The Schrödinger Euros

The Schrödinger Euros

Authored by Jorge Viches,

What ? Payment in Rubles ?? Unthinkable, don´t even mention the word say EU officials and authorities.

Instead, Europe has formally demanded to pay for Russian imports with Schrödinger euros as explained below.

So it´s high time for psychiatrists to step in as the livelihood of 800 million Europeans depends on whatever this incredible set of un-elected delusional EU leaders decide. Let´s get this straight folks: the EU does not want to pay in Rubles – or gold — because it is playing cutie by pretending to “pay” for Russian imports for free. Be it natural gas, or oil, or coal or whatever Russian, instead of really “paying” the EU pretends to pull a “print & deposit + freeze & hide” wise-up gimmick. To make it clear for any audience, the above would be the equivalent of you pretending to “pay” at the check-out counter of any store with a photo of a fully sealed box that you say contains “money” that you will keep hidden at your home – unopened — as long as you want. Please allow me to explain the EU trickery in layman´s terms

the “print & deposit + freeze & hide” seizure trick

In the past, Russian imports were paid through run-of-the-mill bank transfers made to accounts of Russian exporters at EU banks. Now the EU leadership has mandated for such transfers to be instantly frozen as soon as received so that Russia – or anybody else for that matter – can´t use those euros.

So, the European Central Bank would now “print” euros with a keyboard 100% for free and then transfer such euros over to the Russian exporters bank accounts in the EU albeit now under “frozen” status. So Russia never gets to use such euros – which actually never see the light of day – and accordingly are not inflationary in any and every sense of the term as nobody else can use them either. Thus, by not entering into any economy at all in no way, shape, or form the EU outsmarts Heaven and Earth and gets to import Russian produce for free. Easy see ?

It´d be a “print & deposit + freeze & hide” seizure and expect-the-Russians-to-fall-for-it trick…as if they were K6 kids.

Now of course I can hear the maniacs in charge arguing that this would only be “temporary” – of course — and that as soon as Russia gets out of Ukraine under “acceptable” terms – of course, yet again — everything will get back to yankee doodle normal. Enter then the “Schrödinger´s euros” whereby the hypothetical ´money´ should be considered to be simultaneously existent and non-existent… a-la-EU.

the Schrödinger euros

In today´s commercial environment only a fool would accept a Schrödinger payment for anything — not even bubble gum – and should be considered the most childish proposal ever made in the history of trade. It´s both naïve and yet a visible insult from immature wishful thinkers attempting to defy the Law of Financial Gravity by sinking ever deeper into their self-made mud pit. Please very briefly do visit Ref #1 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schr%C3%B6dinger%27s_cat

In the first place, Schrödinger euros should have never been created by the EU and only to be really defined as “theft”.

Actually, with these S-euros the EU would be “buying” itself serious future problems for which there is no solution. For example, if the EU´s proposal were taken seriously and adopted, exactly WHO and HOW would define what are “acceptable terms” for Russia´s withdrawal from Ukraine so as to make the Schrödinger euros usable. From the get-go even millennials can realize that the Russian Federation will never leave certain areas and/or the newly recognized Donetsk People’s Republic and Luhansk People’s Republic plus Crimea. Accordingly, would the S-euros exist or not ?

Schrödinger euros also should not have been suggested for other reasons, including counterintuitive superposition states and disambiguation paradox problems which for lack of space cannot be explained nor fully foreseen into a very uncertain future. Still, you get the picture. The idea being that such “hypothetical” money may be considered simultaneously both existent and/or non-existent and/or in the process of becoming existent or non-existent at a particular point in time or window as a result of events that may or may not occur but which in view of the enormity of the situation could be the basis for “casus belli” which Europe should not be exposed to, let alone actively promote.

In a nutshell: Schrödinger euros are a no-no-no, period. And the EU should have never proposed such nonsense.

Now, as the EU refuses to pay in Rubles – or gold bullion — and insists on paying with their new “funny Schrödinger money”, the Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki has admitted the obvious, namely that sanctions imposed by the EU + US and their allies so far have had the opposite effect on Russia. “Look at the ruble exchange rate; what is happening with the Russian economy. Nothing special is happening there. Crushing sanctions are now needed”.

Ref # 2 https://www.rt.com/business/554625-eu-russia-sanctions-dont-work/

Ref # 3 https://www.rt.com/russia/554398-poland-stop-russia-billboard-campaign/

So unbelievably European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, while accusing Russia of “blackmail” just added that “We are mapping out our coordinated EU response, so Europeans can trust that we stand united and in solidarity…” both of which are simply not true. Liar liar pants on fire my grandson would scream with irritating pitch.

The EU today has no coordination and no solidarity. It´s everyone for himself now, including ´neutral´ Sweden wanting to join NATO while claiming payment for weapons sent to Ukraine. But Auntie Ursula playing the female version of Elmer Fudd still announced that the EU was working “intensively” on a new plan to hit Moscow. “The sixth package of sanctions will come in due time. We’re working intensively on it” said Ursula von der Leyen as Russia halts gas supplies to Bulgaria and Poland while Finland will not agree to ruble payments.

Ref # 4 https://www.rt.com/russia/554614-eu-accuses-energy-blackmail/

Ref # 5 https://www.rt.com/news/554638-sweden-eu-ukraine-compensation/

Ref # 6 https://www.rt.com/business/554624-eu-state-russia-gas/

Ref # 7 https://www.rt.com/business/554587-gazprom-gas-bulgaria-poland/

The fact of the matter is that Europeans at large and most especially the EU leadership are now most fragmented and erratic.

As France´s recently re-elected President would put it, “brain dead” NATO resembles a bunch of beheaded chickens running around without the slightest idea of what´s really going on.

Meanwhile, back on planet Earth, four EU buyers made gas payments in Rubles and at least 10 countries have set up Russian bank accounts in Rubles.

Ref # 8 https://www.rt.com/business/554612-eu-buyers-russian-gas-ruble/

Ref # 9 https://www.rt.com/news/554638-sweden-eu-ukraine-compensation/

So while the EU is supplying all sorts of weapons to Ukraine every single day, now the EU´s top diplomat wants to make friends with Russia.

But only yesterday Josep Borrell said “This matter has to be resolved in the battlefield” .

A day later he says:  “The EU and Russia should rebuild relations”. Which is it ?

Rebuilding the relationship between the EU and Russia will be a very difficult and lengthy process, but it must be done”.

Sure, yes, let´s start by implementing the Minsk Accords that Europeans brokered and endorsed very recently, remember?

Ref # 10 https://www.rt.com/news/554576-eu-reorganize-relationship-russia-borrell/

So Ursula von der Leyen´s process of “ mapping out our coordinated EU response “ does not seem to be running very smoothly

And in view of proposed additional gimmicks the Russians, clearly never lagging and always ahead of events, warn :

” … the unauthorised withdrawal of gas volumes transiting through Poland and Bulgaria to other European countries such as Germany would result in a reduction of transit supplies….” Clearly meaning guys don´t play games with us or you all will freeze and starve to death hand in hand sorta like right now, understand?

Ref # 11 https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/four-european-gas-buyers-fold-russian-demands-pay-gas-rubles

German Economy Minister Robert Habeck was very concerned in that cutting off Russian imports would cause “mass unemployment, poverty, people who can’t heat their homesetc.” Austria openly admitted that it simply cannot afford to ban imports of Russian gas while others want to shut down Russian gas pipes altogether. 

Again, which is it?

And last we checked, something for nothing is impossible.

So Russian imports have to be paid for either in Rubles or gold bullion, with no charity available.

Schrödinger euros are a joke, and a bad one at that.

As John Connally would say, “It´s Russia’s commodities, but it´s your problem.”

Tyler Durden
Sat, 04/30/2022 – 08:10

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White House Says It Would “Strongly Support” Finland & Sweden NATO Membership

White House Says It Would “Strongly Support” Finland & Sweden NATO Membership

The Biden White House now appears to be going all-in on the potential for Finland and Sweden seeking formal application for NATO membership, despite Moscow’s recent repeat warnings that such an action would immediately ratchet nuclear tensions in the Baltic region.

While previously issuing vague statements of positive support for the Scandinavian countries’ discussions on the controversial issue – given especially that Finland shares an over 800-mile long border with Russia – on Thursday Secretary of State Antony Blinken took US support further by saying for the first time the Untied States would “strongly support” Sweden and Finland pursuing NATO membership.

File image via Yahoo News

“We, of course, look to them to make that decision. If that’s what they decide, we will strongly support it,” Blinken told Democratic Representative Jim Costa (Calif.) during House testimony.

The US top diplomat added that it’s “under very active consideration by both countries” but said that no timeline had been set – referencing statements from Finnish and Swedish top officials of the past days.

Also on Thursday NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg issued more statements suggesting the countries would be ‘fast-tracked’ after earlier this month saying something similar. He said according to The Associated Press:

“It’s their decision… but if they decide to apply, Finland and Sweden will be warmly welcomed, and I expect that process to go quickly.”

Earlier this month polling in Scandinavian regional media strongly suggested that public mood had shifted in Finland, which had long been proud of its neutral stance on the question, and generally amicable and cooperative relations with Russia. 

“Public support and political momentum for Finland joining NATO has reached an all-time high as a result of the war in Ukraine, raising the very real possibility that the alliance’s borders with Russia could extend by more than 830 miles in a matter of months,” the prior report said.

