Sunday, May 29, 2011

Wisconsin / Study: Guardian systems flaws allow for exploitation

Wisconsin / Study: Guardian systems flaws allow for exploitation



APPLETON — A nonpartisan federal report released in the fall warned of flaws in the guardianship system that leave vulnerable people open to exploitation ...

Green Bay Press Gazette - 4 related articles

Study: Guardian system's flaws allow for exploitation - WISinfo.com

May 29, 2011 ... Study: Guardian system's flaws allow for exploitation. Appleton man accused of mishandling clients' accounts. By Jim Collar ...

www.wisinfo.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2011105290606

APPLETON A nonpartisan federal report released in the fall warned of flaws in the guardianship system that leave vulnerable people open to exploitation ...

oneclick.indiatimes.com/article/0bU05ZMf4P05p

Study: Guardian system's flaws allow for exploitation

May 28, 2011 ... APPLETON — A nonpartisan federal report released in the fall warned of flaws in the guardianship system that leave vulnerable people open to ...

packersnews.greenbaypressgazette.com/.../Study-Guardian-system-s-flaws-allow-exploitation

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... Wisconsin also charges man in abortionist-attack case · Shawano pair score a perfect 36 on ACT · Study: Guardian systems flaws allow for exploitation ...

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Study: Guardian system's flaws allow for exploitation. APPLETON — A nonpartisan federal report released in the fall warned of flaws in the guardianship ...

www.postcrescent.com/section/GPG - Cached

Last hour — Chronicle Telegram Dorothy Jacobs; Last hour — Green Bay Press Gazette Study: Guardian systems flaws allow for exploitation ...

Red flags raised for years over vulnerabilities in guardianship system

May 29, 2011 ... A 2007 study released by U.S. Sens. Herb Kohl, D-Wis., and Gordon H. ... In many states, she said, families can examine a guardian's books, ... allowing the abuse of vulnerable seniors and their assets to continue," the report says. .... GAO report about cases of financial exploitation, neglect and ...

oshkoshhub.thenorthwestern.com/.../article?...guardianship-system

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Mom, son charged in abuse of bedridden man

Mom, son charged in abuse of bedridden man


Diane Kelley, 63, wife of alleged abuse victim (Winthrop Harbor police photo / May 25, 2011)
By Ruth Fuller, Special to the Tribune
8:41 p.m. CDT, May 25, 2011

A man and his mother have been arrested in far north suburban Winthrop Harbor after authorities said they used pepper spray and duct tape to restrain the woman's husband, who has dementia and is bedridden.
At a court appearance Wednesday, Lake County Assistant State's Attorney Marc Bangser said they were taken into custody after a waitress at a Waukegan restaurant overheard them "bragging" about what they'd done to the man, who Bangser said is a 74-year-old Navy veteran.
Anthony Kelley, 40, the son of the alleged victim, and his mother, Diane Kelley, 63, are charged with aggravated battery to a person over 60, officials said. She also is charged with unlawful restraint.
Bangser said the Kelleys, of the 11000 block of Adams Avenue, used duct tape to tie the man to his bed. The prosecutor said Anthony Kelley also admitted to using pepper spray on his father, while Diane Kelley admitted slapping him and hitting him with a book bag out of frustration as she was caring for him.
Bond was set at $50,000 each by Judge Raymond Collins. The prosecution had sought $100,000.
The man is now at Vista Medical Center East in Waukegan.
While requesting public defenders, Diane Kelley said she is a housewife and her son said he was studying to become "a Russian monk."

Please read complete article at link below:

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/northnorthwest/ct-met-elder-abuse-20110525,0,3875966.story

Editor's Note:  This abuse is so bad...I cannot comment on it. Lucius Verenus, Schoolmaster, ProbateSharks.com

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Ken Ditkowsky wrote 5-22-2011

On Sun, May 22, 2011 at 8:50 AM, kenneth ditkowsky wrote:

I did - it was what is needed. Now Gloria has to play it right. I set it up for her and if she follows the plan she will squarely put the issue to the Court. The problem is she is not comfortable with using the rifle bullet approach - she likes the shot gun.

The Coopers, Ken and Bev, have been fighting this situation for a long time with great frustration. Many other people also have the problem however the fight has been disorganized and ineffective because they have been able to pick the victims off one at the time.

