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When Conservatorship Goes Terribly Wrong

My family's troubling experience with the man appointed to manage my mother's life

By Erica Loberg

When people ask me about the circumstances surrounding the painful story of my mother's probate conservatorship — where the man appointed by a judge to manage my mother's finances and daily life inflicted financial and mental abuse on her — there's one question I always encounter: How did this happen to your family?

The author's mother
The author's mother  |  Credit: Courtesy of Erica Loberg

A simple answer: it can happen to anyone.

Roughly 1.5 million Americans are under guardianship or conservatorship, most of them over 65. Although many conservators and guardians do excellent work, some are notorious. One AARP article said: "Activists charge that in some cases, unscrupulous professional guardians have turned legally sanctioned exploitation into a cottage industry, abetted by greedy attorneys and pliable judges."

A more complicated answer: our family fell apart after my father died.

I was caught in the middle, not sure what best for my mom.

It took me almost two years and half a dozen court hearings to successfully remove the conservator who I'd describe as a criminal sociopath. He charged several thousands of dollars a month for my mother's minimal care, blew through a massive amount of my mother's money and emptied her house.

My Family's Conservatorship Story

Here is my story, followed by advice so something similar doesn't happen to you:

My father, a Los Angeles orthodontist and UCLA School of Dentistry faculty member, was diagnosed with cancer in 2016 and passed away 11 days later at 69. After his death, my family realized that he did not leave a will, and there was no guidance on how we should proceed with caring for my mom or managing her estate. As a result, my two sisters and I had different opinions on what should transpire.

With the shock of our father's death and our immersion in grieving, we weren't able to come together and move forward collectively. So, shortly after my dad died, my 70-year-old mother was appointed a conservator. (A conservator — sometimes called a guardian — is appointed by a judge when someone is no longer able to make financial or health decisions for themselves.)

For several years prior to my father's death, he was in charge of the household finances, managing most of the day-to-day tasks like grocery shopping and handling all the bills. My mom was no longer able to manage the stressors of maintaining the household at the time.

When my father died, my older sister thought it would be better for our mother to live in an assisted living facility; my younger sister thought she should remain at home. I was caught in the middle, not sure what was best for my mom.

Initially, my mom wanted to go to an assisted living facility, but after a few months there, she decided she wanted to be back in her home. Mayhem unfolded. So, I decided to reach out to my mom's older brother for guidance and help. He and my younger sister got my mother back home and found her a lawyer who recommended that my mother be conserved.

The Conservator Is Appointed

The lawyer filed the paperwork to make it happen.

The requirements to become a professional, licensed conservator vary from state to state. Not all states require licensing; others mandate a credential from a professional organization in addition to licensing. To become a conservator in California, either you must file a petition with the court and nominate yourself or another interested party can nominate you.

Given the contentious nature of our family, we weren't given any options to decide on a particular conservator. We showed up to court and the conservator the judge appointed was there, ready to take over. His fees would be paid by the estate, which he controlled.

It was all very confusing, and my sisters and I were operating more or less in the dark.

Prior to this conservatorship assignment, I discovered, the man who became my mother's conservator was listed on a website about guardianship abuse. Its victims shared personal warning and tragic stories.

I remember the night before the hearing at the Los Angeles Superior Court probate department to approve his position, my mother was held hostage in her home and not allowed to speak to any family members.

Her own best friend flew in from out of state to speak to her and explain the dangers of her situation, and my mom was instructed not to open the door to anyone or else she would be sent to a nursing home. I only found out later that anytime he wanted something, he would use the nursing home as a threat so he could do as he pleased.

Trying to Stop the Conservator

When I went to the hearing to try to stop his petition for appointment, I presented the judge the list of testimonials I'd seen of his abuse. But I was immediately shut down.

I walked home that day and thought to myself, something's not right.

After that, the court assigned us an attorney representing the interests of my mom to make sure the chosen conservator was the right fit for the family. In LA County, this kind of lawyer is known as a member of the Probate Volunteer Panel — attorneys who register with the court to help resolve probate proceedings.

During the hearing with the PVP, it was my older sister and I (who didn't want this conservator) on one side of the courtroom and my younger sister (who did) on the other. The PVP chose to side with my younger sibling's wishes, and the conservator was officially appointed.

Soon after, all the belongings from my mom's house, where I grew up, were removed, with no indication of their whereabouts and with no communication about this with the family.

I remember the first time I walked into the house once this had happened; it looked like a living room set from "The Price Is Right" game show with all the furniture replaced by what looked like IKEA home ware. The family heirlooms, including paintings of my mother's, were removed, too.

"I used to work in nursing homes over a decade ago, and he was known to prey on vulnerable women."