This is a trend that has continued through the month as Russian military operations have grown fiercer in eastern and southern Ukraine…

As we reported earlier this week, Finnish Prime Minister Sanna Marin and her Swedish counterpart, Magdalena Andersson, are set to meet during the week of May 16 and are expected to announce their intention to seek a NATO membership after that – thus a major announcement could come as early as a few weeks.

Tyler Durden
Sat, 04/30/2022 – 07:35

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Today in Supreme Court History: April 30, 1789

4/30/1789: President Washington’s inauguration. He would appoint eleven members to the Supreme Court: Chief Justices Jay, Rutledge, and Ellsworth, and Justices Wilson, Blair, Cushing, Rutledge, Iredell, Johnson, Paterson, and Chase.

President Washington’s Appointees

The post Today in Supreme Court History: April 30, 1789 appeared first on Reason.com.

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House Passes Bill To Revive WWII-Era Lend-Lease Program For Ukraine

House Passes Bill To Revive WWII-Era Lend-Lease Program For Ukraine

Authored by Dave DeCamp via AntiWar.com,

On Thursday, the House overwhelmingly approved a bill that would revive the World War II-era lend-lease program for Ukraine in another effort to pour weapons into the country. The lend-lease program was used to ship arms to the Soviet Union, China, the UK, and other US allies during World War II.

The bill passed through the Senate earlier this month, and it is now headed to President Biden’s desk. If signed into law, the lend-lease program would ramp up arms shipments to Kyiv by allowing the US to give weapons to Ukraine free of charge while technically requiring payment at a later date.

Via Reuters

According to a summary of the bill, it would temporarily waive “certain requirements related to the President’s authority to lend or lease defense articles if the defense articles are intended for Ukraine’s government and necessary to protect civilians in Ukraine from Russian military invasion.”

The US would be to send weapons to Ukraine under the legislation for however long the current conflict lasts. According to the summary, it will remain in effect until “the conflict beginning with Russia’s annexation of the Crimea region of Ukraine in 2014 has ceased, and Russia has reduced its military force on Ukraine’s eastern border to the levels maintained prior to March 1, 2021.”

The legislation passed the House in a vote of 417-10 with only Republicans voting against it. The no votes came from Reps. Andy Biggs (AZ), Paul Gosar(AZ), Ralph Norman (SC), Tom Tiffany (WI), Marjorie Taylor Greene (GA), Dan Bishop (NC), Warren Davidson (OH), Scott Perry (PA), Matt Gaetz (FL), and Thomas Massie (KY).

The passage of the bill came the same day President Biden asked Congress for a massive new $33 billion assistance package for Ukraine, which includes $20.4 billion for military aid.

During World War II, the US sent its allies an enormous amount of military aid under the lend-lease program. According to the US Embassy in Russia, the program provided the Soviet Union with $11.3 billion in assistance, the equivalent of $180 billion in today’s currency, from 1941 to 1945.

Tyler Durden
Sat, 04/30/2022 – 07:00

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Today in Supreme Court History: April 30, 1789

4/30/1789: President Washington’s inauguration. He would appoint eleven members to the Supreme Court: Chief Justices Jay, Rutledge, and Ellsworth, and Justices Wilson, Blair, Cushing, Rutledge, Iredell, Johnson, Paterson, and Chase.

President Washington’s Appointees

The post Today in Supreme Court History: April 30, 1789 appeared first on Reason.com.

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‘They Just Took Me Away’


feature-CJ-guardianship

It’s been a year since Jan Garwood, a 72-year-old central Florida woman, won her freedom back and started trying to piece together what was left of her life.

In 2017, Garwood was placed in an assisted living facility against her will. A judge had declared her mentally incompetent and put her in the care of a professional guardian to protect her health and finances. The system was supposed to help her. Instead, Garwood felt like a prisoner.

She was stuck in a lockdown ward for three years, until a local activist and two attorneys managed to get her rights restored. By then, though, she’d lost more than three years. Her guardian had sold her house, leaving her temporarily homeless. All of her possessions were missing. Her savings and the proceeds from the sale of her house were in a trust that she didn’t have direct access to.

Garwood’s case is extreme, but it illustrates the complexities, uncertainties, and sometimes bizarre twists of guardianship cases, also known as conservatorships. Last year, the saga of Britney Spears’ successful efforts to free herself from an onerous conservatorship shined a spotlight on the issue. It was the first time many Americans had heard of conservatorships, but this relatively obscure area of the law, in which the state essentially determines that an adult should be treated like a child, sometimes involuntarily, exerts enormous power over the people who find themselves in the system.

In the worst cases of guardianship abuse, functioning adults are completely stripped of their autonomy: where they live, where they can go, who they can talk to, how their financial assets are handled, even how and where they will die.

In Florida, a chilling scandal where a guardian filed “do not resuscitate” (DNR) orders against her elderly wards’ wishes led to calls for state and national reform. With its large number of retirees, Florida is especially ripe for elder abuse and fraud. Some state officials have been working to strengthen the system over the past few years, but senior citizens like Garwood have continued to slip through the cracks. Even with comparatively strong oversight, the state shows how bad actors, conflicts of interest, and crushing caseloads can undermine those protections.

Over the phone, Garwood is clear and cogent, although she swings from relief and philosophical acceptance to despair over how her plans for her golden years were upended.

“I was just sitting in my office working when the doorbell rang,” Garwood recalls. “There was a lady with a police officer, and she said, ‘Give me the keys to the house and car, you’re coming with me.’ They just took me away.”

‘A Vulnerable At-Risk Senior’

Garwood was placed in a court-appointed guardianship in 2017. She had been in a car crash shortly after the death of one of her sons, and she was, by her own and her lawyers’ accounts, in a downward spiral of grief. She was at one point held under Florida’s Baker Act, which allows authorities to commit someone to a hospital temporarily for a psychiatric evaluation.

Guardians make personal, medical, and financial decisions for minors, people with developmental disabilities, and senior citizens who can’t handle their own affairs. In Florida, the legal term of art for such a person is “incapacitated.” Family members often fill this role, but when people with disabilities don’t have family qualified to take care of them, courts appoint professional guardians.

In Florida, a professional guardian is someone who has received fees for providing services to three or more wards. The guardian must pass a background check, take a 40-hour course and final exam (along with continuing education requirements), and be registered and bonded with the state. There are also public guardians that courts can appoint in cases of indigency. The majority of the roughly 500 professional guardians across the state of Florida are scrupulous and compassionate in their duties. One elderly Florida woman, for example, was admitted to a hospital after a neighbor called 911 over concerns about her living conditions and health. The hospital discharged her to a rehab facility that wasn’t equipped to handle her advancing dementia, and the rehab facility in turn discharged her and sent her back to her unsafe apartment. The woman’s sister lived in Colorado and couldn’t care for her, so she petitioned a court to appoint a professional guardian to make sure she received appropriate medical care, get her apartment cleaned, and sort out her finances.

The sad truth is that professional guardians are also sometimes the best option to protect vulnerable seniors from their own family, and to defuse messy family squabbles over their care and property. This is, professional guardians say, their purpose: to act in the best interest of someone who can’t act for themselves.

But handing someone that much power over other people’s lives, in some cases against their and their families’ will, is an enormous act of trust. When guardians fail to act in their wards’ interests, it can lead to neglect, theft, and worse.

According to a guardianship petition filed in Garwood’s case, Rebecca Fierle, the Florida woman who would become her guardian, told a judge that Garwood “suffers from a seizure disorder, [has] poor insight and judgment, and is a vulnerable at-risk senior who is a victim of potential financial exploitation, and as a result, she is unable to make healthcare and other decisions or manage her finances.”

Florida has a unique system, more stringent than many states, where a three-person examining committee is required to recommend a guardianship. One person on the committee must be a doctor.

Garwood and her lawyers don’t know who referred her to Fierle or how the woman found out about her; they suspect it was one of her cousins. At the time in Florida, a professional guardian could file a petition against anyone. The Florida legislature changed the law in 2020 to restrict guardians from filing such petitions unless they’re related to the person in care.

There was no such law then, so the examining committee, followed by a judge, found Garwood incapacitated. She lost the right to vote, to have a driver’s license, to choose her attorney, to apply for or hold a job, to travel, to marry, to consent to mental or physical health treatment, even to choose who she could talk with or visit.

Garwood was then placed in a local memory care facility—not because of a memory-related condition but because she was deemed a flight risk, according to one court document.

Garwood was held in the Palms of Longwood assisted living facility for three years. She says she wasn’t allowed to use the phone, go outside and smell the fresh air, or even open her window.

One day, though, Garwood got a lifeline. She says a nurse smuggled in a cellphone for her, which she used to post a plea for help on Facebook.

Garwood laughs when she remembers the post and says it must have sounded like a joke—like, “Help, I’m trapped!” But Garwood’s plea found someone who takes such messages very seriously.

A Digital SOS

It’s not a surprise that Hillary Hogue saw Garwood’s digital SOS. If you look into guardianship abuse in Florida, you quickly come across the outspoken activist’s name.

Hogue’s crusade started around 2017. It began, she says, when she had to stop her 90-year-old father from being placed in a permanent guardianship by her sister.

Hogue disputed the emergency petition her sister filed that claimed her father was incapacitated. She hired a lawyer, and the two reached a settlement that allowed her father to live with Hogue and stay out of a permanent guardianship in exchange for her father’s accountant serving as his power of attorney. Since then, she has meticulously tracked allegations of guardianship abuse across the Sunshine State.

