Thursday, November 19, 2015

AAAPG's documentary: BROKEN-The Fallout from Guardianship Abuse

Lynched by COURT ORDER | Judicialcorruption's Weblog

Lynched by COURT ORDER | Judicialcorruption's Weblog



ELDER FINANCIAL ABUSE      by Lawyers and The Judiciary

Elderly Exploitation by Lawyers & the Judiciary = Lynched by Court Order · Storify

Elderly Exploitation by Lawyers & the Judiciary = Lynched by Court Order · Storify

New legislation in the works to protect families in probate

ADVOCATING TO END ELDER ABUSE and Protect our Seniors!!!: Accountability

ADVOCATING TO END ELDER ABUSE and Protect our Seniors!!!: Accountability

Law Enforcement

Law Enforcement

Law
enforcement typically like easy identifable crimes, elder abuse crimes
are somewhat sofisticated and require greater knowledge hopefully with
multidisiplinary teams, SAFE , TRIAD etc we will start to see some
investigations and convictions.

The perportrators of these crimes have truly been laughing at law enforcement for a long time.
Law enforcement's excuse has always been .
1- Its a civil case
2- Not enough resources
3- Get an attorney
4- Cant get involved if its already in court
5- Call elderly protective services
6- etc etc
Maybe
it's time law enforcemnet stop passing the buck and start getting the
education, listening to the complaints, investigate and prosecute.

Essex DA rules Lynn officer was justified in use of deadly force against Roxbury man in July - The Boston Globe

Essex DA rules Lynn officer was justified in use of deadly force against Roxbury man in July - The Boston Globe

Federalist No. 51 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Federalist No. 51 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Very important. Please read.

Very important. Please read.

Cop adds state claim to lawsuit against Portsmouth - News - seacoastonline.com - Portsmouth, NH

Cop adds state claim to lawsuit against Portsmouth - News - seacoastonline.com - Portsmouth, NH

Monday, November 16, 2015

WAYNE CO. PROBATE JUDGE TERRANCE KEITH, GUARDIAN MARY ROWAN FORCE VET GAYLE ROBINSON, 84, TO FLEE | VOICE OF DETROIT: The city's independent newspaper, unbossed and unbought

WAYNE CO. PROBATE JUDGE TERRANCE KEITH, GUARDIAN MARY ROWAN FORCE VET GAYLE ROBINSON, 84, TO FLEE | VOICE OF DETROIT: The city's independent newspaper, unbossed and unbought



Beware of the Scribes
38And in his teaching he said, “Beware of the scribes, who like to walk around in long robes and like greetings in the marketplaces
39and have the best seats in the synagogues and the places of honor at feasts,
40who devour widows’ houses and for a pretense make long prayers. They will receive the greater condemnation.”

WAYNE CO. PROBATE JUDGE TERRANCE KEITH, GUARDIAN MARY ROWAN FORCE VET GAYLE ROBINSON, 84, TO FLEE | VOICE OF DETROIT: The city's independent newspaper, unbossed and unbought

WAYNE CO. PROBATE JUDGE TERRANCE KEITH, GUARDIAN MARY ROWAN FORCE VET GAYLE ROBINSON, 84, TO FLEE | VOICE OF DETROIT: The city's independent newspaper, unbossed and unbought

WHO | Elder abuse

WHO | Elder abuse



  • Around 1 in 10 older people experience abuse every month.
  • Rates of abuse may be higher for older people living in institutions than in the community.
  • Elder abuse can lead to serious physical injuries and long-term psychological consequences.
  • Elder abuse is predicted to increase as many countries are experiencing rapidly ageing populations.
  • The global population of people aged 60 years and older will more
    than double, from 900 million in 2015 to about 2 billion in 2050.

Saturday, October 24, 2015

Article Preview: “Reforming Civil Asset Forfeiture” | New England Law Review

Article Preview: “Reforming Civil Asset Forfeiture” | New England Law Review

SJC Adopts Revised Rules of Professional Conduct

SJC Adopts Revised Rules of Professional Conduct

A father’s mission to reform reporting on abuse of disabled - Bethlehem Spotlight - Local, News, Weather, Sports, Election coverage, for Bethlehem, New Scotland, Guilderland, Glenmont, Ravena, Slingerlands, Capitol, NY

A father’s mission to reform reporting on abuse of disabled - Bethlehem Spotlight - Local, News, Weather, Sports, Election coverage, for Bethlehem, New Scotland, Guilderland, Glenmont, Ravena, Slingerlands, Capitol, NY

Written testimony of Stacy Canan Deputy Assistant Director, Office for Older Americans Consumer Financial Protection Bureau - CUInsight

Written testimony of Stacy Canan Deputy Assistant Director, Office for Older Americans Consumer Financial Protection Bureau - CUInsight

Lawyer indicted for fraud relating to Deepwater Horizon compensation claims - Splash 247

Lawyer indicted for fraud relating to Deepwater Horizon compensation claims - Splash 247

Caseworker gets prison for stealing from elderly couple | 6abc.com

Caseworker gets prison for stealing from elderly couple | 6abc.comThey're charged with conspiracy and money laundering for allegedly
conspiring with a lawyer to steal millions of dollars from elderly
clients.

