Tuesday, June 29, 2021

Netflix episode called "Guardians Inc." might have sparked the interest of federal investigators in elder exploitation, including the case of Joann Bashinsky

Joann Bashinsky

 

Investigations of alleged elder exploitation -- personified in Alabama by the case of the late Joann "Mrs. B" Bashinsky -- likely are being conducted, according to a post at banbalch.com. The interest of federal investigators might have been sparked when the Netflix investigative series Dirty Money last year ran an episode titled "Guardians Inc." And the Birmingham law firm Balch & Bingham, which sat smack in the middle of the Bashinsky case, could use some scrutiny on the subject, reports Ban Balch publisher K.B. Forbes:

In May of 2020, the publication Alabama Today caused a firestorm with the incredible and shocking audio recordings of a Balch & Bingham attorney Amy Davis Adams and Jefferson County Conservator Greg Hawley talking with 88-year old Joann Bashinsky, known as Mrs. B.

Ridiculously claiming Mrs. B could lose her home, run out of money, and have to fire her staff, Adams’ comments appear to have been an attempt to take control of Mrs. B’s affairs, a woman worth $218 million.

Hawley went ahead and appointed Balch’s Adams even though Mrs. B said no, according to Alabama Today. Days after the audio files were released, Probate Judge Alan L. King, who approved the guardianship of Mrs. B, abruptly quit.

Then, weeks later, the Alabama Supreme Court unanimously tossed out the temporary and emergency guardianship.

Is the Bashinsky saga over? No, reports Forbes:

Mrs. B sadly passed away in January, but the fight, unbelievably continues.

Landon Ash, the heir and grandson of Mrs. B, is courageously fighting the perpetrators and instigators who appear to have used and abused the judicial system against his beloved grandmother.

As commentator Kimberly Guilfoyle wrote:

In neighboring Alabama, the family of deceased heiress and philanthropist Joann Bashinsky is still fighting a legal battle with her court-appointed guardian over five months after her death. It’s difficult to fathom why Judge Lee Tucker, who has jurisdiction in the case, hasn’t dismissed it by now – after all, the person supposedly in need of the court’s “protection” is no longer alive. In this case and so many others, based on my years as a prosecutor, something certainly doesn’t smell right.

More importantly, having worked closely with the U.S. Department of Justice for two decades, we believe investigations of elderly exploitation cases are occurring now, behind the scenes, and have become a priority for federal investigators, especially after the Netfix series Dirty Money exposed the deep problem of court-appointed guardianships in an episode titled, “Guardians, Inc.”

Before her death, Joann Bashinsky spoke out about the problems probate courts can cause for seniors. Writes Forbes:

Even Mrs. B made the horrors of her exploitation known.

“It feels like I’m nobody, like all my rights have been taken away,” Mrs. B said during an interview with AL.com in 2019. “I feel like I’m a prisoner in my own home.”

Balch & Bingham ought to be ashamed of their alleged conduct.

And federal investigators should conduct a forensic audit of each and every “guardianship” Balch stuck their fingers in.

And Landon [Ash] should demand so, too.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Is there anybody we won't exploit? Women, people of color, gays, children at the border, the disabled, now the elderly. Need to take a look in the mirror.

legalschnauzer said...

We have a lot of mean, greedy, dishonest people out there. And our culture coarsened under Trump. Hope Biden can help turn that around.

Anonymous said...

I have a feeling Ms. Bashinsky would still be alive if it weren't for this court battle over her estate.