Showing posts with label Conservator. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Conservator. Show all posts

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Mickey Rooney’s family, estate reach agreement over actor’s remains: Star will be buried at Hollywood Forever Cemetery

Mickey Rooney’s family, estate reach agreement over actor’s remains: Star will be buried at Hollywood Forever Cemetery 

Rooney’s estranged ex-wife Jan believed the actor should be buried in a series of family plots purchased with her before they separated two years ago. However his lawyers said the star had voiced a change of heart in the years following their split, especially after he accused one of Jan’s sons of elder abuse that wiped him out financially.

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Published: Friday, April 11, 2014, 12:15 PM
Updated: Friday, April 11, 2014, 6:40 PM
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Mickey Rooney at the 82nd Academy Awards Sunday in  2010.Chris Pizzello/ASSOCIATED PRESSMickey Rooney at the 82nd Academy Awards Sunday in 2010.

The battle over Mickey Rooney’s body was laid to rest Friday with an agreement to bury the Tinseltown titan at Hollywood Forever Cemetery.
“We worked out a full agreement. There should be no declaration of war over the body,” Rooney lawyer Vivian Thoreen told the Daily News.
“Mickey will be buried at Hollywood Forever with a small family reception that will be private,” she said.
A judge approved the settlement Friday morning after three of Rooney’s biological daughters made a surprise appearance in court and signed off on the pact.
Mickey Rooney will be laid to rest at the famed Hollywood Forever Cemetery.Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/GC ImagesMickey Rooney will be laid to rest at the famed Hollywood Forever Cemetery.
“We’re very happy about the decision,” daughter Kimmy Rooney Kelca, 50, told The News as she wiped away tears outside the courthouse. “We’re going to honor him at the service and say some wonderful things.”
Fellow silver-screen greats Cecil B. DeMille, Jayne Mansfield and Rudolph Valentino have gravesites at the famous cemetery where Mick Jagger recently held a memorial for his fashion designer girlfriend L’Wren Scott.
“He’s going to be with his friends,” daughter Kelly Rooney, 54, said.
The daughters said they still had concerns over the administration of their late father’s estate but declined to confirm any firm plans for legal action.

Movie Lounge: Remembering Mickey Rooney

St Louis Post-Dispatch

Film critic Joe Williams pays tribute to Rooney and looks at the week's new releases, which include "Rio 2" and "Nymphomaniac: Vol. 2."

Rooney died Sunday at age 93 from natural causes, Thoreen previously said.
He left a new will signed last month that named stepson Mark Aber, his caretaker in the last year of his life, as the primary beneficiary of his $18,000 estate.
The will specifically omitted Rooney’s biological kids because the screen star considered them financially independent, Thoreen said.
“It’s not over,” daughter Kerry Rooney, 53, said outside court, declining to elaborate.
FILEKevin Winter/Getty ImagesMickey Rooney’s ex-wife Jan Rooney had been at odds with the actor’s lawyers since his death on Sunday.
Rooney’s estranged ex-wife Jan Rooney was not at the hearing but filed a statement saying she supported the new Hollywood Forever arrangements even though she and Rooney had “longstanding” plans at Pierce Brothers cemetery in Westlake, Calif.
“Mickey had his mother’s remains moved to Pierce Brothers and had consistently indicated that he wanted to be buried there alongside his mother, myself and my boys,” she wrote to the court. “Despite my strong desires to be buried beside my husband, I feel that I owe it to Mickey’s fans to allow Mickey to be buried alongside other members of Hollywood royalty.”
Rooney’s lawyers and daughters said Friday that the prolific “Boys Town” star had voiced a change of heart in the years following his split from Jan, especially after he accused one of Jan’s sons of elder abuse.
“He said there was nothing for him there, in Westlake. He told us that a lot, personally,” Kelly Rooney said Friday.
Mickey Rooney (c) with ex-wife Jan Rooney and son Chris Aber.Mathew Imaging/FilmMagicMickey Rooney (c) with ex-wife Jan Rooney and son Chris Aber.
Mickey Rooney sought a voluntary conservatorship in 2011 to get away from Chris Aber, the biological son of Jan Rooney who’d been managing his affairs for a decade.
He sued Chris for elder abuse claiming the stepson withheld food and medication and bullied him while blowing his money on a Porsche, a $100,000 race car and a lavish and reckless lifestyle that left Rooney deep in debt.
Rooney testified about his “unbearable” treatment in Washington before leaving Jan to live with her other son Mark Aber in Studio City.
Thoreen said before his death, Rooney told Mark and his conservator Michael Augustine that he wanted to be buried somewhere with a connection to either Hollywood film stars or military veterans – far from any plot that Chris Aber might claim.
<p>
	Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland pose in a promotional photo of 1938's 'Love Finds Andy Hardy.'</p>
Hulton Archive/Getty Images Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland pose in a promotional photo of 1938's 'Love Finds Andy Hardy.'
“(Jan Rooney) had her feelings about Mickey, but she has stepped back from her original position. She realized someone of Mickey’s stature deserves this type of recognition, and we’re really pleased,” Thoreen said Friday. “The last thing we wanted to do was have another court battle. We’ve done this before, and the idea of Mickey waiting somewhere was horrible.”
Chris Aber and his wife, who have denied any wrongdoing despite agreeing to a financial settlement in the elder abuse case, will not be allowed to attend the memorial service, the new burial agreement obtained by The News states.
Rooney married eight times and had nine kids, though one son died as an adult.
Thoreen said an unidentified individual had stepped forward to help pay for Rooney’s burial at Hollywood Forever. She said the estate lacks the resources to pay for a larger public tribute but that the door was open to offers from another benefactor.
“The hope is that we can work with a studio or someone generous or kind enough to help with resources to put something up for Mickey,” Thoreen said. “And to the extent we can do something like that, we agreed Jan should be permitted to attend if she wishes.”
The new burial agreement explicitly states that Jan “shall not attend any such events with either Christopher or (wife) Christina Aber.”