Monday, October 5, 2015

Gone Without a Case: Suspicious Elder Deaths Rarely Investigated - ProPublica

Gone Without a Case: Suspicious Elder Deaths Rarely Investigated - ProPublica

‘You are also ordered not to post any further information about the [plaintiff]’ - The Washington Post

‘You are also ordered not to post any further information about the [plaintiff]’ - The Washington Post

The Dance of Deception: The US Holocaust Museum Сaught Сovering Up Genocide | New Eastern Outlook

The Dance of Deception: The US Holocaust Museum Сaught Сovering Up Genocide | New Eastern Outlook

Justice: An Impossible Dream?

Justice: An Impossible Dream?



Justice: An Impossible Dream?

The 11-year ordeal of Chester J.
Chalupowski at the hands of unscrupulous lawyers scheming to gain
control over his estate led Dr. Margaret Koch-Nabialczyk to point out
that many books by legal scholars had warned of the crisis that is now
washing over our judicial institutions, entrapping and destroying the
lives of countless citizens who turned to the courts hoping to find
protection and relief from injury.

 

 
The Bigger Picture

MARGARET KOCH-NABIALCZYK, MD PhD
For the first five
years of his legal ordeal, Chester considered himself a
lonely, unfortunate victim of a mean, unethical lawyer, supported and
enabled by a web of his unscrupulous "brothers" and "sisters" utilizing to
their own benefit the numerous tools of the ruthless machine of the legal
system. However, in the summer of 1998, by some kind of divine serendipity,
Chester stumbled upon a book bearing the intriguing title, Jurismania: the
Madness of American Law
, written by Paul F. Campos, a Professor of Law at
the University of Colorado. Chester, by no means a bookworm, devoured
Campos' difficult treatise while growing increasingly amazed, in fact
mesmerized, by its relevance to his own experience. After the first five
years of his anguish, Chester started seeing the legal torment imposed on
him and his family against a backdrop of an enlightening, though menacing,
bigger picture.

Chester, an all-American idealist never anything but proud of his country,
was shaking his head in disbelief. Thinking, "Jurismania, no matter how
depressing, is only one book," Chester set out to search for 'the other side
of the story' assuming that there was one. In an effort to find 'some good
news' (one of his favorite clichés), he went on line, checked the catalogues
of all local libraries, spent long hours sipping coffee, snuggled into a
small cozy couch at the North Shore Mall Borders Books. Shortly he had
assembled a two-foot-high stack of books written by legal scholars,
practicing lawyers, lawyers-turned-journalists, and other open-minded
non-fiction writers. Just looking at the disconcerting titles, Chester had
an uneasy feeling that there was no good news there. Nevertheless, he put
the books in chronological order according to the year of publishing and
began his search for answers.

It seemed that the troubling titles started popping up on bookshelves across
the country by the early 1970s. In 1971 Random House published Law against
the People: Essays to Demystify Law, Order, and the Courts
, by Robert
Lefcourt
. In 1976, a young Ralph Nader and his co-author, Harvard Law School
graduate, Mark Green, edited a collection of alarming essays, Verdicts on
Lawyers
(T. W. Crowell). In 1977 Anne Strick, a prolific fiction and
non-fiction writer, published her now apparently forgotten, yet quite
visionary for its time, Injustice for All: How Our Adversary System of Law
Victimizes Us and Subverts True Justice
(G. P. Putnam's Sons). In 1978, J.
K. Lieberman
tried to alarm us about lawyers' "unethical ethics" in his book
entitled Crisis at the Bar: Lawyers' Unethical Ethics and What to Do about
It
(Norton). In 1980, Philip Stern, a Harvard graduate and special
investigative reporter for The Washington Post, who at age 49 enrolled as a
freshman at Georgetown University Law School, made a daring attempt to put
lawyers on trial in his book actually entitled Lawyers on Trial (Times
Books).

In 1989, Gerry L. Spence, once a famous, self-proclaimed 'country lawyer,'
took on the whole legal system in an effort to "excite and illuminate the
millions of Americans who felt frustrated and betrayed by their justice
system," in With Justice for None: Destroying an American Myth (Times
Books). In 1991, Walter K. Olson, called by Amazon.com, "the legal world's
foremost whistleblower," warned us that the lawsuit industry (according to
Olson, "a civil war in very, very slow motion") was seriously crippling
America, in his book The Litigation Explosion: What Happened when America
Unleashed the Lawsuit
(Dutton).