“This is all I do, from the minute I get up to the minute I go to sleep,” Hogue says.

Hogue reached out to Garwood after she saw her message. She says she tried to visit Garwood in the assisted living facility and bring her a gift bag with some requested items—deodorant and Doritos—but an administrator confiscated the bag and kicked her out, threatening to call the police.

“The only way that Jan got anything different to wear, and Jan was used to having nice things, was when a female resident died and the other female residents would go through a garbage bag to see if anything fit them,” Hogue says.

The Palms of Longwood did not respond to requests for comment.

One frequent accusation in alleged guardianship abuse cases is that guardians stop wards from seeing family and friends. A harrowing 2017 New Yorker investigation into Nevada’s system described elderly people being put into court-appointed guardianships, placed in assisted living facilities, and totally cut off from their loved ones. The Tampa Bay Times reported on a contentious case where a guardian forbade a 92-year-old woman from talking to her friends and neighbors, and had her calls routed to the guardian. A lawyer for the guardian also told the newspaper that reporters were not allowed to talk to the woman without the guardian’s consent.

Hogue was not easily deterred, though. She put Garwood in touch with two lawyers she knew that fought guardianship cases.

Meanwhile, there was another significant development. In September 2018, Garwood’s guardian, Fierle, suddenly resigned from her case.

At the time, Fierle handled hundreds of guardianships around the state, but within a year her career would begin unraveling under scrutiny—not for defrauding her wards, but something much darker. Garwood didn’t know it, but she had dodged a possible death sentence.

A Macabre Case Leads to Reforms

On May 9, 2019, Kim Stryker sent a complaint to the state’s 9th Judicial Circuit and the Florida Department of Elder Affairs. She said her 75-year-old father, Steven Stryker, had been placed into a guardianship without any notice to his family. What’s more, she alleged that her father’s court-appointed guardian, Fierle, had placed a do-not-resuscitate order on him against his explicit wishes.

Stryker had been Baker Act-ed, the same as Garwood. He was sent to AdventHealth, a Florida hospital network. AdventHealth then petitioned a court to place him in a guardianship. The hospital specifically requested Fierle as his guardian. After that, he was shuffled between hospitals and assisted living facilities that his daughter says were unable to properly care for him.

Four days after his daughter filed the complaint, Stryker choked to death in a Tampa hospital. Fierle had ordered his feeding tube to be capped, meaning he had to swallow food, despite having a chronic condition that made swallowing difficult. Staff, restricted by the DNR, did nothing to save him.

Several state agencies launched probes into Fierle’s practices following the complaint. The Florida Clerk’s Statewide Investigations Alliance, which investigates claims of guardianship abuse, found that AdventHealth lied in court about not being able to contact Kim Stryker.

“In the Florida Hospital petition for guardianship, they state the Ward’s daughter’s whereabouts were unknown,” the report said. “However, her contact information was listed on the Advance Directive on file with the hospital, and our office found her contact information with a quick Google search.”

When a judge handed Stryker into Fierle’s care and stripped him of his rights in September 2018, the hearing lasted less than three minutes. The local outlet Spectrum News obtained a video of the brief meeting. Based on the reports of the examining committee, the judge quickly placed Stryker into a guardianship.

“OK, one, two, three…we’ve got three reports already in,” the judge said.

“Yes, ma’am,” a hospital attorney responded.

“So much for emergency,” the judge joked, to laughter.

On July 3, 2019, the same state circuit court judge removed Fierle from numerous guardianship cases, finding that she had abused her power by placing DNR orders on her wards without family or court permission. A week later, a judge in a different circuit removed her from nearly 100 more cases and revoked all the DNRs she had filed, following an Orange County comptroller’s investigation that found AdventHealth had paid Fierle nearly $4 million over a decade. Fierle was double-dipping, billing both the hospital and her ward’s accounts for her services. She was also not disclosing her conflict of interest with hospitals to courts. By the end of the month, she had resigned from all of her cases and the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) had launched a criminal investigation into Stryker’s death.

As the Fierle scandal unspooled, heads started to roll. The director of Florida’s Office of Public and Professional Guardians (OPPG) resigned, as did several other OPPG staffers. ABC Action News revealed that the office had a large backlog of misconduct allegations it was supposed to be investigating and had revoked only one guardian’s license in the past three years. Another family had complained about Fierle in 2016, alleging that their mother wasted away from cancer without proper treatment. The agency ignored the complaint for years.

Doing some public relations cleanup, AdventHealth announced it would no longer pay private guardians and would support reforms of state laws. (AdventHealth declined to comment, citing pending litigation.) Meanwhile, ABC Action News found similar practices at hospitals across the state. (Hospitals have a financial incentive to discharge long-term patients, especially after insurance stops covering their treatment.)

Florida authorities arrested Fierle in February 2020, more than a year after Steven Stryker’s death. The FDLE charged her with aggravated abuse and neglect of an elderly person.

“Medical professionals who examined [Stryker] believed he was capable of making end-of-life medical decisions for himself and informed [Fierle] that her client had a strong desire to live and that he understood his condition,” the FDLE said in a press release announcing Fierle’s arrest. “Despite the wishes of the elderly man and those of his family and friends, [Fierle] ordered his doctors ​not perform any life prolonging medical procedures saying she preferred ‘quality of life versus quantity of life.'”

When the FDLE raided Fierle’s office, it found nine urns containing human remains. It’s not unheard of for guardians to temporarily be in possession of cremated remains while they make funeral arrangements, since their wards sometimes don’t have immediate or nearby family. However, the relatives of Marilyn Hammock, whose remains were found in Fierle’s office, told the Orlando Sentinel that Fierle refused to send them Hammock’s ashes until her husband, also Fierle’s ward, died as well.

Reporting Gaps Persist

With macabre details about human ashes making headlines, state lawmakers moved to act. Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed guardianship reforms into law in June 2020. The new law requires courts to grant permission for guardians to sign DNRs; it also mandates that guardians detail payments. As noted above, it also stopped professional guardians from filing petitions unless they were related to the proposed ward.

But watchdogs say more transparency and information sharing between courts is necessary. Although the majority of professional guardians may follow the rules, bad ones can escape detection due to poor record-keeping and lack of communication between county court systems, all of which have their own filing systems.

“The Rebecca Fierle case really highlighted the need for a statewide database and uniform reporting system for guardianship cases,” says Brad Embry, inspector general for the Okaloosa County Clerk.

An audit by the Orange County Comptroller published last March found major deficiencies in the county’s tracking and oversight of guardianship cases. Courts weren’t notified when guardians failed to file required reports or lacked qualifications, weren’t informed of unauthorized guardian and attorney fees, and couldn’t track active guardianship cases. In one case, the court was unaware that a ward had been dead for 33 months. The report also found “several conflicts of interest between professional guardians assigned and other parties involved in cases; including, examining committee members, attorneys, a trust director, and service providers.”

Before she was removed from her cases, Fierle had at least 450 wards under her care, such as it was, across 19 counties.

In Florida, guardians are required to file detailed annual reports on their wards’ finances and assets, but the sheer number of guardianship cases presents a problem for court systems and watchdogs.

Anthony Palmieri, deputy inspector general for the Palm Beach County Clerk of Court, said last August that Palm Beach County alone has 3,000 to 3,200 open guardianship cases controlling more than $1 billion in assets. In 2020, Palmieri’s office identified $1.2 million in unverifiable and questionable guardianship expenditures and misreported assets.

According to public records obtained by Reason, the OPPG fielded 153 complaints about guardians in 2021 and the Clerk’s investigations alliance opened 51 investigations into alleged guardianship abuse.

BuzzFeed investigation last year estimated that as many as 200,000 adult guardianship cases are filed annually in the U.S. The most vociferous critics of guardianship, like Hogue and Rick Black, co-founder of the Center for Estate Administration Reform, say this system amounts to a huge exploitation scheme. Black often describes guardianship as estate fraud on a massive scale.

It’s hard to overstate how thoroughly a malicious guardian can ruin someone’s life. Last year, a Florida guardian was convicted on 15 charges of exploitation of an elderly person, grand theft, money laundering, and perjury. Prosecutors said he stole $420,000 from five of his wards. One of those wards was placed in an assisted living facility where the owners were later arrested for elder abuse.

Traci Hudson, a Pinellas County guardian, was arrested in 2019 on charges that she stole $500,000 from a ward and spent the money on things like Tampa Bay Buccaneers tickets, jewelry, and a 4,000-square-foot home. Fifteen months before Hudson was arrested, she won a libel lawsuit against the daughter of one of her wards, who had complained about her father’s treatment. A judge awarded Hudson $160,000, leaving the woman destitute and homeless.

The executive director of the Florida State Guardianship Association did not return requests for comment for this story.

‘I Thought I’d Live in That House Forever’

When Leslie Ann Ferderigos first talked to Jan Garwood, she thought, “How in the hell is this person in a guardianship?”

Ferderigos is one of the two attorneys Hogue contacted to take on Garwood’s case, along with Vito Roppo, a Naples lawyer.

Attorneys for Garwood’s new guardian—Denise Willis, appointed after Fierle resigned—filed a motion for sanctions against Roppo for trying to represent Garwood, since Garwood had no power to choose her own attorney. But Roppo and Ferderigos began fighting to lift Garwood’s guardianship anyway, starting with a new medical evaluation. (One quirk of guardianship is that when a ward fights to have her rights restored, the guardian’s attorney fees come out of the ward’s account. So Garwood was paying for her own opposition.)