ndillon@nydailynews.com


Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/gossip/mickey-rooney-family-estate-reach-agreement-actor-remains-article-1.1753434#ixzz2znx0Gubs

Thursday, February 13, 2014

Hopes dim for lawyer's victims who lost more than $1 million

Hopes dim for lawyer's victims who lost more than $1 million

Feb. 10, 2014   |  
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John Clemmons waits outside Metro booking to turn himself in last November. Clemmons pleaded guilty to stealing thousands from wards he had been assigned to protect. / John Partipilo / File / The Tennessean

What’s next?

John E. Clemmons is serving an 18-year sentence in state prison.

Bond insurance has provided partial reimbursement in three cases Clemmons handled. If a judge rules that Clemmons violated the terms of his insurance policy, no payments would be made to his victims.

He still faces the prospect of judgments in two other cases. involving Donald E. Griggs and William C. Link.
The insurance company that provided malpractice coverage to jailed Nashville attorney John E. Clemmons is asking a federal judge to declare they have no responsibility to help pay back his victims who lost more than $1 million.
If the judge agrees, the amount Clemmons’ victims would receive could be smaller than expected.
In a suit filed last week in U.S. District Court in Nashville, lawyers for the Hanover Insurance Company stated that Clemmons’ policy does not apply in cases where he broke the law. Clemmons pled guilty in Davidson and Rutherford counties to theft from his clients.
Clemmons is currently serving an 18-year prison sentence at the state prison at the Charles B. Bass Correctional Complex in Nashville.
In its complaint, the insurance company cited several provisions of the policy they say Clemmons violated, including “any intentional, dishonest, criminal, malicious or fraudulent act or omission.”
The suit cites pending legal actions against Clemmons in three Davidson County cases, his guilty pleas to theft charges and the suspension of his license to practice law.
“Clemmons admitted his misappropriation,” the suit states.
Though the move by the insurance company was not unexpected, one of the lawyers who now represents some of the victims says he is concerned that some may never be fully repaid. The malpractice policy could have provided an estimated $300,000.
“I’m worried about it,” said Paul Gontarek, who was appointed to take over some of the cases by Probate Judge David “Randy” Kennedy.
An even grimmer assessment came from Michael Hoskins, who represents the heirs of another former Clemmons client.
“The estate’s prospects for a full recovery are bleak because Clemmons apparently blew all the money financing his lavish and reckless lifestyle,” Hoskins said in an email response to questions.
Prosecutors in the Clemmons criminal cases have stated that Clemmons spent his clients’ money on gambling at casinos in a number of states.
Court records show that bond insurance that Clemmons was required to purchase has provided at least partial reimbursement in three of the cases including the one being handled by Hoskins.
The victim in Rutherford County, Russell Church, has been repaid all that he was owed, a little over $120,000, according to court officials. Church’s was the first case to become public.
Gontarek said his next step will be to get judgments against Clemmons in the cases of Donald E. Griggs and William C. Link.
“Then we’ll attempt to recover from him personally,” said Gontarek.
The victims also can collect from the Tennessee Lawyers Fund for Client Protection, but the maximum amount that can be claimed for any one attorney, regardless of how many victims there are, is $250,000.
Contact Walter F. Roche Jr at 615-259-8086