Joann Bashinsky |
Joann Bashinsky, the Golden Flake heiress and one of Alabama's most prominent philanthropists, has died. Her death, at age,89 from a heart attack, came roughly eight months after she was embroiled in a battle over her estate, prompted by two former employees, two local attorneys (one with Balch and Bingham, one connected to former U.S. Sen. Doug Jones) and a judge who retired after making a series of peculiar rulings. From a report at al.com:
Joann Bashinsky, the potato chip queen of the South and the widow of the Golden Flake CEO Sloan Bashinsky, died Sunday. She was 89 years old.
“My grandmother was a champion for those in need for decades, and her passing will be felt by countless people whose lives were touched by her kindness and incredible compassion for humanity. Most of all, this loss will be felt by my family and me,” her grandson, Landon Ash, said in a statement. “Nonny was my champion as well, and I loved her dearly for the guidance and direction she gave me throughout my life.”
Ash said his grandmother died from complications of a heart attack.
Bashinsky, of Mountain Brook and known as “Mama B” or “Mrs. B,” is the widow of Sloan Y. Bashinsky, who owned the majority stock in Golden Enterprises Inc. and was the founder, chairman, and CEO of Golden Flake Foods – a 96-year-old Birmingham-based company. In 1968, Golden Flake went public and, in 2016, Pennsylvania-based Utz Quality Foods bought Golden Enterprises, Golden Flake’s parent company, for $141 million.
“Words can’t describe my sorrow for my grandmother’s passing, though I take comfort in knowing she was one of Alabama’s finest women to ever live and that she is now with the rest of her family in heaven.” Ash said.
As for the estate controversy, we reported on that in a series of posts last summer. From a May 27 post:
One of Birmingham's wealthiest and most prominent citizens is the target of apparent elder abuse and exploitation -- driven partly by the embattled Birmingham law firm Balch Bingham -- according to reports from altoday.com and banbalch.com. At the heart of the controversy is big money. Also involved is a recording that reveals two local attorneys engaging in highly dubious scare tactics.
Joann Bashinsky, 88, is the widow of Golden Flake founder and CEO Sloan Y. Bashinsky Sr -- and her estate reportedly is worth $218 million.
Two former family employees -- lawyer John McKleroy and finance manager
Patty Townsend -- have filed a petition in Jefferson County Probate
Court, claiming Mrs. Bashinsky has dementia, is incapable of handling
her affairs, and her estate needs the appointment of a guardian and
conservator. Mrs. Bashinsky's attorneys deny those claims.
From K.B. Forbes, publisher of banbalch.com:
A bombshell story on Alabama Today last Friday is rocking the legal and law enforcement community in Birmingham, Alabama.
A Balch Bingham attorney, Amy Adams, . . . was allegedly involved in a scheme that appears to be {elder] abuse and exploitation while the FBI and U.S. Attorney Jay E. Town . . . have done nothing to investigate.
The target of this alleged scheme: 88 year-old Joann Bashinsky, known as Mrs. B.
Court records indicate Adams, the Balch lawyer, has been working in concert with Greg Hawley, the former law partner of U.S. Sen. Doug Jones (D-AL). Reports Apryl Marie Fogel at Alabama Today:
In a continuance of her ongoing fight for independence, Bashinsky (known to many as Mrs. B or Mama B) told me a story of intimidation, scare-tactics and questionable ethical actions by two powerful and well-known attorneys. It’s a story that would sound as if it were ripped straight from the headlines of any long-running t.v. crime and legal drama, or was the plot of a novel if not for the fact – there’s audio.
The lawyers involved, are Greg Hawley and Amy Adams. Hawley is the former law partner of U.S. Senator Doug Jones. Adams is an attorney from Balch Bingham, a firm long considered a state and national powerhouse (with strong connections to former U.S. Sen. Jeff Sessions).
The facts below are supported by a recording that was made by Mrs. B on a day she unsuccessfully fought back efforts to retain her voting rights in SYB Inc, a company whose board she’d been a part of for decades.
The conversation and actions between Hawley, a man the court-appointed to protect Mrs. B’s interest, and Amy Adams, a woman who in her own words Mrs. B said used “scare tactics” to intimidate her into firing her current counsel and hiring her are painful to read or listen to, but let me summarize them for you below.
How did the audio come about and how painful does it get? As for the second part of that question, it reveals lawyering at its ugliest. As for the first part . . . here is more from Fogel (with quotes from the audio recording highlighted in green.):
Hawley pulled Mrs. B aside before and then again after the board meeting, refusing to allow her chosen attorney in the room and leaving her alone with Adams for a period of time. Their goal: have Mrs. B fire her current legal council and hire Adams. When that didn’t happen, Hawley hired her anyway himself.