By the mid-1990s the frequency of disturbing titles showing up on the
market visibly gains momentum as more and more authors eagerly
express their dreadful concerns. In 1993, a noted legal scholar and
educator, Anthony T. Kronman, the current Dean of Yale Law School, states in
his book, The Lost Lawyer: Failing Ideals of the Legal Profession (Harvard
University Press) that the crisis in the American legal profession,
"threatens the collective soul of American lawyers. […] This is a
catastrophe for lawyers. Beyond that, it is a disaster for the country as
well." On the very first page of his book, Kronman states: "Every year
produces a fresh crop of scoundrels and renewed doubts about the ability of
the profession to police itself, along with familiar complaints about the
undue power of lawyers (which any democratic society is bound to regard with
suspicion)." This diagnosis of "legal pathology" is vehemently confirmed by
Mary Ann Glendon, a Harvard University Professor of Law, who expressed her
concerns in her book entitled A Nation under Lawyers: How the Crisis in the
Legal Profession is Transforming American Society
(Harvard University
Press). In the Introduction to her book, published in 1994, Glendon states:
"It is precisely because of the unique role of law and lawyers in American
life that a significant advance of arrogance, unruliness, greed, and
cynicism in the legal profession is of more concern than similar
developments in, say, banking or dentistry. […] A breakdown in
self-discipline among lawyers, then, cannot be without consequences for the
wider society."

A similar concern for the degradation of the legal
profession is expressed by Sol M. Linowitz, a Washington, D.C. attorney,
former general counsel and chairman of the board of Xerox, in his 1994 book
The Betrayed Profession: Lawyering at the End of the Twentieth Century
(Scribner). Also in 1994, Philip K. Howard, a lawyer practicing in New York
City, published his book, The Death of Common Sense: How Law is Suffocating
America
(Random House). Howard's "distressing, disturbing, devastatingly
detailed indictment" (Amazon.com) of the American legal system called by
reviewers "a blood-boiler" and "a lethal cannonball of a book," stayed on
the Publishers Weekly bestseller list for 25 weeks. In 1996, Ralph Nader
(likely disappointed that his collection of alarming essays, Verdicts on
Lawyers
, published 20 years earlier, did not make much difference) teamed up
with a Californian lawyer-writer, Wesley J. Smith, to write No Contest:
Corporate Lawyers and the Perversion of Justice in America
(Random House).
On the front flap, the editor of the book expresses alarming concerns:
"There is a widespread belief among Americans that something is deeply wrong
with our legal system [dominated by] rapacious thieves with LLDs. But how
has a profession whose ideals are integrity and equality of all sunk so low?
Can this slide be reversed?" One of the book's reviewers, Gloria Steinem,
states: "No Contest makes Watergate and the O.J. Simpson trial look
inconsequential. […] Ralph Nader and Wesley Smith have given us the good
research and deep outrage we need to create social change."

In 1998, the outrage and call for change inspired not only Professor Paul
Campos, but also Max Boot, a young investigative reporter for the Wall
Street Journal and recipient of the Gerald Love Award for Distinguished
Business and Financial Journalism. Boot coined the term "juristocracy" in
his highly acclaimed treatise entitled Out of Order: Arrogance, Corruption,
and Incompetence on the Bench
(Basic Books). Robert H. Bork, a former
federal appeals court judge and the best-selling author of Slouching towards
Gomorrah and The Tempting of America
, states in the Foreword to Max Boot's
book: "Men and women given unaccountable power will often use it to further
their own ends, not ends of the polity which they exist to serve. […] Our
courts are behaving badly and the public, to the degree it can be brought to
understand that, will exact force for reform, a reform that must be
structural as well as intellectual and moral."

After navigating his way through his two-foot-high stack of books, Chester
Chalupowski, deeply disillusioned, found an answer to his question - Paul
Campos was not alone in his doomed vision, there was no 'good news,' and
there was no other, brighter, side to the story told in Jurismania.

Recently, this sad conclusion has been confirmed by more authors courageous
enough to tread on this treacherous ground. In the summer of 1999, Chester,
now an expert on the topic, noticed that Ballantine Books announced The
Moral Compass of the American Lawyer: Truth, Justice, Power and Greed
,
written by Richard Zitrin and Carol M. Langford (both professors of law at
the University of San Francisco, as well as practicing lawyers). The moment
the brand new copy arrived at the Beverly Public Library, Chester was the
first to check it out. While the librarian was still scanning the barcode,
Chester was already reading the publisher's comments placed on the front
flap: "These are perilous times for Americans who need access to the legal
system. Too many lawyers blatantly abuse power and trust, and engage in
reckless ethical misconduct, grossly unjust billing practices, and
dishonesty disguised as client protection."

The contents of the book thoroughly confirms the statement on the cover.

Even more alarming is one of the most recent efforts to bring the crisis in
the American legal system to the public's attention made by Catherine Crier,
a former Dallas lawyer and judge, turned Emmy Award winning TV host and one
of the most respected legal journalists in the nation. In 2002, Crier
published her book, The Case against Lawyers: How the Lawyers, Politicians,
and Bureaucrats Have Turned the Law into an Instrument of Tyranny - and What
We as Citizens Have to Do About It
(Broadway Books). According to the
publisher, Crier "describes an American legal system dangerously out of
control - and finds the lawyers guilty as charged. […] She now confronts a
profoundly unfair legal system that produces results and profits for the few
- and paralysis, frustration, and injustice for the many. […]" The Broadway
Books Editor assures us: "The Case Against Lawyers will make readers hopping
mad. And it will make them realize that the only response can be to demand
change. Now."

