Archive for November, 2008

Probate Judge Frees Woman

November 20, 2008
A Greenwich judge has freed a Michigan woman who has been caught in a Connecticut probate court dispute for more than a year.

Marilyn Plank, a Michigan woman brought to Connecticut by relatives under questionable circumstances in 2007, can now return to her home state of Michigan.

Probate Judge David Hopper granted Plank’s wish to return to Michigan after probate court administrator Paul Knierim began investigating the case. Knierim stepped in after learning about the case in reporter Rick Green’s , Another probate court kidnap case in Connecticut.

Critics say the case is another example of the need to reform and restructure state probate courts.

Source:
Greenwich probate court frees Michigan woman

See also:
Probate Investigation

Probate-Sanctioned Kidnapping

>Prisoner People

November 20, 2008

>

Britney Spears, whose father Jamie Spears is still the conservator of her finances and affairs, now says her tightly controlled existence feels “like Groundhog Day” and she feels “Like a Prisoner.”

In the new 90 minute documentary “Britney: For The Record”, airing on Nov 30 on MTV, executive-produced by Spears’ manager Larry Rudolph, the Pop Princess admits:

“There’s no excitement, there’s no passion.I have really good days, and then I have bad days.”

“Even when you go to jail, y’know, there’s the time when you’re gonna get out. But in this situation, it’s never ending. It’s just like Groundhog Day every day.”

“If you do something wrong in your work, you can move on, but I’m having to pay for a long time.”

“I think it’s too in control, If I wasn’t under the restraints I’m under, I’d feel so liberated. When I tell them the way I feel, it’s like they hear but they’re really not listening.”

“I never wanted to become one of those prisoner people. I always wanted to feel free.”

“I think I’ve learnt my lesson now and enough is enough.”

Source:
Britney Spears says she feels like a prisoner

Britney Spears: Life Is “Like Groundhog Day”

Britney: Life is worse than jail

See also:
Permanent Conservatorship

Big Money Conservatorship

No Right To Counsel

Bad News For Britney

Prisoner People

November 20, 2008
Britney Spears, whose father Jamie Spears is still the conservator of her finances and affairs, now says her tightly controlled existence feels “like Groundhog Day” and she feels “Like a Prisoner.”

In the new 90 minute documentary “Britney: For The Record”, airing on Nov 30 on MTV, executive-produced by Spears’ manager Larry Rudolph, the Pop Princess admits:

“There’s no excitement, there’s no passion.I have really good days, and then I have bad days.”

“Even when you go to jail, y’know, there’s the time when you’re gonna get out. But in this situation, it’s never ending. It’s just like Groundhog Day every day.”

“If you do something wrong in your work, you can move on, but I’m having to pay for a long time.”

“I think it’s too in control, If I wasn’t under the restraints I’m under, I’d feel so liberated. When I tell them the way I feel, it’s like they hear but they’re really not listening.”

“I never wanted to become one of those prisoner people. I always wanted to feel free.”

“I think I’ve learnt my lesson now and enough is enough.”

Source:
Britney Spears says she feels like a prisoner

Britney Spears: Life Is “Like Groundhog Day”

Britney: Life is worse than jail

See also:
Permanent Conservatorship

Big Money Conservatorship

No Right To Counsel

Bad News For Britney

>Couple Awarded Joint Guardianship

November 20, 2008

>

The parents of a Delaware woman declared to be in a persistent vegetative state have resolved a legal dispute over her care.

After fighting over the possible removal of their daughter’s feeding tube, the parents of 24-year-old Lauren Richardson have agreed to jointly care for her at her father’s home.

Earlier this year, Richardson challenged a Chancery Court judge’s decision awarding Lauren’s mother, Edith Towers, sole guardianship and authority to remove their daughter’s feeding tube.

Towers decided in August to drop the lawsuit and joined her ex-husband and other family members in visiting Lauren the following month.

The judge issued an order last week granting Richardson and Towers joint guardianship and closing the case.

Full Article and Source:
Couple Reconciles Over Care of Bedridden Daughter

Pair Reconciles Over Daughter in Vegetative State

See also:
Life For Lauren

Don’t Starve Women

Life For Lauren – Update

Couple Awarded Joint Guardianship

November 20, 2008
The parents of a Delaware woman declared to be in a persistent vegetative state have resolved a legal dispute over her care.

After fighting over the possible removal of their daughter’s feeding tube, the parents of 24-year-old Lauren Richardson have agreed to jointly care for her at her father’s home.

Earlier this year, Richardson challenged a Chancery Court judge’s decision awarding Lauren’s mother, Edith Towers, sole guardianship and authority to remove their daughter’s feeding tube.

Towers decided in August to drop the lawsuit and joined her ex-husband and other family members in visiting Lauren the following month.