The kitchen had been completely remodeled. Those adobe tiles my dad had personally laid in the floor were replaced with plain ugly squares. I opened the cupboards only to find all the china was missing. The box of recipes passed down from generation to generation was nowhere to be found, either.

Down in the basement, the wine cellar was gone. I wandered upstairs to an empty second floor and found the walls that used to hang family photos where bare. My childhood bedroom was a hallow box.

All attempts to connect with the conservator were for naught.

Shut Out From Information About Mom

I only found out that my mother was hospitalized for dehydration days afterwards. When I did, I tried phoning the conservator's office to insist on  being alerted if my mother was sick, especially a hospitalization; he wouldn't take my call.

I followed up with an email stating that correspondence about serious matters concerning my mother's health was unacceptable. I didn't receive a reply, but the conservator charged my mother's estate for receiving the email, and for my phone call.

When I contacted St. John's Hospital, where my mom had been discharged. I asked to speak to the social worker. I got her on the phone, mentioned my mom's conservator's name and she fell silent.

I asked if she knew him and she said, "I used to work in nursing homes over a decade ago, and he was known to prey on vulnerable women."

Then one day, I received a call from another woman who had been victimized by the same conservator. She was involuntarily removed from her home and placed in a nursing care facility. This was one of several similar stories I heard.

Over time, I began to understand his pattern: Prey on vulnerable victims, isolate them from their loved ones, allow no open lines of communication with the family, provide no transparency in billing, bleed the estate, then toss the people in conservatorship into nursing homes. When they run out of money there, leave them there to rot and die.

I remember when the conservator did unnecessary renovations on the house, which were expensive and draining the estate, I asked my mom why she allowed them. She told me that if she didn't go along with what he had recommended, she'd end up back in a nursing home.

The Estate Gets Drained

My mom was constantly subject to manipulative abusive bullying behavior that came from the conservator.

As far as I can tell, my mother had very little in-person communication with him. For the most part, he employed his minions to do his dirty work, which only calls into question the caregiving company he employed to watch over my mother. In fact, this conservator is practically invisible; you'll never find a picture online or a profile on social media about him.

When I tried to contact my mom by phone, her number had always been changed. That happened numerous times.

There was only one time my mom called me. It came in on an unidentified number, so I didn't pick up. However there was an accidental message left on my voicemail:

"She's not picking up, call her back." (Mom)

"She doesn't want to speak to you." (Her caregiver)

The Conservator Tries to Keep Me Away From My Mother

I remember the one time I picked my mom up when no one was there and took her downtown to spend the night with me. We left a note on the refrigerator letting the caregiver know she was with me, and that we were going to have brunch together. When the caregiver found out, she was instructed to immediately show up at my building to retrieve my mother. After that incident, she had 24/7 people in her home to watch her.

They were more or less bodyguards to keep her away from spending any private time with the family. Once my mother's conservator realized I was after him, he tried to put a restraining order on me to keep me from talking to my mom, saying I was causing my mother stress by voicing my concerns about him stealing her money.

To avoid the worst outcome for my mom, I immediately went to work to try and remove him as soon as possible.

I decided I'd do this on my own, rather than hiring a Los Angeles attorney at $500 an hour — something I couldn't afford. I also believed I would be the best advocate for my mom, even though I knew nothing about the law or much about the process of conservatorship appeal.

I'm grateful I took on this endeavor by myself because later, when I spoke with other victims, I learned they'd spent hundreds of thousands of dollars fighting this same conservator over the years. And they're still trying to remove him.

We just wanted the original conservator out, so we succumbed to his ultimatum.

The first thing I did was file a complaint with California's Probate Fiduciary Bureau; it's supposed to be a watchdog for complaints regarding conservators. The Bureau said, after conducting their "investigation," they didn't find any foul play.

Next, I filed two Adult Protective Services reports, a police report and an FBI complaint.

Finally, a Break

For months I blanketed Los Angeles to find any and all outlets who could help. Then one day I got a break.

I had filed a complaint with the county's Probate Investigators Office, and after months of the financial and emotional abuse inflicted on my mother, my complaint finally led to a report recommending his removal.

I went back to court and presented the report, arguing that my mother's mental, emotional and psychological health was deteriorating. The judge assigned a new PVP to put fresh eyes on the case.

This opened the door for me to get the conservator temporarily removed. The initial judge who appointed the conservator had retired, which I thought might help the situation.

I argued that my mother's PVP who recommended her conservator had never interviewed all the siblings, asked for a new PVP and the judge agreed.

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The Troubled Mediation

After this PVP conducted her investigation, she provided a report calling for a new conservator. Because my mother's conservator didn't want to step down, we were off to mediation.

The next thing I knew, I was in an office with my older sister, the new PVP, the new temporary conservator and me in one room and the original conservator with his lawyer in another.

The mediation turned out to be a disaster.