What the victims do not understand is that law enforcement is also frustrated. They work up a case and the people that they expect to help them either fall short or become adversaries. In particular - I have children. I raised them and protected them from just about every scenario that could be adverse. It is a habit! If I should become the victim of abuse or financial exploitation out of habit I would continue to protect my children - even from me! Imagine the poor policeman who works up a case and brings it to Court to have the victim say: "my daughter treats me like a queen" (Mary's words)

The other side is no smarter than we are and in many cases has no more avarice or arrogance. We have to pick our battles. I like the Sykes case because 1) it has all the elements, 2) the people on the other-side are 'hateful', 3) You've read Farenga's e-mails - they speak for themselves, 4) the violations are stark, and 5) the incentive for the IRS to nail the plenary guardian is fantastic.

I am always encouraged by a matter that I had about a decade ago. My client's husband went into the hospital for minor surgery however the operation went terribly wrong. It went so wrong that the entire medical staff involved went into a depressive state. It was sooooo bad that when the husband went into recovery the nurse forgot to put up the side bar. Naturally husband fell out of the bed and hit his head! Worse yet there were no brain waves detectable.

Wife was referred to me. My first step was to run to the probate court and have her appointed plenary guardian. Armed with the order I waited for the hospital attorney to call me. He did! He demanded we remove husband from the hospital - he told me it was not a warehouse. My arrogant remark was = you did it! he belongs to you! You take care of him.

While the games were going on (at the same time) a young ex-tern (or whatever they are called) who just got his narcotic license was doing rounds. He walked into the room that husband lay - as a veggie - and demanded to know why husband had not been placed on xyz medicine. The nurse remarked that she could not administer xyz without an order! He gave the order.

The next morning I was cutting the grass and my wife told me that I had a telephone call that she thought that I should take. It is my client! She requested my permission to take Arnie (husband) home. I told her she did not need my permission but I strongly advised against her taking home a 250 pound veggie! She told me he wanted to go home - and asked me if I wanted to talk to him. You know what I said.

even though I am technically challenged I was able to conference in the doctor, who repeated almost word for word the oaths that I uttered! As tears move mountains we agreed that when the doctor did his rounds on Sunday, if Arnie was able to dress himself, do his toilet, and sign himself out he could go home. On Sunday, the doctor found Arnie dressed, packed, neat as pin newly shaved and sitting on the bed ready to go home. HE DID!

Apparently the medication prescribed by the young doctor did the trick. Of course my client thinks that I am dumber than a stone and much more stupid! I however was delighted for both of them! the last thing I heard was that he recovered fully except the botched operation left him disabled.

Where there is life there is hope! I never cease to be amazed at how little I know and how impotent I am.

Ken Ditkowsky

http://www.ditkowskylawoffice.com/



Ken, The first half of your letter is brilliant and sums up the problems we are all experiencing in just a few paragraphs. May I have your permission to publish it in the blog.

It reminds me of a book I read many years ago written by a Holocaust survivor, Prof. Boris Kader, of Heidelberg University, entiltled, "Life I salute you" After Dr. Kader was literally physically driven from his lecture hall, had his career stolen from him, he chose life and escaped from Germany. Dr. Kader gave examples of heroism exemplified by Jewish General von Sommer of the Austrian army. General von Sommer, after Hitlers brown shirts broke into his home and in an told him to "scrub the street", asked them to wait while he changed clothing. The bully boys smirked and waited for the gun shot that never came. General von Sommer, resplendent in his full dress uniform with all his WWI decorations came out and said, "I am ready." The brown shirts snapped to attention, saluted the General and left.

We, victims and fighters face the same brown shirted fascists that Dr. Kader encountered in 1930's Germany, except they wear black robes and polyester suits. These Cook County Probate Court parasites portray a perverted doctrine that is a parody of what the law is meant to be. The Shark's Blog and NASGA website and other blogs display and document thousands of examples of this "criminal enterprise" that rivals the Mafias'. Ken, sometime in the future we should talk so I can tell you how I really feel about these vermin. Ken Cooper
 
of course you can publish what I write.


