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We like to think that judges are impartial arbiters of justice and that medical professionals as a physician myself, I know this should always be true only have the best interests of their patients at heart. Unfortunately, as a growing number of elderly Americans and their families are discovering, that isn’t always the case. Conservatorship abuse has been a largely silent problem for decades, but the recent documentary about Britney Spears’s problems has given it a higher profile. Unlike Ms. Spears, who has legions of fans eager to speak in her behalf, most victims of conservatorship abuse can only rely on the advocacy of friends and family. Even if victims have ample financial resources, that’s frequently not enough to overcome the combined authority of the government and medical “experts” and lawyers hired by conservators. ....
I Care a Lot : The Shocking True Stories Behind the Netflix Movie On 2/24/21 at 7:25 AM EST I Care a Lot is the latest movie to hit the top of the Netflix charts, with viewers finding themselves shockingly compelled by the actions of the villainous guardian Marla Grayson (played by Rosamund Pike) and the rest of the movie s gruesome parade of horrible people. Many of Marla s actions seem like the fevered imaginings of a Hollywood screenwriter trying to write a truly despicable villain, as she forces vulnerable old people under her conservatorship and then steals from them. Marla s business, however, has some parallels with some real-life stories of elder abuse. ....
Six people were convicted of a murder they didn t even remember. Now a county owes them $28 million If they had raped and killed an elderly woman, wouldn t they recall the details? A police psychologist told them it was possible. Some believed him. Written By: Washington Post | × For years, a group of outcasts in Beatrice, Nebraska, were convinced they had raped and suffocated an elderly woman named Helen Wilson one night in February 1985, even though they couldn t remember any of it. That was only what they had been told by the detectives and the police psychologist at the Gage County Sheriff s Office. At first, it was befuddling: Why couldn t they recall any details about the killing? None of the six suspects could even remember being in the woman s apartment that night. But that was okay, the police assured the group: They had simply repressed the traumatizing memories. ....