Here are 3 of the most alarming parts of the conversation:
1. Financial scare tactics
The first, yet not even the most concerning issue arises in the first couple of minutes when Amy Adams meets Ms. B and says “I’ve seen your finances”.
Those documents are or at least should be confidential. At this point, Adams (Balch Bingham), had not been retained by anyone in the case nor had Mrs. B. given her permission for them to be reviewed. She wasn’t even expecting to meet with Adams that day or at any other point.
But what’s worse? Not that Adams has seen the documents, but that she misrepresents them repeatedly.
She tells Mrs. B that she could potentially lose her house and staff and run out of money. These “scare tactics” as Mrs. B calls them is repeated, no fewer than 10 times over the course of their 2 conversations. With Adams saying things like,
“You’re not going to have enough money to live off of the rest of your life if you keep going through your money the way you’ve gone through it the last couple of years.”
“It takes a lot of money to stay in your house and you’re not keeping enough money to stay in your house. You realize that right?”
“Okay. I’m just telling you – I’ve looked at it you’re not keeping enough money.”
She doesn’t stop there, at the threat that Mrs. B losing her house. She goes on to suggest that Mrs. B might need to fire some of those who help her at her home. Trusted employees, some of whom have been with her for many years. Adams says this about them, “We might have to get rid of some of the people that are on your staff.”
The problem is Mrs. B owns her house and has tens of millions in liquid assets, not including stock. This painful conversation goes on for several minutes at a time off and on during both meetings. The basic theme of Adams being if you want to stay in your house you need to hire me or my firm Balch Bingham — at $425 per hour. She goes on to joke though if retained drinks with her would for free, “I wouldn’t charge you for that,” she says.
When Hawley returns to the conversation, he makes it clear that Adams' repeated misrepresentations about Mrs. B being in dire financial straights can’t be verified, “What I don’t know yet is, I don’t have the whole financial picture so I can’t say, I can’t say that yet.” That doesn’t stop [Adams] from saying it a few more times as the conversation continues, though.
2. HIPAA compliance questions
Mrs. B sat for several competency tests. The results of which she describes as showing she is perfectly capable of managing her own affairs. Again, results that the court never even heard.
That said, when Hawley brings up one of the initial tests, it was clear his office sent them to Adams. While Hawley is looking for them himself, Adams says, “I might have it on my phone.” Note this report would fall under the category of private health information (PHI) covered by HIPAA.
[Adams] proceeds to check, confirming that Hawley’s assistant Margaret sent private and confidential medical records.
Hawley’s casual dismissal of the fact she has them and his office sent them, should send shock waves through his client list, “Margaret was supposed to just send you the letters of conservatorship but anyway…” he says, as if this sort of mistake happens every day and is just fine.
I emailed Hawley and among the questions I asked him was if his office was HIPAA compliant. In his response, in which he did not answer the HIPAA questions following his signature was this boilerplate messages, “CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE: This e-mail and any attachments may contain confidential information that is legally privileged. Do not read this e-mail if you are not the intended recipient. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any disclosure, copying, distribution or use of any information contained in or attached to this e-mail is strictly prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error, please immediately notify us by replying to the sender or calling the sender at (205) 490-XXXX and destroy the original email and its attachments without reading or saving it. Thank you.”
I don’t think it takes an expert to know Adams should have known better than to read private medical information that came from another attorney’s office before she was formally engaged by either party.
3. Hawley hires Balch Bingham
After Amy Adams spoke alone with
Mrs. B, Hawley continues to push Mrs. B to hire Adams. Refusing to
allow Mrs. B’s existing lawyer to be in the room. When Mrs. B decided
not to hire Adams, telling me that she felt like Adams talked down to
her, tried to use scare tactics, and made her feel disrespected, you’d
think this would be the end of Adam’s chapter in this sordid situation.
It wasn’t. After this meeting, Hawley hired Adams himself.
Nevermind that at the beginning
of the conversation Adams gives her word that she’s not interested in
helping Hawley just in being Mrs. B’s attorney, “When Greg called me I
told him the only way I’d do it is if we could fire him because I wasn’t
going with him. I’d only go with you and that’s what I told him that’s
the only way I would come.”
It wasn’t just a promise by
Adams that she would only represent Mrs. B. Here’s what Hawley said,
“Let me tell you, there are lawyers – Amy’s very decisive. Some people
use the B-word to describe her, okay. She’s a great lawyer, but she’s
very decisive, and she will represent you. And I even told her, and I’ll
tell you this and I’ll tell you this, in front of her, and I’ll put it
in writing that if she ever sees a conflict of interest developing
between what’s best for you and something different I say, I want her to
represent you, not me.”