Unfortunately I know exactly what you are feeling. In the early days of my practice I was insulated from the corruption because I happen to fall in with the 'right crowd!' These lawyers actually practiced law! However, within a short time I got a call from a Judge = at home! He said the 'bid is five' I did not know what he meant, so after he hung up I called one of my friends! He told me that the other side had given the judge a five thousand dollar bribe, and unless my client beat the 'bid' we would lose. We lost! I appealed and on the very day that Kennedy was killed in Dallas the lawyers met and we settled the case (which was on appeal). I never allowed another of my cases to go before the offending Judge. However, a Judge by the name of B. Fain Tucker apparently felt that I did not play the game right and she made it a point to rule against me on every Motion. Fortunately, I found a way to get away from her! The case went to trial and I won.

Lawyers in the 60's were different. We were all friends and we co-operated. When you got a case you called the other side and asked him what he 'had.' He told you, and you made a complete and honest disclosure to him. We then figured out what we could agree upon and then did exactly that. This usually reduced the dispute to couple of issues. We then took the issues to the judge and in a good 90% of the cases the dispute was over. Today - the young lawyers will lie to your face!

yes sir! I hope that you feel better than I do about my brothers!

Ken Ditkowsky

http://www.ditkowskylawoffice.com/

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Community Calls for Return of Kino to Original Owner

Community Calls for Return of Kino to Original Owner



Meredith Hoenes, edited by Jason Vaughn
10:32 p.m. CDT, May 19, 2011

INDEPENDENCE, Mo.— An Independence man lost his dog, Kino, after he was rushed to the hospital. The shelter says that the dog was adopted out in accordance to state law, but that hasn't stopped the uproar in the community, as now people rally to reunite the man and his dog.

Officials with the Independence Animal Shelter says that the facility has been swamped with calls from metro residents urging them to reunite Kino with his original owner, Craig Van Compernolle. The calls have been prompted in part by a Facebook page - "Bring Kino Home."

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Lisa Welch says that she went to middle school with Van Compernolle, and although she hasn't seen him in years, Kino's story touched her heart.
"It's not a matter of knowing the family it's a matter of doing what is right. This is his family, it's his companion," said Welch.
Welch, with a friend, started spreading Kino's story through social networking, contacting local radio stations, animal groups and even political representatives.
"we've left messages for the governor, we've left messages for Clair McCaskill, no return as of yet, but we're still trying," said Welch.
Van Compernolle's sister, Tammy J. Smith, who has been fighting to get the dog back for months, says that she is amazed by how fast word has spread.
"There's a lot of people that have personally inboxed me on my Facebook page to tell me how very sorry they are, and I really and truly appreciate that and so does my brother," said Smith.
The Independence Animal Shelter maintains that they did nothing wrong by adopting Kino out to another family. Under Missouri law, shelters are allowed to adopt out animals after 10 days of no contact with the animal's owner. Kino was adopted out after 12 days.
"If we have contact, if we have info, if we just have people communicating with us, then we'll do the best we can to make it right for them," said shelter manager Aimee Wells.
The city says that the adopting family has been contacted, and they want to keep the dog. The city did not tell them all of the details of the situation, saying that it would be unfair pressure on the family.
Welch says only the shelter knows Kino's current family and hopes they pass on the message.
"It's more of a life lesson of doing what's the right thing to do. For humanity, to show compassion," said Welch.
Copyright © 2011, WDAF-TV

Please read complete story and video at link below:

http://www.fox4kc.com/news/wdaf-community-calls-for-return-of-kino-to-original-owner-20110519,0,274562.story

Editor’s note: It appears that the Probate Court of Cook County has competition for its brand of injustice.  As one Sharkette noted, “What's even sadder is that this dog gets more attention than our loved ones. Our loved ones get stolen from us, they're given to strangers and we can't rally this kind of support or get them in the news.”

The sad case of Alice R. Gore, a 99 year old disabled ward:  Judge Kowamota and the Probate Court of Cook County parasites and vultures picked her one million dollar estate clean in 3 years.  There was no money to bury Alice left in the estate and her family had to scrounge up the funds for a paupers funeral! Yes, and the public cares more about dogs! 

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Wanted! We have had inquiries

Wanted! We have had inquiries...