While it may be difficult to ascertain whether Crier's book, or any other of
the aforementioned books for that matter, made the readers "hopping mad,"
one thing is painfully apparent - all these books (and many more from the
'Chester's list,' which were not mentioned here) did not make any difference
as far as the condition of the American legal system is concerned. "The
paralysis, frustration, and injustice for the many," complained about for
the last 30 years is getting more and more rampant, and it seems to be here
to stay. All these painstakingly researched and masterfully written books
(some of them as engrossing as good fiction) have not brought about any
change, and apart from documenting the crisis, did not have any significant
impact. Each of them ends with some suggestions for a reform of the legal
system. But, as Paul Campos noticed in his Jurismania, "… almost nothing
recommended by well-intentioned academics ever happens." All these excellent
books usually do not make bestsellers' lists, unlike the ones that deal with
specific juicy and emotionally charged cases (e.g. A Civil Action, by
Jonathan Harr, or all the accounts of the O.J. Simpson trial, and other high
profile criminal cases). Therefore, the message of "well-intentioned
academics" does not get into the general public's consciousness.

In the Foreword to Max Boot's book, Robert Bork states: "[…] laymen rarely
have a complete understanding of what is taking place and those lawyers who
do, by and large, become cynically accepting of a system they do not admire
but have learned how to work, or at least to live, with." Lawyers'
complacence is unsettling. Robert W. Gordon, a Stanford Law School professor
and a reviewer of Anthony Kronman's book, states: "If lawyers could spare
any time to read, The Lost Lawyer [or any other of these books] should
really make them sit up and take notice of what has happened to them."

Practicing lawyers shrug these concerns off, and preoccupied with playing
the system well (i.e. to their own advantage) they would never waste time
reading all these alarming treatises. After all, to whom would they bill the
hours spent on the reading?

Only people like Chester Chalupowski of Salem, Massachusetts, deeply
wounded and traumatized by the injustices of the justice system, but still
struggling to make some sense out of the chaos and to see the bigger
picture, take the time to explore the matter, even if there is no good news,
especially, if there is no good news.


Excerpted from an essay by Dr. Margaret Koch-Nabialczyk, circulated on
the Internet December, 2004.  Dr. Koch-Nabialczyk lives in Beverly,
Massachusetts and can be reached by e-mail at mana6484@hotmail.com.  A full description of the Chester J. Chalupowski case can be found at Citizens for Judicial Accountability, http://www.judicialaccountability.org.

 




Legal Abuse Syndrome -- Las Vegas Review-Journal

Legal Abuse Syndrome -- Las Vegas Review-Journal

Judges and Mortgage Loans

Judges and Mortgage Loans

Sunday, September 20, 2015

The Real Deal Ep # 106 Trashing Trump Unjustly / Eugenics by way of Water

An Age For Justice Confronting Elder Abuse In America | Iniitu.webcam

An Age For Justice Confronting Elder Abuse In America | Iniitu.webcam

American Screen Legend's Emotional Appeal To Congress To Stop 'Chronic Elder Abuse In America' | Martha T.S. Laham

American Screen Legend's Emotional Appeal To Congress To Stop 'Chronic Elder Abuse In America' | Martha T.S. Laham

 By Chester J Chalupowski
CJC I & RE

The Probate and Family Court Department has jurisdiction over family-related and probate matters such as divorce, paternity, child support, custody, visitation, adoption, termination of parental rights, abuse prevention and wills, estates, trusts, guardianships, conservatorships, and changes of name.
Now the number one illness within the court is money and greed from an untitled individual.
The solution is to remove the number one illness money and greed from an untitled  individual.
Abolish probate court and provide a FREE citizens council of mediation and arbitration  by the people, for the people, as a benefit to the people WITHOUT LAWYERS, JUDGES ETC.
The aforementioned issues are so critical and emotional to the foundation of our society that unless the money and greed from an untitled individual is removed the consequence will continue to be an involuntarily redistributing of assets, an erosion of public trust in our government to the point of revolution.
A whole 7- trillion dollar industry payed on the backs of our survivors of WWII (10,000 elderly are turning 65 every day in this country due to the baby boom) can be stopped by the people and for the people.

“I would not put a thief in my mouth to steal my brains.”
― William Shakespeare, Othello

PS: READ Lynched by Court Order
 http://cesarlebel.blogspot.com/

Thursday, September 17, 2015

Patients scarred, insurance firms duped in massive scam, L.A. County prosecutors say - LA Times

Patients scarred, insurance firms duped in massive scam, L.A. County prosecutors say - LA Times

National Elder Mistreatment Study - 226456.pdf

National Elder Mistreatment Study - 226456.pdf

Elder abuse tends not to be reported - Times Bulletin

Elder abuse tends not to be reported - Times Bulletin

Facts & Figures 2013: How Does Your State Compare? | Tax Foundation

Facts & Figures 2013: How Does Your State Compare? | Tax Foundation

ct probate advocates

Probate Corruption  

ct probate advocates

"The Scandal of Connecticut's Probate Courts," Statement of Prof. John H. Langbein to Conn. Legislature Committee

How Did Rich Connecticut Morph Into One Of America's Worst Performing Economies? - Forbes

How Did Rich Connecticut Morph Into One Of America's Worst Performing Economies? - Forbes



 Don’t die in Connecticut!