“I want her to represent you,
not me.” Those were his words and then he hired her anyway after Mrs. B
said she didn’t want her engaged. It’s enough to make one’s head
explode.
Understandably alarmed by what she hears on the recording, Fogel wonders
about the ethics rules that are supposed to govern such interactions:
Can you imagine a loved one going through this? I cannot.
What’s more, I cannot begin to imagine how intimidating it would be find yourself at the mercy or a court who didn’t allow your voice to be heard before placing you in the “protection” of a lawyer who among, other concerning actions could willy nilly allow your medical and financial documents to be shared with others, by a lawyer who brought onto your case someone you clearly didn’t and wouldn’t hire yourself, someone you felt bullied by. This whole situation leaves many questions to be answered.
I asked about this situation, their code of conduct for lawyers, and a host of other questions to Adams' direct supervisor at Balch Bingham, Stan Blanton. I received a response to reach out to their media relations person. The spokesman sent the following statement after a call, “It is our understanding that Mrs. Bashinsky expressly stated that she did not want the conservator to engage Amy Adams as her attorney, and therefore no attorney-client relationship was formed. Balch Bingham has not taken any position adverse to Mrs. Bashinsky. Nevertheless, we notified the conservator of the firm’s intent to withdraw from our representation of the conservator in this matter to avoid being a distraction.” I responded to that message repeating questions from my first inquiry about their code of conduct or ethics and did not get a response.
It seems to me that keeping your word would be included in any code of conduct required of Adams, and as such, she shouldn’t have taken any role in this case after her promises to Mrs. B that she would only engage if she could engage on her behalf.
What I found after examining this case and conservatorship, in general, is that there is an exceptional lack of openness and transparency in the process. Seniors all over the country have found themselves seemingly railroaded by the court system and the attorneys who are supposed to “protect them”.
So I close this first story of a multi-part series posing the following questions:
Are conservatorship/guardianship courts failing seniors here in Jefferson County or more broadly throughout Alabama? Who is going to stand up for the seniors who can’t stand up for themselves?
A ruling from the Alabama Supreme Court helped Bashinsky regain control of her personal finances:
Joann Bashinsky, heiress to the Golden Flake Snack Foods fortune and one of Alabama's most admired philanthropists, has regained control of her financial resources after an effort in Jefferson County Probate Court to have her declared mentally unfit and placed under a conservator.
The move comes after the Alabama Supreme Court, taking a dim view of actions in the trial court, overturned appointment of a temporary guardian and conservator. From a report at al.com:
In its . . . ruling, the Alabama Supreme Court (ASC) criticized decisions made by Bashinsky’s former employees, their lawyers, and the probate judge. The state Supreme Court said the probate court Judge Alan King’s decision to not give Bashinksy time to get a lawyer at an October 2019 hearing was “unfathomable.” The court also ruled that Bashinsky’s “basic due-process rights, were egregiously violated.”
For Alabama's highest court to issue such a stern rebuke to a trial court is highly unusual and suggests even the ASC could smell the foul odor wafting from the case. The ASC opinion clearly hints at ugliness in the trial court, apparently centered around Judge King (now retired), Conservator Greg Hawley, and Balch Bingham lawyer Amy Adams, with much of it caught on audiotape. That's why the Bashinsky matter should not be over; it should be thoroughly investigated, and if corruption is found, the qppropriate parties must be held accountable.Reports al.com:
Joann Bashinsky, heiress to the Golden Flake Snack Foods fortune and one of Alabama's most admired philanthropists, has regained control of her financial resources after an effort in Jefferson County Probate Court to have her declared mentally unfit and placed under a conservator.
The move comes after the Alabama Supreme Court, taking a dim view of
actions in the trial court, overturned appointment of a temporary
guardian and conservator. From a report at al.com:
In its . . . ruling, the Alabama Supreme Court (ASC) criticized decisions made by Bashinsky’s former employees, their lawyers, and the probate judge. The state Supreme Court said the probate court Judge Alan King’s decision to not give Bashinksy time to get a lawyer at an October 2019 hearing was “unfathomable.” The court also ruled that Bashinsky’s “basic due-process rights, were egregiously violated.”Reports al.com yesterday:
The Alabama Supreme Court released a ruling in July 2020 ordering that the appointment of a temporary guardian and conservator was void. The court also ruled Greg Hawley, the temporary guardian, must “account for all of Ms. Bashinsky’s funds and property.” The court dismissed the emergency petition for a guardian and conservator, but did not dismiss the permanent petition, because that had not been decided by the probate court so it was not an issue the high court could consider.
At the time of Bashinsky’s death, the permanent petition was still being sought.
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