We have had inquiries about the following list of attorneys, judges, guardians and other fiduciaries encountered by our viewers. If you have any information on any of these individuals, please email us at verenusl@gmail.com or phone (224) 365-5770. We would appreciate your input. This dynamic list will be updated frequently. This list and any information gathered from it is being compiled for educational purposes and does not necessarily suggest untoward behaviour of those parties listed. Lucius Verenus, Schoolmaster, ProbateSharks.com


Ingrid Babitsky IL Caregiver
Costigan Niedle IL Paralegal
Melanie Frazier IL Guardian
Miriam Solo IL Attorney (GAL) aka Miriam Greenfield aka Miriam Faskowitz aka Miriam Solveichik
David Martin IL Attorney (GAL)
Melinda Martin IL Attorney (GAL)
Lynne Kowamoto IL-TX Ex-Judge  **
Jane Stuart IL Judge
Benjamin Topp IL Care Management
Sally Griffin IL Trust Officer
Janna Dutton IL Attorney
Morris Esformes IL FL NY Nursing homes owner
Moshe Faskowitz IL FL NY Rabbi
Pam Chwala IL RN(case manager)
Bruce Lange IL Attorney
Devon Bank IL Fiduciary
Tom Kleinhinz IL CEO Rehab Assist
Karen Bowes IL Attorney
Peter Schmiedel, IL Attorney
Kevin Carter IL Agent for Rehab Assist
Cynthia Feranga IL Attorney (GAL)
Maureen Connor IL Judge
James Reily IL Judge
Joel Brodsky IL Attorney
Len LeRose IL Attorney (GAL)
Dawn Lewandowski-Keller IL Attorney
John Fleming IL Judge
Ruben Garcia IL Attorney (GAL)
Donita Link IL Nursing Home Administrator
Adam Stern IL Attorney GAL
Helen Grimaldi IL Elder Abuse investigator for Catholic Charities
Kindred Guardian Services, inc. IL Care givers
Signe Gleeson IL CEO Eldercare Solutions Case management
Dr. Geoffrey Shaw IL Physician
Dr. Stephen Fox IL Physician
Dr. Mark Amdur IL Physician
Home Instead Caregiving Agency in Chicago on Marine Drive IL Caregivers
MB Financial Bank IL Fiduciary
Northern Trust Bank IL Fiduciary
First Nations Bank of Canada Manatoba (FNBC) Fiduciary
Editor's note: (FNBC) is not to be confused with the First National Bank of Chicago. This Canadian Tribal bank is used for Chicago Probate Court trusts. Why????  Any of the DOJ folks who frequent our site...This confusing use of a tribal bank (FNBC) should raise RED FLAGS. Lucius Verenus, Schoolmaster, ProbateSharks.com
Laura Bice     IL     Attorney
Tom Brewer   IL     Attorney, former FBI agent
Mary Raleigh  IL    Attorney, GAL
Michael J. Crowley    IL   Real Estate
Lifecare           IL    Guardian
Matthew McQuiston  IL Attorney, Accountant
Katten, Muchen, Rosenman  IL Law Firm
Richard M. Daley, IL Of Counsel, Katten, Muchen, Rosenman
Melvin Katten,   IL    Attorney
Myrrha Guzman   IL   ARDC
Brandi Kukurba IL Elder Abuse Investigator - Catholic Charities
Sheryl Fuhr   IL  Elder Law Attorney
James Meyer  IL  Attorney, GAL
Darryl Rosenzweig  IL  Attorney
Kathleen Meersman Murphey  IL  Attorney, GAL
American Bank & Trust   IL  Fiduciary
Amy McCarty IL  Elder Law Attorney
VITAS Hospice  IL
 Michael Hubbard GAL, IL Attorney
Philip Tortorich, Attorney,  Katten Muchen
Mary Hays, Attorney,   Aronberg Goldgehn
Heidi Kronnenberg, guardian, worked for Rehab Assist
Magnolia Care Solutions
 Ray J. Koenig III, managing member of Clark, Hill PLC’s Chicago office,

Angel Homecare IL
Victoria Dziezbick IL
Sharon Opryszek, Atty Melissa Smart, Atty Jerome Larkin, ARDC
Ollie Dragon  IL  Actor
Karen Bowes, Judge, IL
Mordecai Faskowitz, Murderer, IL


 