There’s another factor that leads people to think seriously about leaving Connecticut: its probate court system.

Yale Law School professor John H. Langbein said that “When citizens of our state ask me about Connecticut probate, I give this simple advice: Try not to die in Connecticut.  If you are a person of means, you should establish your domicile in some place such as Florida or Maine or Arizona that has a responsible probate system.”  See Langbein’s testimony before the Connecticut Legislature Committee on Program Review & Investigation, October 7, 2005.

Connecticut probate corruption has been going on for a long time, because judges and lawyers aggressively resist attempted reforms.  More than 60 years ago, New York University law professor Thomas Atkinson reported that “Connecticut is just about at the bottom of the list so far as its probate court system is concerned.”

Today, Connecticut probate judges work part-time in one town and often practice law in other towns which can mean obvious conflicts-of-interest.  Probate judge A is reluctant to reject motions enriching lawyer B who comes before him, because lawyer B serves as probate judge B in another town where probate judge A works as lawyer A and makes motions to enrich himself.

To be sure, there is a Connecticut statute –  Chapter 801, Section 45a-25  — that says a probate judge cannot appear as an attorney in another probate judge’s court when a matter is “contested.”  A matter is “contested” if a party objects.  In that situation, a Connecticut probate judge might be able to get around the law by having his law firm partner or associate appear in a another probate judge’s court.

If there’s no objection, because a party or his/her attorney isn’t present — perhaps because there wasn’t proper notice about a hearing — then the law seems to indicate that a probate judge could appear as an attorney in another probate judge’s court.

In 2011, there were some changes in Connecticut law applicable to probate courts, and Judge Paul J. Knierim, Connecticut Probate Court Administrator, claimed that those reforms “addressed all of Langbein’s core concerns.”

Langbein emphatically disagreed: “The worst feature of the probate system, that many of the judges are part-timers who have active law practices, remains.  No set of be-good rules can begin to eradicate structural conflicts-of-interest this system invites.  If you are in law practice, you are looking to build your law practice. That is profoundly inconsistent with the judicial function, where your sole purpose must be to make the right decision under law.”

Connecticut’s probate system has enabled judges to collect fees for essentially looting estates.  According to Langbein, “Filing fees and subsequent charges are far higher than elsewhere.  Probate courts have extended their fees to non-probate transfers such as life insurance and joint tenancy, for which, by definition, no probate services are needed.”

That’s not all.  Connecticut has had something called the Duplicate Trial Rule that, as Langbein pointed out, “allows a litigant who is determined to have a contested probate matter heard by a professional judge to do so, but only after making that person pay for two full trials.”

Langbein insisted that “It’s no answer to say [as Knierim did] that the court fees and the judges’ compensation are set by law.  The problem is that there are still too many probate courts, too many [part-time] judges and too much needless judicial supervision of trusts and estates, driving up costs.”

Langbein warned about the arbitrary power of probate judges to dictate “who owns the property of a decedent, and they can decide whether to strip a citizen of his or her liberty by declaring the citizen incompetent.  It is far from clear that Connecticut probate could withstand constitutional scrutiny under the Due Process clause of the U.S. Constitution.  When liberty and property are at stake, the state has an obligation to operate under procedures commensurate with the seriousness of the affected interests.”

Consider this case exposed by Hartford Courant investigative reporter Rick Green.  The case involved Josephine Smoron, the last of a family of Polish farmers whose 80-acre property is in Southington.  She willed it to Sam Manzo, her long-time caretaker.  The property was estimated to be worth about $1.5 million.

According to the Courant, when Smoron’s health worsened, probate judge Brian Meccariello appointed local lawyer John Nugent as conservator supposedly to protect her interests.  Nugent, who never met Smoron (“I don’t speak dementia,” he was quoted as saying), reportedly made a deal to help a Southington developer gain control of the property.  The developer was identified by the Courant as Carl Verderame.  In May 2009, Meccariello arbitrarily changed Smoron’s will, disinheriting Manzo and setting up a legal maneuver that would transfer the property to Verderame.  Manzo persisted with efforts to uphold Smoron’s original will, and the case went to Superior Court in Hartford.  Rick Green described the judge as struggling to resolve a “circular firing squad of competing interests.”  Manzo finally prevailed this year, but the court nearly pulled off a robbery.

These courts have been reformed?  “As for the scandals involving abuse of the protective jurisdiction for the elderly,” Yale Law’s Langbein remarked, “I am not aware of any major reforms having been taken to prevent such cases in the future.  The power to strip an elderly person of autonomy over his or her property is essential — we cannot leave such persons to harm themselves or be victimized — but that power is inherently dangerous and should not be in the hands of guys who are on the make.”

Despite the 2011 Connecticut probate reforms, there continue to be outrageous cases of guardianship abuse.  Connecticut Probate Advocates has gathered cases from multiple sources.