The complex legal wrangling that followed illustrates the tangled connections, incentives, and conflicts of interest that the Orange County comptroller identified among guardians, attorneys, and examining committees that recommend or reject petitions for guardianships.

In 2018, Willis had filed a “suggestion of capacity”—a request for the court to reconsider Garwood’s mental capacity and restore some or all of her rightson Garwood’s behalf, but a judge denied it based on the report of a physician who examined Garwood.

According to court records, that physician was Thomas Sawyer. As BuzzFeed reported last year, Sawyer is an oncologist who Florida probate courts regularly turn to for examinations in guardianship cases. He also founded a law firm that represents professional guardians.

In fact, Sawyer’s son-in-law—Thomas Moss, a partner at the firm—was Rebecca Fierle’s attorney before she resigned from Garwood’s case.

Moss represented Fierle in hundreds of cases, including, BuzzFeed reported, the case of a “59-year-old woman who complained of being held in a lockdown facility while Rebecca Fierle paid out thousands of dollars from her accounts without court approval.” That woman had also filed a suggestion of capacity, but it was denied based on the report of the examining physician, none other than Thomas Sawyer.

Roppo and Ferderigos got another doctor to evaluate Garwood. The doctor reported that she “is fully capable of handling and executing her own personal, medical and financial day-to-day affairs.”

The conflicting opinions show the difficulty of determining exactly when someone is “incapacited”—that is, when it’s necessary to protect her from her own choices. A 35-year-old is largely free to indulge in ruinous but legal behavior without the threat of being stripped of legal autonomy. Is a 70-year-old who does the same simply making bad choices or mentally infirm?

In another guardianship that Ferderigos successfully had terminated, a Florida man named Doug Keegan went through eight psychiatric evaluations over the course of his guardianship. Law360 reported last year that three doctors recommended no guardianship, two recommended limited guardianship, and two recommended plenary guardianship, the most stringent form. Keegan’s family had moved to place him in a court-appointed guardianship because he had a severe alcohol problem and had married a Kenyan woman whom he had met online. Shortly after his rights were restored, Keegan was arrested and charged with making written threats against his former guardian’s lawyer and the judge in his case.

Based on Garwood’s new medical evaluation, Roppo and Ferderigos filed a suggestion of capacity in her case, and on August 24, 2020, a judge restored Garwood’s rights.

Unlike Keegan, Garwood has maintained her freedom since then. The problem is, she has her autonomy back but not much else.

Garwood’s guardian had previously received approval from the court to sell her house to pay the costs of her staying at the assisted living facility.

“My mother died in that house. I wanted to live there forever,” Garwood says. “I thought I’d live there forever.” Instead, she was homeless. She spent some time living at Ferderigos’ house, in a friend’s garage, and at a hotel.

Roppo says that Garwood’s house was sold to the relative of an administrator of the Palms of Longwood assisted living facility for well under market value.

Property records show that Willis sold the home in 2019 to Danielle Wolfrum for $250,000. According to 2019 Seminole County tax records, the property had an assessed value of $310,095. State records from 2018 list the administrator of the Palms of Longwood as Kendra Wolfrum.

When the Seminole County Clerk’s inspector general audited Garwood’s guardianship last year, the investigation found that her house “may have also been sold below true market value.”

“Though a real estate comprehensive was provided, the Court was NOT provided with a property appraisal conducted by a licensed property appraiser,” the audit noted.

Kyle Fletcher, Willis’ attorney, says that the sale of the house and the handling of Garwood’s finances were all duly approved by the court. (It bears noting that there’s considerable acrimony between Fletcher and Ferderigos. Fletcher, who also represented Doug Keegan’s guardian, has accused Ferderigos of improperly jumping into guardianship cases, unethically misleading judges, and using hand-picked doctors to give her clients favorable evaluations. The Florida Supreme Court sustained a bar complaint against Ferderigos last year for unprofessional behavior in an unrelated case, and a federal judge dismissed a civil lawsuit filed by her on Garwood’s behalf for being a “shotgun pleading,” a term for a complaint that is too vague to give the defendants proper notice of the claims against them.)

Although Garwood’s rights have been restored, her guardianship case is still open due to ongoing issues with and objections to Willis’ final report on Garwood’s assets. The inspector general has repeatedly dinged Willis for gaps in the report and for failing to provide requested documents.

“It’s a year later, and we still don’t have a complete accounting of what [Willis] did,” Roppo says.

In the meantime, Fletcher has filed a petition to the court seeking to bill Garwood $1,800 for his time spent on her case after her rights had been restored. He was, after all, still the attorney for her court-appointed guardian, and the case was still open. This sort of billing is common. When the Tampa Bay Times reported on a contested guardianship case, the guardian’s attorney noted that he would be billing the ward for time spent responding to the newspaper’s email.

While Garwood’s case drags on, things are moving faster elsewhere in the Seminole County court system. On January 10, a Seminole County judge removed Willis from 20 other guardianship cases, according to court filings.

“Judge [John] Galluzzo takes his responsibility to protect and preserve the interests of the ward very seriously,” Michelle Kennedy, the public information officer for Florida’s 18th Judicial Circuit, said when Reason asked about the reason for the removals. “When the previous guardian was unable to file timely reports, Judge Galluzzo had a duty to appoint new guardians.”

How To Stop More Cases of Guardianship Abuse

Last year, the state of Florida convened a task force to draft recommendations for improving Florida’s guardianship system. The task force included Hogue, as well as state legislators, judges, court clerks, professional guardians, and a former ward.

The task force released its final report in January. Its recommendations include a statewide data collection system for guardianship cases, a database of guardians, and notifying courts of discipline against guardians.

“I believe the biggest challenge in guardianship oversight is statewide uniformity,” Embry says. “The required documentation for certain types of filings vary from circuit to circuit, county to county, and courtroom to courtroom.”

Unfortunately, this isn’t a new problem. A similar Florida guardianship committee recommended in 2003 that “uniform reporting forms should be adopted on a statewide basis.”

The January task force report also recommended giving more opportunities for “supported decision-making,” an alternative to guardianship that allows people with disabilities to choose supporters who will help them make decisions. The supporters do not have full legal power over the person.

“Studies show that people who have greater self-determination are more likely to identify abusive situations and less likely to experience abuse,” says Olivia Babis, a senior public policy analyst at Disability Rights Florida. She adds that supported decision making “allows people with disabilities to have a team of supporters and stronger ties to the community. This makes it harder for any one person to take advantage of them. In contrast, a person under guardianship might be isolated. They may not even be allowed to speak to their loved ones.”

Thirteen states and the District of Columbia have laws encouraging supported decision making, but Florida is not among them. During Florida’s 2021 legislative session, a bill was introduced that would authorize adults with disabilities to enter into supported decision-making arrangements; it would also require petitioners for guardianship to show they had made efforts to use less restrictive methods. The legislation died in committee.

Picking Up the Pieces

Garwood has an apartment now, at least. But all her possessions were supposedly put in storage after her house was sold, and no one knows where her stuff went. Reached by phone in January, she said she was parked outside a thrift store that a local church opens once a week on Thursdays. “I’m living in second-hand clothes,” Garwood says. “I had food stamps for a while.”

Roppo and Garwood say her family pictures, her jewelry, and the art she collected over the years are all missing. The proceeds of the sale of Garwood’s house, roughly $171,000, were placed by Willis into a trust that Garwood has no control over. The Seminole County Clerk’s inspector general noted that Willis did this without court approval or oversight, contrary to Florida statutes. Garwood says her hair dresser and real estate licenses lapsed while she was under guardianship.

It would be irresponsible to declare, based only on an interview, that Garwood is perfectly capable of taking care of herself. Licensed doctors couldn’t agree on that. But it’s clear that she was deeply unhappy in her guardianship and, four years later, demonstrably worse off for being put through it.

“I had a lot of dreams that I’m not going to see happen,” Garwood says, “and it hurts.”

The post 'They Just Took Me Away' appeared first on Reason.com.

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‘They Just Took Me Away’


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It’s been a year since Jan Garwood, a 72-year-old central Florida woman, won her freedom back and started trying to piece together what was left of her life.

In 2017, Garwood was placed in an assisted living facility against her will. A judge had declared her mentally incompetent and put her in the care of a professional guardian to protect her health and finances. The system was supposed to help her. Instead, Garwood felt like a prisoner.

She was stuck in a lockdown ward for three years, until a local activist and two attorneys managed to get her rights restored. By then, though, she’d lost more than three years. Her guardian had sold her house, leaving her temporarily homeless. All of her possessions were missing. Her savings and the proceeds from the sale of her house were in a trust that she didn’t have direct access to.

Garwood’s case is extreme, but it illustrates the complexities, uncertainties, and sometimes bizarre twists of guardianship cases, also known as conservatorships. Last year, the saga of Britney Spears’ successful efforts to free herself from an onerous conservatorship shined a spotlight on the issue. It was the first time many Americans had heard of conservatorships, but this relatively obscure area of the law, in which the state essentially determines that an adult should be treated like a child, sometimes involuntarily, exerts enormous power over the people who find themselves in the system.

In the worst cases of guardianship abuse, functioning adults are completely stripped of their autonomy: where they live, where they can go, who they can talk to, how their financial assets are handled, even how and where they will die.