Editor's note: ProbateSharks.com wishes to thank our anonymous information contributors. Please keep the tips coming on our sharkline phone, commentary and email. Lucius Verenus, Schoolmaster, ProbateSharks.com

** Travesty of the Week Award goes to Judge Lynne Kowamoto for "allowing a mentally disabled person to be guardian of a 99 year old disabled ward"

Editor's note: View video of NASGA protesters in Washington at link below.

http://www.presstv.ir/detail/179086.html

Saturday, May 14, 2011

WW II vet holds his ground, fights eviction

WW II vet holds his ground, fights eviction


Pushing 90, Chicago veteran fights to stay in apartment
By Ron Grossman, Tribune reporter
May 14, 2011

Five shooting wars later, Lt. Col. Curtis Welborn Jr., U.S. Army, ret., remains doggedly determined to hold the high ground.

In this instance, it's a tiny apartment in a Near North high-rise, where the 89-year-old and his wife have lived for a decade. Management wants them out by May 31.

Wellborn says he's been told it's because of bedbugs. But he sees the affair as a matter of honor — a sense shaped by military service that began in a World War II bomber. Small in stature but martial in bearing, he answers the phone with a crisp flourish: "Col. Welborn here."

He doesn't deny the bedbugs, but says they came from next door — retreating to regroup, as it were, when that apartment was fumigated. Besides, he says, he was the one who brought the matter to light by calling the city's help line, about a year ago. He thought it a top-secret communication. Evidently the building inspector didn't.

"311 betrayed me," Welborn said. "We were threatened with eviction."

Please read complete article at link below:

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-met-colonel-20110514,0,7707741.story

Editor's note:  Your ProbateShark fears for the brave Col. Welborn and his wife from the publicity raised by this article. The vultures in the Probate Court of Cook County would see these wonderful people as pieces of meat to devour.  These Welborns did their part to saved democracy and humanity from parasites  like the inhabitants of the Probate Court of Cook County. "Somewhere, in one of Shakespeare's plays," the Colonel said, "a character says something like, 'For I served the state in some purpose.'"  Lucius Verenus, Schoolmaster, ProbateSharks.com

Tree dwellers maintain their perch in Brazil

Tree dwellers maintain their perch in Brazil

 Pair facing eviction from trees say life with the birds is safer than life in a shelter.
Last Modified: 14 May 2011 08:02

Two men who've spent years living in trees next to a highway in Sao Paulo, Brazil, have been ordered to leave.
 Officials told the men to move into a homeless shelter, but the pair have made the trees their home and say it’s safer and more peaceful than sleeping in a shelter or on the streets.
In a city with a houseless population of 15,000, city social workers say living in a tree sets a bad precedent and violates city code.

Gabriel Elizondo reports from Sao Paulo.
Source: Al Jazeera

Please read complete article at link below:

http://english.aljazeera.net/video/americas/2011/05/201151473525173.html

Editor’s note: Bizarre as this subject is, it would interest our Probate Court of Cook County parasites had it occurred in Cook County. The men obviously have a home, personal property, some type of social security from the state and perhaps pensions. They could be OBRAsized, guardianized, have GALs assigned and be moved from their treehouse into nursing homes where they would be drugged and stupefied forever. Lucius Verenus, Schoolmaster, ProbateSharks.com

How An Unwanted Guardianship Cost A Firefighter His Freedom and His Fortune

How An Unwanted Guardianship Cost A Firefighter His Freedom and His Fortune


Bob Fitrakis and Harvey Wasserman
Posted: March 24, 2008 03:47 PM
Read More: Judge Stephen Williams, Norman Baker, Norman Baker Guardianship, Living News

Norman Baker is an American hero who has been detained against his will for more than three years.

His "crime": owning too much property.

His sentence: a court-appointed guardianship on the brink of costing him everything he spent his life building.

His rights in this case: virtually none, significantly less in many ways than an actual law-breaking criminal.

His future if this continues: long-term de facto imprisonment, followed by abject poverty, if he has anything left at all.


A retired firefighter who once helped save a child's life, Norman Baker is not suspected of terrorism. He has never been charged with any statutory infraction, and has never been in any kind of trouble with the law. But he has been stripped of his right to vote and access to his own assets, which appear to have been well in excess of $1 million as little as three years ago.