What should be done about Connecticut’s probate scandals?  Langbein believes “the reform that is needed is to get rid of the probate court system, fold the jurisdiction into the ordinary courts as in other states, and have it served by real judges chosen more on merit.”  Unfortunately, such genuine reform isn’t likely to happen, because as Langbein notes, “The probate gang is a feared interest group in the state legislature, and they largely get what they want.”

Probate issues, though little talked about outside the world of trusts and estates, could spur an acceleration of the exodus from Connecticut as affluent baby boomers retire where they’re less likely to be looted.

TopRetirements.com rated states according to their desirability for retirement.  They ranked Connecticut dead last.

The most fundamental lesson here is simply that investors, entrepreneurs and other productive people want to go where they’re welcome.  They start to think about leaving when they feel exploited.

If enough of these people leave, how can a declining economy possibly turn around?

Editor’s Note:  This article has been updated to contain additional information provided by Yale Law School professor John Langbein .

The History of the Probate Court - viewcontent.cgi

The History of the Probate Court - viewcontent.cgi

Monday, August 31, 2015

Elder abuse: People 'don't really talk about it' | Klamath | heraldandnews.com

Elder abuse: People 'don't really talk about it' | Klamath | heraldandnews.com

Bristol County DA Thomas Quinn: I will prioritize elder abuse in Taunton area - News - The Herald News, Fall River, MA - Fall River, MA

Bristol County DA Thomas Quinn: I will prioritize elder abuse in Taunton area - News - The Herald News, Fall River, MA - Fall River, MAI hope that DA's in MA realize according a subsequent Met Life Study in
Rochester NY the greatest dollar amount stolen from Elder's is by
Lawyers using the tools and facilities of probate court for there own
self enrichment, all along being subsidized by the citizens of the
commonwealth.

The administrator of the court could save a lot of time and money for
the commonwealth if they investigated and prosecuted the very people who
are sworn to protect them. It truly is quite an evil network. I am sure
if the DA would prosecute there friends the judiciary would stop
bellyaching about not having enough money to administrate the judiciary
here in Massachusetts annually. We are truly tired of the Da's excuses,
its a civil issue. The truth is it is a Racketeering criminal
enterprise.

READ:
http://cesarlebel.blogspot.com/

Ex-lawyer accused of hypnotizing women indicted on 27 charges - MorningJournalNews.com | News, Sports, Jobs, Lisbon, Ohio - The Morning Journal

Ex-lawyer accused of hypnotizing women indicted on 27 charges - MorningJournalNews.com | News, Sports, Jobs, Lisbon, Ohio - The Morning Journal

Athena Roe of HAR Justice Exposes America's Secret Wealth Exchanges Prob...

How to Spot — and Handle — a Sociopath «

How to Spot — and Handle — a Sociopath «

Friday, July 31, 2015

Lawmakers to take on receivership, probate abuse - Watchdog.org

Lawmakers to take on receivership, probate abuse - Watchdog.org

By Chester J Chalupowski
CJC I & RE

The Probate and
Family Court Department has jurisdiction over family-related and probate
matters such as divorce, paternity, child support, custody, visitation,
adoption, termination of parental rights, abuse prevention and wills,
estates, trusts, guardianships, conservatorships, and changes of name.
Now the number one illness within the court is money and greed from an untitled individual.
The solution is to remove the number one illness money and greed from an untitled individual.

Abolish probate court and provide a FREE citizens council of mediation
and arbitration by the people, for the people, as a benefit to the
people WITHOUT LAWYERS, JUDGES ETC.
The aforementioned issues are so
critical and emotional to the foundation of our society that unless the
money and greed from an untitled individual is removed the consequence
will continue to be an involuntarily redistributing of assets, an
erosion of public trust in our government to the point of revolution.

A whole 7- trillion dollar industry payed on the backs of our survivors
of WWII (10,000 elderly are turning 65 every day in this country due to
the baby boom) can be stopped by the people and for the people.


“I would not put a thief in my mouth to steal my brains.”
― William Shakespeare, Othello

PS: READ Lynched by Court Order
http://cesarlebel.blogspot.com/

Monday, July 20, 2015

White House Conference on Aging Abuses Elders by Ignoring Injustice | Somewhat Reasonable

White House Conference on Aging Abuses Elders by Ignoring Injustice | Somewhat Reasonable

Elder exploitation: who are the perpetrators? | Your Legal Corner | NJ.com

Elder exploitation: who are the perpetrators? | Your Legal Corner | NJ.com

Elder exploitation: who are the perpetrators? | Your Legal Corner | NJ.com

Elder exploitation: who are the perpetrators? | Your Legal Corner | NJ.comThe Probate and Family Court Department has jurisdiction over family-related and probate matters such as divorce, paternity, child support, custody, visitation, adoption, termination of parental rights, abuse prevention and wills, estates, trusts, guardianships, conservatorships, and changes of name.
Now the number one illness within the court is money and greed from an untitled individual.
The solution is to remove the number one illness money and greed from an untitled  individual.
Abolish probate court and provide a FREE citizens council of mediation and arbitration  by the people, for the people, as a benefit to the people WITHOUT LAWYERS, JUDGES ETC.
The aforementioned issues are so critical and emotional to the foundation of our society that unless the money and greed from an untitled individual is removed the consequence will continue to be an involuntarily redistributing of assets, an erosion of public trust in our government to the point of revolution.
A whole 7- trillion dollar industry payed on the backs of our survivors of WWII (10,000 elderly are turning 65 every day in this country due to the baby boom) can be stopped by the people and for the people.