The judge issued an order last week granting Richardson and Towers joint guardianship and closing the case.

Full Article and Source:
Couple Reconciles Over Care of Bedridden Daughter

Pair Reconciles Over Daughter in Vegetative State

See also:
Life For Lauren

Don’t Starve Women

Life For Lauren – Update

>What Has Changed Since 2001?

November 19, 2008

>

Paper: Houston Chronicle
Date: FRI 04/20/2001

The buck stops in probate court?

By THOM MARSHALL

While there is a widely held belief that the more money you have the better you can expect to be treated in a courtroom, there is one area of the law that seems to turn that notion upside down.

In probate court cases, where judges appoint lawyers to serve as guardians of people who are found to be incapable of taking care of themselves or their business matters, the more money a person has the greater the risk of injustice, said local lawyer David Wukoson. And nowhere is that more true than in our local system, he said.

Wukoson: “You do not want to live in Harris County if you have money and become incapacitated.”

At the behest of client and longtime friend J. Michael Epstein, who is a local businessman and president of RMS Lighting, Wukoson organized a team of lawyers that acquired and analyzed a tall stack of probate court records regarding judicial appointments and the fees paid to appointed probate lawyers.

The goal of Epstein and his legal team is to demonstrate to lawmakers in Austin that probate court reform is needed. Epstein spent tens of thousands of dollars in his reform efforts. What sparked him to take up the gauntlet and work to get probate laws improved was his mother’s experience.

Going into probate she had an annual income of about $120,000, which should have been plenty to provide for her care but almost all her assets have been liquidated in order to pay the fees charged by the attorney appointed to serve as her guardian.

The Findings:

●Courts do not distribute appointments to attorneys outside of a very close-knit group of attorneys

●The practice allows former probate judges to serve as visiting probate judges in some cases and also to practice as appointed attorneys in other probate cases in the same courthouse

●Unreasonably high fees – Texas probate code currently says the guardian of an estate “is entitled to a fee of 5 percent of the gross income of the ward’s estate and 5 percent of all money paid out of the estate.” However, the code also allows a judge to “authorize reasonable compensation to a guardian” if the judge decides that 5 percent “is an unreasonably low amount.”

●Fewer than one in 10 attorneys who handle guardianships were compensated according to that 5 percent rate

●When anyone makes a legal challenge regarding the handling of a probate estate, the court-appointed guardian benefits by adding more legal fees on his charges to the estate

Full Article and Source:
The buck stops in probate court?

What Has Changed Since 2001?

November 19, 2008
Paper: Houston Chronicle
Date: FRI 04/20/2001

The buck stops in probate court?

By THOM MARSHALL

While there is a widely held belief that the more money you have the better you can expect to be treated in a courtroom, there is one area of the law that seems to turn that notion upside down.

In probate court cases, where judges appoint lawyers to serve as guardians of people who are found to be incapable of taking care of themselves or their business matters, the more money a person has the greater the risk of injustice, said local lawyer David Wukoson. And nowhere is that more true than in our local system, he said.

Wukoson: “You do not want to live in Harris County if you have money and become incapacitated.”

At the behest of client and longtime friend J. Michael Epstein, who is a local businessman and president of RMS Lighting, Wukoson organized a team of lawyers that acquired and analyzed a tall stack of probate court records regarding judicial appointments and the fees paid to appointed probate lawyers.

The goal of Epstein and his legal team is to demonstrate to lawmakers in Austin that probate court reform is needed. Epstein spent tens of thousands of dollars in his reform efforts. What sparked him to take up the gauntlet and work to get probate laws improved was his mother’s experience.

Going into probate she had an annual income of about $120,000, which should have been plenty to provide for her care but almost all her assets have been liquidated in order to pay the fees charged by the attorney appointed to serve as her guardian.

The Findings:

●Courts do not distribute appointments to attorneys outside of a very close-knit group of attorneys

●The practice allows former probate judges to serve as visiting probate judges in some cases and also to practice as appointed attorneys in other probate cases in the same courthouse

●Unreasonably high fees – Texas probate code currently says the guardian of an estate “is entitled to a fee of 5 percent of the gross income of the ward’s estate and 5 percent of all money paid out of the estate.” However, the code also allows a judge to “authorize reasonable compensation to a guardian” if the judge decides that 5 percent “is an unreasonably low amount.”

●Fewer than one in 10 attorneys who handle guardianships were compensated according to that 5 percent rate

●When anyone makes a legal challenge regarding the handling of a probate estate, the court-appointed guardian benefits by adding more legal fees on his charges to the estate

Full Article and Source:
The buck stops in probate court?

>Lawyer Accused of Elder Abuse

November 19, 2008

>

John Robert “Bob” Bonner, 72, had died without a valid will in the spring of 2005 and left a fortune of millions of dollars. Bonner, an only child who was never married and childless, had been dead weeks at his home in the Gardens of Oak Hollow development before anyone noticed.