The conservator lied about stealing all the family belongings, among other things. But the new temporary conservator had uncovered his wrongdoings. The conservator agreed to relinquish his position only if we fired the temporary one and went with one of his suggestions.

After 10 hours of torture, my sister and I gave in. We just wanted the original conservator out, so we succumbed to his ultimatum.

After the mediation I researched the new permanent conservator my mother was given, and discovered questionable articles written about her in The Los Angeles Times. I also learned that they both she and the original conservator used the same caregiving company, which struck me as odd.

I raced back to court and filed paperwork to undo the original conservator's "suggestion." Thankfully, at the next hearing, we won.

Getting Mom the Care She Needed and Deserved

We were able to make the good, temporary conservator my mother's permanent conservator. Finally, after almost two years, my mom was able to start getting the care she needed and deserved.

Before the new conservator, my mother didn't see any doctors, except that one time she was hospitalized. Now, she was seeing a primary care doctor and a therapist.

I've since seen my mom a handful of times; mostly we speak on the phone. She's doing pretty well.

But when I walk into her house, I don't recognize anything, and it makes me sad.

I doubt we'll ever get back any of the items that were ransacked. It's so depressing not to find my dad's vinyl record collection in the living room or the wallpaper in the dining room where we shared family dinners every night together. Seeing the chandelier over the dining room table replaced with a cheap tacky light traumatizes me.

I don't need my high school trophies or any other items from my old bedroom, but why did the conservator find it necessary to remove all the belongings from the house?

Best as I can tell, he was preparing the house for someone else to inhabit, so he could make money from the sale while my mother would live alone in a nursing home.

I still have hope that one day, my mother's initial conservator will be brought to justice.

4 Ways to Prevent a Conservatorship Disaster

How can you avoid an experience like my family and I had? There's no guarantee, but here are four suggestions:

Discuss your parents' estate wishes and their finances while they are alive. I wish we had done that with my dad.

Find out if your parents have wills, what they entail and where they are. Learn about your parents' assets and debts as well as how they'd like to live if their spouse dies before they do.

If you can, get a durable power of attorney and a health care advance directive, giving you or someone whom you trust the authority to make decisions for a parent if they can't.

If you will need to hire someone who isn't a family member or friend to be a conservator for your parent, do your homework. Make sure you choose a conservator with an excellent resumé and with reliable recommendations. Don't do what we did and accept some random person assigned by the court.

If my sisters and I had taken these steps, most likely none of the abuse our mother suffered would have happened.

If things do go wrong with a conservatorship, document everything. I cannot emphasize this enough. It means keeping a record of all conversations you have with parent that are concerning, with dates and times. This will help you make a solid case to get the conservator removed.

If applicable, cover all aspects of the conservatorship abuse, including mental abuse — not just financial abuse.

Don't give up. Despite the long odds to remove my mother's conservator, I never quit, despite his evil attempts to silence me and taint my relationship with my mother. If I can do it, you can do it.

If you can afford to hire a conservatorship attorney to remove a conservator, you might want to do it.

Now, back to my initial question: How did this happen to your family?

The bigger question is how was this allowed to happen to my family?

And another question: Why aren't there better checks and balances in the conservatorship system?

The Problems With Conservatorship in America

While states have laws designed to protect people under conservatorship, in reality, there's very little oversight. A National Center for State Courts report said: "Nationally, there is a dire need for guardianship/conservatorship reform, as relatively few courts have the resources, staffing or expertise to actively monitor conservatorships."

A book of poetry the author wrote about her experience
A book of poetry the author wrote about her experience

In 2017, the Uniform Guardianship, Conservatorship, and Other Protective Arrangements Act was approved by a group called the Uniform Law Commission. Among other things, it's supposed to get rid of guardians and conservators not acting in the best interest of the people they're assisting; let courts "remove a conservator for failure to perform the conservator's duties or other good cause" and limit the ability of unscrupulous guardians to drain assets by charging unreasonable fees.

But so far, only two states (Maine and New Mexico) have adopted any or all of this model act.

At a 2018 Senate Special Committee on Aging hearing, Sen. Bob Casey (D-Pa.) said: "Some states have taken efforts to improve guardianship, but it's also clear that much more work needs to be done."

At that hearing, Nina Kohn, associate dean at Syracuse University College of Law, said: "Currently, monitoring is typically anemic, and the ability to monitor is generally limited to under-resourced courts."

So, how did this happen to my family?

You tell me.

(You can read more about my experience with my mother's conservatorship in my recent book of poetry,  "I'm Not Playing.")

Erica Loberg is a poet and author. Her new book of poetry, "I'm Not Playing," is based on her experience with her mother's conservatorship. Her book "Inside the Insane" is a memoir about her struggles with Bipolar II coupled with a look at inpatient psych wards in Los Angeles County. She can be reached at [email protected]. Read More
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