In Florida, a chilling scandal where a guardian filed “do not resuscitate” (DNR) orders against her elderly wards’ wishes led to calls for state and national reform. With its large number of retirees, Florida is especially ripe for elder abuse and fraud. Some state officials have been working to strengthen the system over the past few years, but senior citizens like Garwood have continued to slip through the cracks. Even with comparatively strong oversight, the state shows how bad actors, conflicts of interest, and crushing caseloads can undermine those protections.

Over the phone, Garwood is clear and cogent, although she swings from relief and philosophical acceptance to despair over how her plans for her golden years were upended.

“I was just sitting in my office working when the doorbell rang,” Garwood recalls. “There was a lady with a police officer, and she said, ‘Give me the keys to the house and car, you’re coming with me.’ They just took me away.”

‘A Vulnerable At-Risk Senior’

Garwood was placed in a court-appointed guardianship in 2017. She had been in a car crash shortly after the death of one of her sons, and she was, by her own and her lawyers’ accounts, in a downward spiral of grief. She was at one point held under Florida’s Baker Act, which allows authorities to commit someone to a hospital temporarily for a psychiatric evaluation.

Guardians make personal, medical, and financial decisions for minors, people with developmental disabilities, and senior citizens who can’t handle their own affairs. In Florida, the legal term of art for such a person is “incapacitated.” Family members often fill this role, but when people with disabilities don’t have family qualified to take care of them, courts appoint professional guardians.

In Florida, a professional guardian is someone who has received fees for providing services to three or more wards. The guardian must pass a background check, take a 40-hour course and final exam (along with continuing education requirements), and be registered and bonded with the state. There are also public guardians that courts can appoint in cases of indigency. The majority of the roughly 500 professional guardians across the state of Florida are scrupulous and compassionate in their duties. One elderly Florida woman, for example, was admitted to a hospital after a neighbor called 911 over concerns about her living conditions and health. The hospital discharged her to a rehab facility that wasn’t equipped to handle her advancing dementia, and the rehab facility in turn discharged her and sent her back to her unsafe apartment. The woman’s sister lived in Colorado and couldn’t care for her, so she petitioned a court to appoint a professional guardian to make sure she received appropriate medical care, get her apartment cleaned, and sort out her finances.

The sad truth is that professional guardians are also sometimes the best option to protect vulnerable seniors from their own family, and to defuse messy family squabbles over their care and property. This is, professional guardians say, their purpose: to act in the best interest of someone who can’t act for themselves.

But handing someone that much power over other people’s lives, in some cases against their and their families’ will, is an enormous act of trust. When guardians fail to act in their wards’ interests, it can lead to neglect, theft, and worse.

According to a guardianship petition filed in Garwood’s case, Rebecca Fierle, the Florida woman who would become her guardian, told a judge that Garwood “suffers from a seizure disorder, [has] poor insight and judgment, and is a vulnerable at-risk senior who is a victim of potential financial exploitation, and as a result, she is unable to make healthcare and other decisions or manage her finances.”

Florida has a unique system, more stringent than many states, where a three-person examining committee is required to recommend a guardianship. One person on the committee must be a doctor.

Garwood and her lawyers don’t know who referred her to Fierle or how the woman found out about her; they suspect it was one of her cousins. At the time in Florida, a professional guardian could file a petition against anyone. The Florida legislature changed the law in 2020 to restrict guardians from filing such petitions unless they’re related to the person in care.

There was no such law then, so the examining committee, followed by a judge, found Garwood incapacitated. She lost the right to vote, to have a driver’s license, to choose her attorney, to apply for or hold a job, to travel, to marry, to consent to mental or physical health treatment, even to choose who she could talk with or visit.

Garwood was then placed in a local memory care facility—not because of a memory-related condition but because she was deemed a flight risk, according to one court document.

Garwood was held in the Palms of Longwood assisted living facility for three years. She says she wasn’t allowed to use the phone, go outside and smell the fresh air, or even open her window.

One day, though, Garwood got a lifeline. She says a nurse smuggled in a cellphone for her, which she used to post a plea for help on Facebook.

Garwood laughs when she remembers the post and says it must have sounded like a joke—like, “Help, I’m trapped!” But Garwood’s plea found someone who takes such messages very seriously.

A Digital SOS

It’s not a surprise that Hillary Hogue saw Garwood’s digital SOS. If you look into guardianship abuse in Florida, you quickly come across the outspoken activist’s name.

Hogue’s crusade started around 2017. It began, she says, when she had to stop her 90-year-old father from being placed in a permanent guardianship by her sister.

Hogue disputed the emergency petition her sister filed that claimed her father was incapacitated. She hired a lawyer, and the two reached a settlement that allowed her father to live with Hogue and stay out of a permanent guardianship in exchange for her father’s accountant serving as his power of attorney. Since then, she has meticulously tracked allegations of guardianship abuse across the Sunshine State.

“This is all I do, from the minute I get up to the minute I go to sleep,” Hogue says.

Hogue reached out to Garwood after she saw her message. She says she tried to visit Garwood in the assisted living facility and bring her a gift bag with some requested items—deodorant and Doritos—but an administrator confiscated the bag and kicked her out, threatening to call the police.

“The only way that Jan got anything different to wear, and Jan was used to having nice things, was when a female resident died and the other female residents would go through a garbage bag to see if anything fit them,” Hogue says.

The Palms of Longwood did not respond to requests for comment.

One frequent accusation in alleged guardianship abuse cases is that guardians stop wards from seeing family and friends. A harrowing 2017 New Yorker investigation into Nevada’s system described elderly people being put into court-appointed guardianships, placed in assisted living facilities, and totally cut off from their loved ones. The Tampa Bay Times reported on a contentious case where a guardian forbade a 92-year-old woman from talking to her friends and neighbors, and had her calls routed to the guardian. A lawyer for the guardian also told the newspaper that reporters were not allowed to talk to the woman without the guardian’s consent.

Hogue was not easily deterred, though. She put Garwood in touch with two lawyers she knew that fought guardianship cases.

Meanwhile, there was another significant development. In September 2018, Garwood’s guardian, Fierle, suddenly resigned from her case.

At the time, Fierle handled hundreds of guardianships around the state, but within a year her career would begin unraveling under scrutiny—not for defrauding her wards, but something much darker. Garwood didn’t know it, but she had dodged a possible death sentence.

A Macabre Case Leads to Reforms

On May 9, 2019, Kim Stryker sent a complaint to the state’s 9th Judicial Circuit and the Florida Department of Elder Affairs. She said her 75-year-old father, Steven Stryker, had been placed into a guardianship without any notice to his family. What’s more, she alleged that her father’s court-appointed guardian, Fierle, had placed a do-not-resuscitate order on him against his explicit wishes.

Stryker had been Baker Act-ed, the same as Garwood. He was sent to AdventHealth, a Florida hospital network. AdventHealth then petitioned a court to place him in a guardianship. The hospital specifically requested Fierle as his guardian. After that, he was shuffled between hospitals and assisted living facilities that his daughter says were unable to properly care for him.

Four days after his daughter filed the complaint, Stryker choked to death in a Tampa hospital. Fierle had ordered his feeding tube to be capped, meaning he had to swallow food, despite having a chronic condition that made swallowing difficult. Staff, restricted by the DNR, did nothing to save him.

Several state agencies launched probes into Fierle’s practices following the complaint. The Florida Clerk’s Statewide Investigations Alliance, which investigates claims of guardianship abuse, found that AdventHealth lied in court about not being able to contact Kim Stryker.

“In the Florida Hospital petition for guardianship, they state the Ward’s daughter’s whereabouts were unknown,” the report said. “However, her contact information was listed on the Advance Directive on file with the hospital, and our office found her contact information with a quick Google search.”

When a judge handed Stryker into Fierle’s care and stripped him of his rights in September 2018, the hearing lasted less than three minutes. The local outlet Spectrum News obtained a video of the brief meeting. Based on the reports of the examining committee, the judge quickly placed Stryker into a guardianship.

“OK, one, two, three…we’ve got three reports already in,” the judge said.

“Yes, ma’am,” a hospital attorney responded.

“So much for emergency,” the judge joked, to laughter.

On July 3, 2019, the same state circuit court judge removed Fierle from numerous guardianship cases, finding that she had abused her power by placing DNR orders on her wards without family or court permission. A week later, a judge in a different circuit removed her from nearly 100 more cases and revoked all the DNRs she had filed, following an Orange County comptroller’s investigation that found AdventHealth had paid Fierle nearly $4 million over a decade. Fierle was double-dipping, billing both the hospital and her ward’s accounts for her services. She was also not disclosing her conflict of interest with hospitals to courts. By the end of the month, she had resigned from all of her cases and the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) had launched a criminal investigation into Stryker’s death.

As the Fierle scandal unspooled, heads started to roll. The director of Florida’s Office of Public and Professional Guardians (OPPG) resigned, as did several other OPPG staffers. ABC Action News revealed that the office had a large backlog of misconduct allegations it was supposed to be investigating and had revoked only one guardian’s license in the past three years. Another family had complained about Fierle in 2016, alleging that their mother wasted away from cancer without proper treatment. The agency ignored the complaint for years.

Doing some public relations cleanup, AdventHealth announced it would no longer pay private guardians and would support reforms of state laws. (AdventHealth declined to comment, citing pending litigation.) Meanwhile, ABC Action News found similar practices at hospitals across the state. (Hospitals have a financial incentive to discharge long-term patients, especially after insurance stops covering their treatment.)

