianship machine geared up to make mince meat out of the elderly, blind and incapacitated woman. As occurs in these proceedings, an attorney was appointed to protect the interests of the proposed conservatee. As is often typical in these proceedings, the attorney’s actions plunged his client into debt and further negatively impacted her ability to remain at home with members of her own family caring for her. (See sidebar). A new Judge took over the case, and Lee’s situation began to plummet towards disaster. Judge Aviva Bobb appointed a professional conservator, Frumeh Labow. This conservatorship lasted barely a year, and Labow resigned after accusations by Casey and Marilyn Peters that she was failing to attend to Lee’s most basic medical needs. LaBow charged $30,000 for her services. LaBow’s attorneys, Weinstock Manion Reisman Shore and Neumann, charged $70,000. LaBow was also featured in the L.A. Times expose on the conservatorship problem. On file in Lee’s conservatorship case is concern by Casey and Marilyn that Lee has developed “purple legs.” On recommendation by the conservator, Lee had been removed from her own home and was living in an assisted living facility. The facility utilized unlicensed attendants with no medical training. Marilyn Peters has repeatedly stated that concern about the discolored legs was ignored, first by the conservator LaBow, and then by the facility and Judge Bobb. Casey Peters had made a motion in Los Angeles Superior Court that Lee be seen by her own doctor, but this motion was denied by Judge Bobb. Lee Peters passed away on December 28, 2006 of
a blood clot which had migrated from her legs to her lungs. A CONVICTED FELON HAS MORE RIGHTS THAN A CONSERVATEE The end result of this is clear: the conservatee loses her dominion over her own life. In an article to the court by author and journalist Patricia Lambert, she cited the following: “Until the appointment of this conservator, Amalie was accustomed to exercising her free will, going where she wished, when she wished, seeing whom she wished—in short, she was accustomed to having control over her own life. Now she has none. She is under the thumb of a conservator and an attorney whom she regards as indifferent, even hostile, to her wishes. She has tried to dismiss the attorney but the judge ignored her letter requesting it. Now I feel Amalie is beginning to lose hope of ever being free again to make her own decisions. “The day after I saw her, I came across the following quote (in a LA Times article) from 9th Circuit Court Judge Robert M. Takasugi, whose entire family was part of the Japanese internment during WWII. Regarding his father who died at age 57, Takasugi said this: “I think he died, if anything, of the stress that was caused by feeling he was totally helpless.” Feeling “totally helpless,” I fear, is how Amalie is now feeling. And why wouldn’t she?” Patricia Lambert was then threatened by the conservator, Melodie Scott, with a Restraining Order. The judge simply ignored Lambert’s report and proceeded to rubber-stamp all Scott’s motions and accountings. The conservator’s handbook states the following: “The position of conservator is one of great trust and responsibility. The court and the conservatee are trusting you to follow the law and to act in the conservatee’s best interest. You should make choices that support, encourage, and assist the conservatee’s capabilities and wishes…” (page 2, Conservator’s Handbook). The court, in fact, is charged with far more than “trust.” Recognizing the potential for abuse in granting a stranger dominion over a vulnerable person’s affairs, the courts are charged with oversight. |
THE BEAT GOES ON The reality is that the courts are rubber-stamping decisions as well as accountings by the conservators, in what can only be considered collusion, rather than negligence on the part of the court. In 2001, Retired Riverside County Judge William Sullivan pleaded guilty to seven misdemeanor charges of making improper financial dealings in probate cases. He had presided over most of Riverside County’s probate cases between 1987 and 1999, and had retired only upon learning he was under investigation. This capped a public scandal which rocked the Inland Empire, the Bonnie Cambalik affair. Cambalik was a professional conservator, and for over twelve years was at the helm of her own firm, West Coast Conservatorships. Christopher Mannes, in an article in the California Lawyer Magazine, referred to Cambalik as “a high-society supporter of the arts with a taste for fine jewelry.” Cambalik had embarked on a systematic scheme to pad her own pockets with the funds of her helpless conservatees. Due to the diligent efforts of three individuals in far-away San Francisco, Bonnie Cambalik, was sentenced in 2000 to 26 years in prison for defrauding conservatees. Her lawyer, Michael Molloy, was sentenced to more than 16 years in prison for advising Cambalik in the thefts. Sullivan was the Judge presiding over most of Cambalik’s cases. Sullivan was ordered to pay $27,000 in fines and perform 1,000 hours of community service. It appears that his fraud amounted to around $1 million. Sullivan resigned the State Bar, and the Commission on Judicial Performance also publicly censured Sullivan and barred him from receiving an assignment, appointment, or reference of work from any California state court. Consider the situation of E. Joan Nelms. She has served as a judge pro-tem in the San Bernardino Court system, where she has regularly heard her own firm’s cases, in obvious conflict of interest. A compilation of these was submitted to the California Attorney General’s office. At this time, Nelms is still serving as Judge Pro-tem in that district. Jeff Golin has been battling in the courts for
over six years. He has now filed a civil rights lawsuit against the County
of Santa Clara, who removed his grown autistic daughter from his care.
Golin is alleging wrongdoing by the County, San Andreas Regional Center,
the City of Palo Alto, Stanford Hospital and others, whom he states created
false records in order to trump up charges against him and his wife, for
the purpose of removing Nancy Golin from their home. The Golins have set
up a comprehensive website –freenancy.com, which contains the story
of Nancy’s life with her parents, the “kidnapping by the State,”
court documents, and regular updates. And in 2006, Schwarzenegger also appointed one Mark Mandio to the bench in California Superior Court. Mandio had been the point-man in the Riverside D.A’s office on elder abuse cases, and had a history of dropping the ball on reports of conservatorship abuse. His reward for contributing to the problem he was mandated to address was a plum appointment, and Mandio is now sitting on the bench in Riverside Superior Court. Neither the Riverside D.A.’s office nor the office of the Presiding Judge of Riverside Superior Court responded to phone calls from TAB requesting input on allegations against Judge Mandio. Barbara Jagiello, a San Francisco lawyer who was pivotal in putting Bonnie Cambalik behind bars, has this to say about the failure of the judicial system in adequately protecting the elderly from abuse by court appointed conservators: “What we saw with Bonnie Cambalik is that these professional fiduciaries and conservators become so well ensconsed that there is no one you can go to and complain. And that is the real problem. The judge is used to seeing the same conservator every day. The court appointed counsel won’t complain because he has to work with the conservator in other cases. The caregivers won’t complain because they will lose the account. The nursing homes won’t complain because the conservators will pull all their patients out of that home. It becomes a closed circuit, and there is a disincentive for someone to say, “Something’s wrong here.” When I got behind the scenes with Bonnie Cambalik, everyone told me “We all know what she is doing. We can’t do anything about it, but we all know.” To be continued…..
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