Bonner’s maternal aunt, who in January 2006 was ruled his sole heir.

Now allegations that her troubled granddaughter who effected the heirship has been bleeding her fortune and the Bonner estate of hundreds of thousands of dollars for personal benefit.

Michelle Valicek, a San Antonio criminal defense and family lawyer, eventually took over the administration of the Bonner estate in 2006 on behalf of her grandmother, Margaret Lorenz, 94, an aging but drifting beauty whose estate she also oversaw.

A judge stripped Valicek of these responsibilities after allegations of elderly abuse surfaced this spring in the form of a Texas Adult Protective Services investigation that was revealed in a letter to the court asking that a guardian be appointed for Lorenz. One was.

The allegations state that Valicek had taken out credit cards in Lorenz’s name, gifted $150,000 to other family members and had engaged in “exploitations” against Lorenz’s investments, “in excess of $400,000.

A court investigator wrote in a report to the court that one of the estate’s bank accounts that had $475,000 last July was depleted to $121,000 recently and that Valicek was spending at a rate of $25,000 a month off the Bonner fortune.

According to an inventory prepared for the court, Valicek used money from either the Bonner estate or her grandmother to purchase a $25,000 Lexus, a $13,500 Steinway baby grand piano, a pool table, a mansion, another house where her mother apparently was living, and to pay $20,000 in back child support for her younger brother.

The probe is ongoing. Valicek has invoked her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination in recent hearings. She faces the loss of her law license and the loss of her freedom.

Full Article and Source:

Plot thickens in case of disappearing estate funds

Lawyer Accused of Elder Abuse

November 19, 2008
John Robert “Bob” Bonner, 72, had died without a valid will in the spring of 2005 and left a fortune of millions of dollars. Bonner, an only child who was never married and childless, had been dead weeks at his home in the Gardens of Oak Hollow development before anyone noticed.

Bonner’s maternal aunt, who in January 2006 was ruled his sole heir.

Now allegations that her troubled granddaughter who effected the heirship has been bleeding her fortune and the Bonner estate of hundreds of thousands of dollars for personal benefit.

Michelle Valicek, a San Antonio criminal defense and family lawyer, eventually took over the administration of the Bonner estate in 2006 on behalf of her grandmother, Margaret Lorenz, 94, an aging but drifting beauty whose estate she also oversaw.

A judge stripped Valicek of these responsibilities after allegations of elderly abuse surfaced this spring in the form of a Texas Adult Protective Services investigation that was revealed in a letter to the court asking that a guardian be appointed for Lorenz. One was.

The allegations state that Valicek had taken out credit cards in Lorenz’s name, gifted $150,000 to other family members and had engaged in “exploitations” against Lorenz’s investments, “in excess of $400,000.

A court investigator wrote in a report to the court that one of the estate’s bank accounts that had $475,000 last July was depleted to $121,000 recently and that Valicek was spending at a rate of $25,000 a month off the Bonner fortune.

According to an inventory prepared for the court, Valicek used money from either the Bonner estate or her grandmother to purchase a $25,000 Lexus, a $13,500 Steinway baby grand piano, a pool table, a mansion, another house where her mother apparently was living, and to pay $20,000 in back child support for her younger brother.

The probe is ongoing. Valicek has invoked her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination in recent hearings. She faces the loss of her law license and the loss of her freedom.

Full Article and Source:

Plot thickens in case of disappearing estate funds

>Puppet Child

November 18, 2008

>

A stunning family legal drama about a brave mother who defies the court to save her daughter from its “justice.”

Rachel Belmore is a poised, determined, yet vulnerable advertising executive fighting to bar her charming former husband, Dr. Wesley Belmore, from molesting their five-year-old daughter, Ellie. Caught in a nightmarish justice system, Rachel’s odyssey takes a turn for the worse when she loses her battle in the court of Judge McGillian. The judge, a gregarious man who believes that he applies the law without prejudice, is nevertheless trapped in his biases, which throw him into the eye of a media storm.

His young, easy-going law clerk, Phil Crawford, hides a dark secret as he sets out on a mission to change the fate of children betrayed by the justice system. The compassionate Phil forces his way into Rachel’s plight, but fails to dissuade the Judge from his harsh viewing of her case.

To save Ellie, Rachel must take the law into her hands and suffer the consequences.

Against the backdrop of media frenzy, corporate indifference, political corruption, family treachery, terrorism and judicial callousness, the story unfolds in blazingly sure-penned prose to reveal loyalty, the kindness of strangers, devotion, passion, and friendship. In a riveting tale of surprising twists, Puppet Child is a moving tribute to a mother who remains dignified, honest and loving as she changes the rules.

Talia Carner – Puppet Child


Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started