Florida authorities arrested Fierle in February 2020, more than a year after Steven Stryker’s death. The FDLE charged her with aggravated abuse and neglect of an elderly person.

“Medical professionals who examined [Stryker] believed he was capable of making end-of-life medical decisions for himself and informed [Fierle] that her client had a strong desire to live and that he understood his condition,” the FDLE said in a press release announcing Fierle’s arrest. “Despite the wishes of the elderly man and those of his family and friends, [Fierle] ordered his doctors ​not perform any life prolonging medical procedures saying she preferred ‘quality of life versus quantity of life.'”

When the FDLE raided Fierle’s office, it found nine urns containing human remains. It’s not unheard of for guardians to temporarily be in possession of cremated remains while they make funeral arrangements, since their wards sometimes don’t have immediate or nearby family. However, the relatives of Marilyn Hammock, whose remains were found in Fierle’s office, told the Orlando Sentinel that Fierle refused to send them Hammock’s ashes until her husband, also Fierle’s ward, died as well.

Reporting Gaps Persist

With macabre details about human ashes making headlines, state lawmakers moved to act. Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed guardianship reforms into law in June 2020. The new law requires courts to grant permission for guardians to sign DNRs; it also mandates that guardians detail payments. As noted above, it also stopped professional guardians from filing petitions unless they were related to the proposed ward.

But watchdogs say more transparency and information sharing between courts is necessary. Although the majority of professional guardians may follow the rules, bad ones can escape detection due to poor record-keeping and lack of communication between county court systems, all of which have their own filing systems.

“The Rebecca Fierle case really highlighted the need for a statewide database and uniform reporting system for guardianship cases,” says Brad Embry, inspector general for the Okaloosa County Clerk.

An audit by the Orange County Comptroller published last March found major deficiencies in the county’s tracking and oversight of guardianship cases. Courts weren’t notified when guardians failed to file required reports or lacked qualifications, weren’t informed of unauthorized guardian and attorney fees, and couldn’t track active guardianship cases. In one case, the court was unaware that a ward had been dead for 33 months. The report also found “several conflicts of interest between professional guardians assigned and other parties involved in cases; including, examining committee members, attorneys, a trust director, and service providers.”

Before she was removed from her cases, Fierle had at least 450 wards under her care, such as it was, across 19 counties.

In Florida, guardians are required to file detailed annual reports on their wards’ finances and assets, but the sheer number of guardianship cases presents a problem for court systems and watchdogs.

Anthony Palmieri, deputy inspector general for the Palm Beach County Clerk of Court, said last August that Palm Beach County alone has 3,000 to 3,200 open guardianship cases controlling more than $1 billion in assets. In 2020, Palmieri’s office identified $1.2 million in unverifiable and questionable guardianship expenditures and misreported assets.

According to public records obtained by Reason, the OPPG fielded 153 complaints about guardians in 2021 and the Clerk’s investigations alliance opened 51 investigations into alleged guardianship abuse.

BuzzFeed investigation last year estimated that as many as 200,000 adult guardianship cases are filed annually in the U.S. The most vociferous critics of guardianship, like Hogue and Rick Black, co-founder of the Center for Estate Administration Reform, say this system amounts to a huge exploitation scheme. Black often describes guardianship as estate fraud on a massive scale.

It’s hard to overstate how thoroughly a malicious guardian can ruin someone’s life. Last year, a Florida guardian was convicted on 15 charges of exploitation of an elderly person, grand theft, money laundering, and perjury. Prosecutors said he stole $420,000 from five of his wards. One of those wards was placed in an assisted living facility where the owners were later arrested for elder abuse.

Traci Hudson, a Pinellas County guardian, was arrested in 2019 on charges that she stole $500,000 from a ward and spent the money on things like Tampa Bay Buccaneers tickets, jewelry, and a 4,000-square-foot home. Fifteen months before Hudson was arrested, she won a libel lawsuit against the daughter of one of her wards, who had complained about her father’s treatment. A judge awarded Hudson $160,000, leaving the woman destitute and homeless.

The executive director of the Florida State Guardianship Association did not return requests for comment for this story.

‘I Thought I’d Live in That House Forever’

When Leslie Ann Ferderigos first talked to Jan Garwood, she thought, “How in the hell is this person in a guardianship?”

Ferderigos is one of the two attorneys Hogue contacted to take on Garwood’s case, along with Vito Roppo, a Naples lawyer.

Attorneys for Garwood’s new guardian—Denise Willis, appointed after Fierle resigned—filed a motion for sanctions against Roppo for trying to represent Garwood, since Garwood had no power to choose her own attorney. But Roppo and Ferderigos began fighting to lift Garwood’s guardianship anyway, starting with a new medical evaluation. (One quirk of guardianship is that when a ward fights to have her rights restored, the guardian’s attorney fees come out of the ward’s account. So Garwood was paying for her own opposition.)

The complex legal wrangling that followed illustrates the tangled connections, incentives, and conflicts of interest that the Orange County comptroller identified among guardians, attorneys, and examining committees that recommend or reject petitions for guardianships.

In 2018, Willis had filed a “suggestion of capacity”—a request for the court to reconsider Garwood’s mental capacity and restore some or all of her rightson Garwood’s behalf, but a judge denied it based on the report of a physician who examined Garwood.

According to court records, that physician was Thomas Sawyer. As BuzzFeed reported last year, Sawyer is an oncologist who Florida probate courts regularly turn to for examinations in guardianship cases. He also founded a law firm that represents professional guardians.

In fact, Sawyer’s son-in-law—Thomas Moss, a partner at the firm—was Rebecca Fierle’s attorney before she resigned from Garwood’s case.

Moss represented Fierle in hundreds of cases, including, BuzzFeed reported, the case of a “59-year-old woman who complained of being held in a lockdown facility while Rebecca Fierle paid out thousands of dollars from her accounts without court approval.” That woman had also filed a suggestion of capacity, but it was denied based on the report of the examining physician, none other than Thomas Sawyer.

Roppo and Ferderigos got another doctor to evaluate Garwood. The doctor reported that she “is fully capable of handling and executing her own personal, medical and financial day-to-day affairs.”

The conflicting opinions show the difficulty of determining exactly when someone is “incapacited”—that is, when it’s necessary to protect her from her own choices. A 35-year-old is largely free to indulge in ruinous but legal behavior without the threat of being stripped of legal autonomy. Is a 70-year-old who does the same simply making bad choices or mentally infirm?

In another guardianship that Ferderigos successfully had terminated, a Florida man named Doug Keegan went through eight psychiatric evaluations over the course of his guardianship. Law360 reported last year that three doctors recommended no guardianship, two recommended limited guardianship, and two recommended plenary guardianship, the most stringent form. Keegan’s family had moved to place him in a court-appointed guardianship because he had a severe alcohol problem and had married a Kenyan woman whom he had met online. Shortly after his rights were restored, Keegan was arrested and charged with making written threats against his former guardian’s lawyer and the judge in his case.

Based on Garwood’s new medical evaluation, Roppo and Ferderigos filed a suggestion of capacity in her case, and on August 24, 2020, a judge restored Garwood’s rights.

Unlike Keegan, Garwood has maintained her freedom since then. The problem is, she has her autonomy back but not much else.

Garwood’s guardian had previously received approval from the court to sell her house to pay the costs of her staying at the assisted living facility.

“My mother died in that house. I wanted to live there forever,” Garwood says. “I thought I’d live there forever.” Instead, she was homeless. She spent some time living at Ferderigos’ house, in a friend’s garage, and at a hotel.

Roppo says that Garwood’s house was sold to the relative of an administrator of the Palms of Longwood assisted living facility for well under market value.

Property records show that Willis sold the home in 2019 to Danielle Wolfrum for $250,000. According to 2019 Seminole County tax records, the property had an assessed value of $310,095. State records from 2018 list the administrator of the Palms of Longwood as Kendra Wolfrum.

When the Seminole County Clerk’s inspector general audited Garwood’s guardianship last year, the investigation found that her house “may have also been sold below true market value.”

“Though a real estate comprehensive was provided, the Court was NOT provided with a property appraisal conducted by a licensed property appraiser,” the audit noted.

Kyle Fletcher, Willis’ attorney, says that the sale of the house and the handling of Garwood’s finances were all duly approved by the court. (It bears noting that there’s considerable acrimony between Fletcher and Ferderigos. Fletcher, who also represented Doug Keegan’s guardian, has accused Ferderigos of improperly jumping into guardianship cases, unethically misleading judges, and using hand-picked doctors to give her clients favorable evaluations. The Florida Supreme Court sustained a bar complaint against Ferderigos last year for unprofessional behavior in an unrelated case, and a federal judge dismissed a civil lawsuit filed by her on Garwood’s behalf for being a “shotgun pleading,” a term for a complaint that is too vague to give the defendants proper notice of the claims against them.)

Although Garwood’s rights have been restored, her guardianship case is still open due to ongoing issues with and objections to Willis’ final report on Garwood’s assets. The inspector general has repeatedly dinged Willis for gaps in the report and for failing to provide requested documents.

“It’s a year later, and we still don’t have a complete accounting of what [Willis] did,” Roppo says.

In the meantime, Fletcher has filed a petition to the court seeking to bill Garwood $1,800 for his time spent on her case after her rights had been restored. He was, after all, still the attorney for her court-appointed guardian, and the case was still open. This sort of billing is common. When the Tampa Bay Times reported on a contested guardianship case, the guardian’s attorney noted that he would be billing the ward for time spent responding to the newspaper’s email.