“I would not put a thief in my mouth to steal my brains.”
― William Shakespeare, Othello

PS: READ Lynched by Court Order
 http://cesarlebel.blogspot.com/

Saturday, July 18, 2015

Policy Briefs | Elder Justice Policy Brief

Policy Briefs | Elder Justice Policy BriefThe Probate and Family Court Department has jurisdiction over family-related and probate matters such as divorce, paternity, child support, custody, visitation, adoption, termination of parental rights, abuse prevention and wills, estates, trusts, guardianships, conservatorships, and changes of name.
Now the number one illness within the court is money and greed from an untitled individual.
The solution is to remove the number one illness money and greed from an untitled  individual.
Abolish probate court and provide a FREE citizens council of mediation and arbitration  by the people, for the people, as a benefit to the people WITHOUT LAWYERS, JUDGES ETC.
The aforementioned issues are so critical and emotional to the foundation of our society that unless the money and greed from an untitled individual is removed the consequence will continue to be an involuntarily redistributing of assets, an erosion of public trust in our government to the point of revolution.
A whole 7- trillion dollar industry payed on the backs of our survivors of WWII (10,000 elderly are turning 65 every day in this country due to the baby boom) can be stopped by the people and for the people.

“I would not put a thief in my mouth to steal my brains.”
― William Shakespeare, Othello

PS: READ Lynched by Court Order
 http://cesarlebel.blogspot.com/

How deep does courthouse corruption run? - WOAI News 4 San Antonio - Top Stories

How deep does courthouse corruption run? - WOAI News 4 San Antonio - Top Stories

Freedom Doesn't Ring in Cookeville — Cookeville Free Press

Freedom Doesn't Ring in Cookeville — Cookeville Free Press

Thursday, July 16, 2015

Long Island lawyer admits to $4M real estate con job | Long Island Real Estate Investment Association

Long Island lawyer admits to $4M real estate con job | Long Island Real Estate Investment Association

DA: Great Neck Lawyer Stole $700K from Clients | Long Island News from the Long Island Press

DA: Great Neck Lawyer Stole $700K from Clients | Long Island News from the Long Island Press

Suehs: Guardianship reforms to bring peace of mind to elderly, disabled - Houston Chronicle

Suehs: Guardianship reforms to bring peace of mind to elderly, disabled - Houston Chronicle

Casey Kasem's ordeal inspires law to curb elder abuse - MyNewsLA.com

Casey Kasem's ordeal inspires law to curb elder abuse - MyNewsLA.com

Royal Commission into Family Violence: Abuse of elderly under-reported by victims due to 'embarrassment, shame' - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

Royal Commission into Family Violence: Abuse of elderly under-reported by victims due to 'embarrassment, shame' - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

Police zeroing in on elder abuse | The Belleville Intelligencer

Police zeroing in on elder abuse | The Belleville Intelligencer

The corruption at end of El Chapo's tunnel - Chicago Tribune

The corruption at end of El Chapo's tunnel - Chicago Tribune

Former Texas judge sentenced to 2 years in prison in judicial corruption case

Former Texas judge sentenced to 2 years in prison in judicial corruption case

Bribes for Favorable Court Rulings

WHCOA 2015, Empowering All Generations: Elder Justice in the 21st Centur...

Collaborating with Adult Protective Services

Elder Financial Exploitation: The Crime of the 21st Century

Elder Neglect: When does this become criminal?

Paul Greenwood: Destroying the Myths

White House Initiative on Elder Abuse and Financial Exploitation Closing...

White House Initiative on Elder Abuse and Financial Exploitation Panel 2

White House Initiative on Elder Abuse and Financial Exploitation Opening...

Guardianship Abuse Spreads to Pennsylvania | RebelPundit

Guardianship Abuse Spreads to Pennsylvania | RebelPundit

Planned Parenthood Uses Partial-Birth Abortions to Sell Baby Parts

Ginger Lott is putting Willie Jo Mills On Hospice

CELL PHONE VIDEO: Chandler officer 'illegally' enters woman's home, arrests her while she is naked - ABC15 Arizona

CELL PHONE VIDEO: Chandler officer 'illegally' enters woman's home, arrests her while she is naked - ABC15 Arizona

Wednesday, July 15, 2015

True-Link-Report-On-Elder-Financial-Abuse-012815.pdf

True-Link-Report-On-Elder-Financial-Abuse-012815.pdf

Caregiver abuse:
$6.67 billion is lost annually to deceit or theft
enabled by a trusting relationship—typically a family member
but sometimes a paid helper, friend, lawyer, accountant, or
financial manager.