Until he was placed in a nursing home against his will by the court-appointed attorney he is trying to reject, Norman Baker owned and managed two dozen rental properties, many of which he designed and built himself. He also owned a 33-acre farm, with four horses, an array of tractors and other heavy farm implements, a carefully preserved century-old barn, a restored farmhouse from which he drew steady rental income, and a 3,000-square-foot brick home, which he also designed and built.

All Norman Baker's properties were free of any liens or mortgages. Before he was confined against his will to a nursing home, Norman Baker also had some $250,000 in cash and liquid investments above and beyond his real estate holdings. He rented his properties and lived a quiet, private life.

Today, without writing a check or using a credit card or making a single bad investment, Norman Baker has less than $20,000 in cash. Most of his rental properties are vacant. Some have been flooded. In one, a broken pipe has resulted in a water bill in excess of $19,000. Nearly all his properties, which were once entirely rented, are now vacant. Some have been seriously vandalized. A rental property business, which yielded a steady cash flow, is now bleeding cash every month.

Baker's farm implements -- including a tractor owned by his brother -- were sold by his unwanted guardian without his permission. The guardian also sold the slate off the roof of Norman's carefully preserved antique hay barn, which may now be ruined by rainwater. The roof of his farm house has also been damaged and left unmended.

The comfortable brick ranch home Norman built by hand is boarded up and rotting. Its plush carpeting has apparently been stripped out. Its interior fixtures are gone or rotting. The concrete backyard swimming pool whose construction Baker oversaw is cracked and in ruins. When we visited the property, Baker could only peer into the windows of his wrecked home. It is posted against "trespassers."

At one point in his involuntary guardianship, a medical examiner hired at Norman's expense found him competent and recommended that he no longer need a guardian. But the attorney running Baker's guardianship refused to surrender control of Norman's assets. He then brought back the same medical examiner for yet another examination. This doctor then proclaimed he "changed his mind" and that Norman needed a guardian after all. Norman was then billed some $2,000 for both examinations.

Since then, a Harvard-trained medical examiner has repeatedly tested Baker, who just turned 80. This doctor, whose most recent examination has been videotaped, has consistently found Baker competent to manage his own affairs and to hire his own professional help.

More than a year ago, a physician for the nursing home where Norman has been confined recommended that he be given an immediate discharge to the community. Baker walks three miles a day inside the home, and does his own laundry. He is dependent on no medications.

Norman Baker's case is not an isolated one. Usually guardianships are necessary where someone has no assets or no family and there has been no estate plan appointing a fiduciary. However, throughout the United States, tens of thousands of elderly citizens with significant assets have been placed under court-appointed guardians.

Though regulations vary from state to state, the attorney-guardians are required to report periodically to the county probate court on the disposition of the assets. Commonly, the attorneys charge fees for "managing" the property of their wards.

The law requires a guardian to act in the ward's best interests. But often that is a major issue between the guardian and his ward that must be balanced by the Probate Judge, who is expected to act as the "superior guardian".

By and large, legal guardians are expected to pay regular visits to their wards. According to Baker, his court-appointed attorney has visited him just twice in more than two years.

Norman Baker has continuously requested that he have input in to the property management of his estate. But he has been ignored. Decisions have been made about Norman's bank account and his properties without his knowledge or input, and over his continued objections and complaints.

Baker's court-appointed guardian was recently more than six months late in providing the court with a report on the status of Norman's assets. Such reports are required by the Fairfield County court every two years, although the better practice is an annual account. Baker's cash assets have been drained, and many of his properties have been brought to the brink of ruin. But it is unclear whether or not all his bills have been properly paid.

Acting on his own, Baker has managed to contract with independent counsel. Susan Wasserman and Lewis E. Williams of Columbus have asked, on his behalf, that Fairfield County Probate Court Judge Stephen Williams set Baker free of his guardianship. But Judge Williams has refused and Norman Baker remains confined to a nursing home against his will.

Baker's troubles began in January, 2005, when he suffered a urinary tract infection. Reports for elder abuse are confidential and it is unclear who made the recommendation that his affairs be turned over to a guardian.

Whatever the situation at that time, Baker has long since recovered. But he still remains under a guardianship established at a hearing in front of Judge Williams where Norman was not represented by legal counsel, and was not in the presence of a blood relative.