While Garwood’s case drags on, things are moving faster elsewhere in the Seminole County court system. On January 10, a Seminole County judge removed Willis from 20 other guardianship cases, according to court filings.

“Judge [John] Galluzzo takes his responsibility to protect and preserve the interests of the ward very seriously,” Michelle Kennedy, the public information officer for Florida’s 18th Judicial Circuit, said when Reason asked about the reason for the removals. “When the previous guardian was unable to file timely reports, Judge Galluzzo had a duty to appoint new guardians.”

How To Stop More Cases of Guardianship Abuse

Last year, the state of Florida convened a task force to draft recommendations for improving Florida’s guardianship system. The task force included Hogue, as well as state legislators, judges, court clerks, professional guardians, and a former ward.

The task force released its final report in January. Its recommendations include a statewide data collection system for guardianship cases, a database of guardians, and notifying courts of discipline against guardians.

“I believe the biggest challenge in guardianship oversight is statewide uniformity,” Embry says. “The required documentation for certain types of filings vary from circuit to circuit, county to county, and courtroom to courtroom.”

Unfortunately, this isn’t a new problem. A similar Florida guardianship committee recommended in 2003 that “uniform reporting forms should be adopted on a statewide basis.”

The January task force report also recommended giving more opportunities for “supported decision-making,” an alternative to guardianship that allows people with disabilities to choose supporters who will help them make decisions. The supporters do not have full legal power over the person.

“Studies show that people who have greater self-determination are more likely to identify abusive situations and less likely to experience abuse,” says Olivia Babis, a senior public policy analyst at Disability Rights Florida. She adds that supported decision making “allows people with disabilities to have a team of supporters and stronger ties to the community. This makes it harder for any one person to take advantage of them. In contrast, a person under guardianship might be isolated. They may not even be allowed to speak to their loved ones.”

Thirteen states and the District of Columbia have laws encouraging supported decision making, but Florida is not among them. During Florida’s 2021 legislative session, a bill was introduced that would authorize adults with disabilities to enter into supported decision-making arrangements; it would also require petitioners for guardianship to show they had made efforts to use less restrictive methods. The legislation died in committee.

Picking Up the Pieces

Garwood has an apartment now, at least. But all her possessions were supposedly put in storage after her house was sold, and no one knows where her stuff went. Reached by phone in January, she said she was parked outside a thrift store that a local church opens once a week on Thursdays. “I’m living in second-hand clothes,” Garwood says. “I had food stamps for a while.”

Roppo and Garwood say her family pictures, her jewelry, and the art she collected over the years are all missing. The proceeds of the sale of Garwood’s house, roughly $171,000, were placed by Willis into a trust that Garwood has no control over. The Seminole County Clerk’s inspector general noted that Willis did this without court approval or oversight, contrary to Florida statutes. Garwood says her hair dresser and real estate licenses lapsed while she was under guardianship.

It would be irresponsible to declare, based only on an interview, that Garwood is perfectly capable of taking care of herself. Licensed doctors couldn’t agree on that. But it’s clear that she was deeply unhappy in her guardianship and, four years later, demonstrably worse off for being put through it.

“I had a lot of dreams that I’m not going to see happen,” Garwood says, “and it hurts.”

The post 'They Just Took Me Away' appeared first on Reason.com.

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China And Russia’s “Space War”: Where Is The US?

China And Russia’s “Space War”: Where Is The US?

Authored by Judith Bergman via The Gatestone Institute,

  • “Evidence of both nations’ intent to undercut the United States and allied leadership in the space domain can be seen in the growth of combined in-orbit assets of China and Russia, which grew approximately 70% in just two years.” — Kevin Ryder, senior analyst at the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) for space and counterspace, Air Force Magazine April 12, 2022.

  • Space has already become the scene of an ongoing “shadow war” in which China and Russia conduct attacks against U.S. satellites with lasers, radiofrequency jammers, and cyber-attacks every day, according to General David Thompson, the U.S. Space Force’s first vice chief of space operations.

  • “The threats are really growing and expanding every single day…. We’re really at a point now where there’s a whole host of ways that our space systems can be threatened…. Hostile action toward our space-based assets is not a question of ‘if,’ but instead, ‘when.'” — General David Thompson, Washington Post, November 30, 2021.

  • “Fifteen years after China’s ASAT strike, we still lack the ability to defeat an attack on our space systems or launch an offensive strike if circumstances warrant.” — US Air Force Gen. Kevin Chilton (Ret.), former commander of U.S. Strategic Command and Air Force Space Command, The Hill, April 12, 2022.

  • “The PLA [People’s Liberation Army] will continue to integrate space services… to erode the U.S. military’s information advantage.” — Annual Threat Assessment of the U.S. Intelligence Community, Office of the Director of National Intelligence, February 2022.

  • “If deterrence were to fail, we would face an adversary that has integrated space into all aspects of their military operations…. Space provides the foundation of everything we do as a joint force, from delivering humanitarian assistance to combat on the ground, in the air, and at sea…. We cannot afford to lose space; without it we will fail.” — General John W. Raymond, U.S. Chief of Space Operations, Space Force News, April 5, 2022.

Space has already become the scene of an ongoing “shadow war” in which China and Russia conduct attacks against U.S. satellites with lasers, radiofrequency jammers, and cyber-attacks every day, according to General David Thompson, the U.S. Space Force’s first vice chief of space operations.

Pictured: A Long March 3B rocket, carrying the Beidou-3GEO3 satellite, lifts off from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in China’s Sichuan province on June 23, 2020. (Photo by STR/AFP via Getty Images)

Space-based threats from China and Russia have grown exponentially in recent years, according to a new report on the issue by the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), published April 12.

“Evidence of both nations’ intent to undercut the United States and allied leadership in the space domain can be seen in the growth of combined in-orbit assets of China and Russia, which grew approximately 70% in just two years,” noted Kevin Ryder, DIA senior analyst for space and counterspace.

“This recent and continuing expansion follows a more than 200% increase between 2015 and 2018.”

“Space is a warfighting domain now,” said Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall in April.

“China’s long-standing and extensive modernization program is the greatest challenge… Although China is the Department’s pacing challenge, we also regard Russia as an acute threat.”

Space has already become the scene of an ongoing “shadow war” in which China and Russia conduct attacks against U.S. satellites with lasers, radio frequency jammers, and cyber-attacks every day, according to General David Thompson, the U.S. Space Force’s first vice chief of space operations. The attacks are “reversible” for now, which means that the damage to the attacked satellites is not permanent, but they amply demonstrate the intentions and abilities of the two main competitors of the United States in space.

“The threats are really growing and expanding every single day. And it’s really an evolution of activity that’s been happening for a long time,” Thompson said in November 2021. “We’re really at a point now where there’s a whole host of ways that our space systems can be threatened.”

China leads by far over Russia. “The Chinese are actually well ahead [of Russia],” according to Thompson. “They’re fielding operational systems at an incredible rate.” Some of those systems are ground-based, such as anti-satellite missiles (ASAT) and lasers intended to blind, damage, or destroy satellites. Others are space-based, such as orbiting “killer” satellites programmed to attack other satellites at a certain point in time, whether with blinding lasers, robotic arms or other means meant to destroy or incapacitate. According to the Pentagon’s 2021 report to Congress on China’s military capabilities:

“The PLA continues to acquire and develop a range of counterspace capabilities and related technologies, including kinetic-kill missiles, ground-based lasers, and orbiting space robots, as well as expanding space surveillance capabilities, which can monitor objects in space within their field of view and enable counterspace actions.”

In January 2007, China tested its first successful ASAT, destroying one of its own inactive weather satellites and creating one of the world’s largest space debris incidents. According to the Pentagon’s 2021 report:

“The PRC has an operational ground-based Anti-Satellite (ASAT) missile intended to target low-Earth orbit satellites, and China probably intends to pursue additional ASAT weapons capable of destroying satellites up to geosynchronous Earth orbit”.

Russia tested another ASAT in November 2021, during which it successfully destroyed one of its inactive Soviet-era satellites, creating 1,500 pieces of debris in what General Thompson has called an “incredibly dangerous and irresponsible act.” The ASAT was part of Russia’s mobile missile defense complex known as Nudol, which, according to the Defense Intelligence Agency’s new report, is “capable of destroying ballistic missiles and low-orbiting satellites.” Russia is reportedly also developing an air-launched ASAT weapon that could be launched from aircraft, such as the Russian MiG-31, to target spacecraft in low earth orbit.

What is concerning is that the US appears to be at a grave disadvantage countering such attacks. “Fifteen years after China’s ASAT strike, we still lack the ability to defeat an attack on our space systems or launch an offensive strike if circumstances warrant,” Retired US Air Force Gen. Kevin Chilton, former commander of U.S. Strategic Command and Air Force Space Command, noted.

“Hostile action toward our space-based assets is not a question of ‘if,’ but instead, ‘when.’ Attacks are regularly occurring at lower thresholds. Our adversaries fully understand the U.S. military’s reliance upon these systems and will seek to compromise or destroy them to gain a decisive advantage in any terrestrial conflict… The goal is to develop resilient, defendable capabilities that can withstand an attack, while also developing offensive options that will deter strikes against our systems in orbit.”

While China has made it a goal to become the world’s leading space power by 2045, China could overtake the United States by the end of the decade, according to General Thompson — especially because China is putting up satellites at twice the rate of the United States.