White House Conference On Aging 2015: Elder Justice

White House Conference On Aging 2015: Elder Justice

Friday, July 10, 2015

Judicial Abuse: May 2015

Judicial Abuse: May 2015

Former prosecutor questions integrity of court's federal funding used to punish crime victims, reward violent offenders | Communities Digital News

Former prosecutor questions integrity of court's federal funding used to punish crime victims, reward violent offenders | Communities Digital News

Corruption trials shed light on blood money flowing through Massachusetts DCF, courts | Communities Digital News

Corruption trials shed light on blood money flowing through Massachusetts DCF, courts | Communities Digital News

Vermont AG Sorrell sues Emerge Family Advocates | Communities Digital News

Vermont AG Sorrell sues Emerge Family Advocates | Communities Digital News

US Attorney Deirdre M. Daly: Investigation of corrupt CT courts | Communities Digital News

US Attorney Deirdre M. Daly: Investigation of corrupt CT courts | Communities Digital News

Family Court Fraud, ABA monopoly, Collusion & Corruption - The Brilliant Racket(tm)

Family Court Fraud, ABA monopoly, Collusion & Corruption - The Brilliant Racket(tm)

Jade Helm, Terrorist Attacks, Surveillance and Other Fairy Tales for a Gullible Nation | The PPJ Gazette

Jade Helm, Terrorist Attacks, Surveillance and Other Fairy Tales for a Gullible Nation | The PPJ Gazette

Lynched by COURT ORDER | Judicialcorruption's Weblog

Lynched by COURT ORDER | Judicialcorruption's Weblog

Death via probate court: An American Horror Story | The PPJ Gazette

Death via probate court: An American Horror Story | The PPJ Gazette

Saturday, June 27, 2015

Elder abuse may be more common than people think | Fox News

Elder abuse may be more common than people think | Fox News

Air-Force-Documents-3964_001.pdf

$206,337.00 flight to Florida On Airforce OneAir-Force-Documents-3964_001.pdf

Records Reveal Obamas’ Ireland Trip Cost Taxpayers $7,921,638.66 - Judicial Watch

Records Reveal Obamas’ Ireland Trip Cost Taxpayers $7,921,638.66 - Judicial Watch

JW Obtains Documents Revealing High Cost of Obama 2013 Trips - Judicial Watch

JW Obtains Documents Revealing High Cost of Obama 2013 Trips - Judicial Watch

14-556 Obergefell v. Hodges (06/26/2015) - 14-556_3204.pdf

the opinion on marriage14-556 Obergefell v. Hodges (06/26/2015) - 14-556_3204.pdf

14-114 King v. Burwell (06/25/2015) - 14-114_qol1.pdf

the opinion on Obamacare14-114 King v. Burwell (06/25/2015) - 14-114_qol1.pdf

13-1371 Texas Dept. of Housing and Community Affairs v. Inclusive Communities Project, Inc. (06/25/2015) - 13-1371_m64o.pdf

13-1371 Texas Dept. of Housing and Community Affairs v. Inclusive Communities Project, Inc. (06/25/2015) - 13-1371_m64o.pdfSJC opinion on so-called "disparate impact"

Friday, June 26, 2015

Supreme Court Extends Same-sex Marriage Nationwide

Supreme Court Extends Same-sex Marriage Nationwide

Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) - Crimes Against the Elderly, 2003-2013

Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) - Crimes Against the Elderly, 2003-2013

Local Government Corrections Expenditures, FY 2005–2011 - lgcefy0511.pdf

Local Government Corrections Expenditures, FY 2005–2011 - lgcefy0511.pdf

Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS)

Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS)

The Bureau of Justice Statistics

FBI — Patricia Merz and Christopher Mcguigan Convicted for Embezzling from Mother’s Bennington Estate

FBI — Patricia Merz and Christopher Mcguigan Convicted for Embezzling from Mother’s Bennington Estate

Lawyer for indicted Palisades Park police sergeant says his client committed no crime - News - NorthJersey.com

Lawyer for indicted Palisades Park police sergeant says his client committed no crime - News - NorthJersey.com

Leland Yee case: lawyers seek another delay in racketeering trial - San Jose Mercury News

Leland Yee case: lawyers seek another delay in racketeering trial - San Jose Mercury News

Former Chief Clerk Of The Chatham County | USAO-SDGA | Department of Justice

Birge embezzled and stole more than $700,000 from the Probate Court’s bank accounts.Former Chief Clerk Of The Chatham County | USAO-SDGA | Department of Justice

NCJRS Abstract - National Criminal Justice Reference Service

WHY PROBATE JUDGES FEAR UNIFIED COURTS - MOST OF THEM CLAIM THEY WON'T WORK - BUT OTHERS SAY THEY ARE WRONGNCJRS Abstract - National Criminal Justice Reference Service

FBI — Former Mahoning County Probate Judge Pleads Guilty to Tampering with Records

FBI — Former Mahoning County Probate Judge Pleads Guilty to Tampering with Records

FBI — Hancock County Probate Judge Pleads Guilty to Embezzlement

FBI — Hancock County Probate Judge Pleads Guilty to Embezzlement

Nislick: Court consolidation plan raises concerns - OPINION - MetroWest Daily News, Framingham, MA - Framingham, MA

Nislick: Court consolidation plan raises concerns - OPINION - MetroWest Daily News, Framingham, MA - Framingham, MA