This fall, after numerous attempts to terminate the guardianship, Attorneys Wasserman and Williams moved in the Fairfield County court that Baker's guardianship be vacated.

Ohio law stipulates that someone being subjected to a guardianship has the right to have his closest relative from within the state be present at the determination hearing. Norman Baker's daughter was not notified because she was out of state, and notification to her was therefore not required by law. But it was mandatory under the law that Norman Baker's brother Robert be noticed, as he lives in-state and is "next of kin."

Because guardianships are invasive proceedings, strict requirements are meant to safeguard situations in which a probate court has such unfettered power over a human being. Norman's brother, Robert Baker, of Celina, Ohio, has since stated under oath that he would have attended the hearing had he known about it, and that he would have argued then -- as he does now -- that his brother did not want or need a legal guardian then, and does not want or need one now.

Robert Baker also charges that the attorney appointed by the court to be his brother's guardian sold his own personal antique tractor -- inherited from his father -- from his brother Norman's farm, and has never accounted for the proceeds.

Norman Baker's farm has also been stripped of many of its accouterments without a full accounting. Its buildings have been left to rot. The land itself may be worth a million dollars or more. Baker's guardian has stated that he has gotten numerous calls from developers wanting to buy it.

Judge Williams has repeatedly refused to vacate the guardianship. Nor has he set for hearing the objections filed by Baker to the late and incomplete accounting as to what precisely the Guardian has accomplished on his behalf.

By Ohio law, such an accounting was many months overdue until Norman Baker demanded that the account be filed. In December, 2007, at Norman Baker's behest, Attorneys Wasserman and Williams filed a motion with the Chief Justice of the Ohio Supreme Court, Thomas Moyer, asking that Judge Williams be removed from the case. Baker's chosen attorneys argued that Judge Williams's handling of the case "gives the appearance" that there is little hope of Norman Baker escaping his unwanted guardianship, and regaining his freedom with due process of law as guaranteed under the Ohio and U.S. constitutions.

Chief Justice Moyer has recently established a high-level commission charged with looking into the guardianship system in Ohio. Nationwide, hundreds of cases similar to Norman Baker's have been reported at places such as the www.stopguardianabuse.org web site. The Los Angeles Times ran a major expose several years ago which has resulted in reform in many states. Extreme as Baker's case may seem, numerous state and local court records are filled with cases of guardianship discord.

Moyers turned down the request that Judge Williams be removed from the case. An appeal on Judge Williams's denial of the motion to vacate the guardianship has been filed in the Ohio Court of Appeals, Fifth Appellate District.

Thus far, Norman Baker has been in constant litigation for three years against the guardian appointed over him by the court. Norman's guardianship was imposed in a hearing at which he was unpresented by counsel, and had no relative at his side, even though his brother lives in the state. He is no longer allowed to drive a car or vote. He has been deprived of the management of his properties and of his cash accounts, which by all indications have been seriously mismanaged. The home Norman built with his own hands has been largely ruined through neglect. He has been unable to obtain a full accounting of what has been done with his assets.

In essence, someone who has committed a murder or robbed a bank has more rights than have been granted Norman Baker.

Though the furthest thing imaginable from a terrorist, Norman Baker has no access to habeas corpus, or to a speedy trial.

Every night, Norman Baker goes to bed in his unwanted nursing home, praying for his freedom. If anything, his case stands as a bizarre warning against getting inconveniently ill, even briefly, while being in possession of enough assets to attract a legal guardian to "protect" you in your later years.

As a Franklin County firefighter, Norman Baker worked to save lives. Now he must fight to save his own. "I never dreamed such a thing could happen in this country," he told the Free Press. "I just want to go home."

Letters of support for Norman Baker can be sent to Box 09683, Bexley, OH., 43209 or to Harvey@Freepress.org

Please read complete article at link below:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bob-fitrakis-and-harvey-wasserman/how-an-unwanted-guardians_b_93143.html
 
Editor's note: Please read some of the comments in the linked article, especially the comments concerning alleged kick-backs for the judge in this case. It makes one wonder about the extent of the kick-backs the judges in the Probate Court of Cook County Probate Court may receive. The moral of this sad story is you can't even trust your own Urologist. Lucius Verenus, Schoolmaster, ProbateSharks.com