“We are still the best in the world, clearly in terms of capability. They’re catching up quickly… We should be concerned by the end of this decade if we don’t adapt.”

In addition, China’s space station, Tinangong, is expected to become fully operational between 2022 and 2024. Three Chinese astronauts, one of them a former fighter pilot and another a People’s Liberation Army (PLA) pilot, just landed back in China after spending six months in space working on the space station. China plans to continue conducting explorations on the moon, including establishing a robotic research station, and in March 2021 signed a memorandum of understanding with Russia on a joint lunar research station.

The latest threat assessment report of the US intelligence community, published in February, also makes it clear that while both Russia and China “increasingly see space as a warfighting domain”, the greater threat comes from China. According to the report:

“The PLA will continue to integrate space services—such as satellite reconnaissance and positioning, navigation, and timing—and satellite communications into its weapons and command-and-control systems to erode the U.S. military’s information advantage.

Counterspace operations will be integral to potential military campaigns by the PLA, and China has counterspace-weapons capabilities intended to target U.S. and allied satellites. The PLA is fielding new destructive and nondestructive ground- and space-based antisatellite (ASAT) weapons.”

In a recent speech, U.S. Chief of Space Operations General John W. Raymond described just how crucial space is to warfare and why it is paramount that the United States remain the preeminent space power:

“If deterrence were to fail, we would face an adversary that has integrated space into all aspects of their military operations. They use space to detect, track, and target our forces with long-range precision weapons. Space provides the foundation of everything we do as a joint force, from delivering humanitarian assistance to combat on the ground, in the air, and at sea. Our joint operational plans assume assured access to space. … We cannot afford to lose space; without it we will fail.”

Tyler Durden
Fri, 04/29/2022 – 23:40

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How Far Are We From Phasing Out Coal?

How Far Are We From Phasing Out Coal?

At the COP26 conference last year, 40 nations agreed to phase coal out of their energy mixes.

However, as Visual Capitalist’s Bruno Venditti details below, despite this, in 2021, coal-fired electricity generation reached all-time highs globally, showing that eliminating coal from the energy mix will not be a simple task.

This infographic shows the aggressive phase-out of coal power that would be required in order to reach net zero goals by 2050, based on an analysis by Ember that uses data provided by the International Energy Agency (IEA).

Low-Cost Comes at a High Environmental Cost

Coal-powered electricity generation rose by 9.0% in 2021 to 10,042 Terawatt-hours (TWh), marking the biggest percentage rise since 1985.

The main reason is cost. Coal is the world’s most affordable energy fuel. Unfortunately, low-cost energy comes at a high cost for the environment, with coal being the largest source of energy-related CO2 emissions.

China has the highest coal consumption, making up 54% of the world’s coal electricity generation. The country’s consumption jumped 12% between 2010 and 2020, despite coal making up a lower percentage of the country’s energy mix in relative terms.

Together, China and India account for 66% of global coal consumption and emit about 35% of the world’s greenhouse gasses (GHG). If you add the United States to the mix, this goes up to 72% of coal consumption and 49% of GHGs.

How Urgent is to Phase Out Coal?

According to the United Nations, emissions from current and planned fossil energy infrastructure are already more than twice the amount that would push the planet over 1.5°C of global heating, a level that scientists say could bring more intense heat, fire, storms, flooding, and drought than the present 1.2°C.

Apart from being the largest source of CO2 emissions, coal combustion is also a major threat to public health because of the fine particulate matter released into the air.

As just one example of this impact, a recent study from Harvard University estimates air pollution from fossil fuel combustion is responsible for 1 in 5 deaths globally.

The Move to Renewables

Coal-powered electricity generation must fall by 13% every year until 2030 to achieve the Paris Agreement’s goals of keeping global heating to only 1.5 degrees.

To reach the mark, countries would need to speed up the shift from their current carbon-intensive pathways to renewable energy sources like wind and solar.

How fast the transition away from coal will be achieved depends on a complicated balance between carbon emissions cuts and maintaining economic growth, the latter of which is still largely dependent on coal power.

Tyler Durden
Fri, 04/29/2022 – 23:20

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New Jan. 6 Bodycam Videos Show DC Police Officer Assaulting Unconscious Protester

New Jan. 6 Bodycam Videos Show DC Police Officer Assaulting Unconscious Protester

Authored by Joseph M. Hanneman via The Epoch Times,

A District of Columbia police officer used a large wooden stick to strike the body and head of protester Rosanne Boyland three times as she lay motionless on the ground on Jan. 6, 2021, according to bodycam footage from several officers obtained by The Epoch Times.

Use-of-force expert Stanley Kephart, upon reviewing the previously unreleased footage, concluded that the three full-force blows by D.C. police officer Lila Morris constituted a felony assault with intent to cause great bodily harm.

Kephart called Morris’s use of force “indefensible” and the internal-affairs investigation of Boyland’s death a “clear and convincing coverup.”

“I think that the first thing that occurred is an assault under the color of authority by Morris,” Kephart told The Epoch Times. “That is a crime, an arrestable offense.”

Police at the mouth of the Lower West Terrace tunnel at the U.S. Capitol ignored dozens of pleas to help Boyland after she collapsed, the videos show.

When a lifeless Boyland was pulled inside the building more than 10 minutes later, other police and EMS personnel began 50 minutes of life-saving efforts that ultimately failed.

An independent forensic pathologist hired by the Boyland family contends that her cause of death wasn’t an overdose of the prescription drug Adderall—as reported by the D.C. medical examiner—but manual asphyxia. Boyland was crushed under a pile of people when police gassed protesters and pushed them out of the tunnel at about 4:20 p.m. on Jan. 6.

‘Under the Color of Authority’

Kephart, a 42-year law enforcement veteran and former director of security for the 1984 Los Angeles Summer Olympics, reviewed Boyland’s case at the request of The Epoch Times. He has testified as a witness more than 350 times on topics including excessive force, police discipline, officer safety, and crowd control.

Kephart concluded that Morris’s use of force was a felonious “assault under the color of authority,” with intent to cause great bodily harm. He said that Morris should be prosecuted in criminal court and fired from the D.C. Metro police force.

“I believe two things were in operation here. One was anger at this person,” Kephart said, referring to Boyland. “That was overridden by fear. And those two elements were the causal connection between what was done to the person by the officer and the result.”

Rosanne Boyland was struck with a wooden stick on Jan. 6, 2021: once in the ribs and twice in the head, video evidence shows. (Metropolitan Police Department Bodycams/Graphic by The Epoch Times)

The force used against Boyland fails a four-part standard set in the 1989 U.S. Supreme Court case Graham v. Connor, Kephart said: whether force was ever needed and appropriate in the situation, the extent of the injury, and “whether the force was applied in a good-faith manner to maintain and restore discipline, or maliciously and sadistically.”

Police are trained not to strike people in the head with a blunt object. In the West Terrace tunnel, something overcame that training, Kephart said.

“If you have a trained officer who is angry at what the crowd is doing and the crowd rises up and puts him in a position where he feels his personal safety is compromised, fear begins to take over the anger, and the reflexive response throws the training right out the window,” Kephart said.

Chief Robert Contee of the Metropolitan Police Department didn’t respond to a request for comment. A message left with the department’s public information office wasn’t returned.

Justin Winchell reacts in horror when his friend Rosanne Boyland is struck in the head with a wooden stick. Boyland was struck three times. Officer Lila Morris tried striking a fourth time, but the stick flew from her hand. (Metropolitan Police Department Bodycam/Screenshot via The Epoch Times)

One protester who allegedly used the same wooden stick to strike and jab at police in the terrace tunnel was charged with assaulting, resisting, or impeding certain officers using a dangerous weapon. Jonathan Mellis was charged in a 10-count indictment on March 10, 2021. He pleaded not guilty. Mellis is being held in jail pending trial.

Police Ignored Pleas for Help

Police bodycam video shows protesters begging officers to render life-saving aid to Boyland from the moment she collapsed at the mouth of the tunnel. The pleas grew more desperate as it became apparent Boyland was dying. That sparked a violent backlash from rioters, who attacked the police line with fists, flag poles, sticks, and a whisk broom.

“There’s people under here!” shouted Justin Winchell, Boyland’s friend who accompanied her to Washington that day. “There’s people trapped under here!”

A protester right at the police line who was bleeding from a baton strike to the head pointed to Boyland and pleaded for help. “Get her up. Get her up! Get her up, please,” the man urged. “Save her life! Save her life, please!”

One officer used his baton and boots to push five protesters on top of Boyland, bodycam video shows. “Please get her up! She’s gonna die!” Winchell shouted.

There was the sound of a female coughing as a battle raged above and around Boyland. The coughing stopped at 4:26:04 p.m., according to a timeline developed by The Epoch Times from police bodycam footage. A few seconds later, the large crowd on the terrace began chanting, “I can’t breathe! I can’t breathe!”

“My God! She’s dead! She’s dead! Rose!” Winchell cried at 4:26:52 p.m. “Rosanne! I need somebody! She’s dead! … I need somebody! I need medics!”

Just shy of 4:28 p.m., protester Luke Coffee of Dallas stepped to the front of the police line, held up his hand, and shouted, “Stop!” He was squirted in the face with pepper spray but maintained his position.

A rioter threw a large wooden stick at Morris from out in the crowd. At the time, Morris was in the tunnel, crouching behind a protester who had his arms covering his head.

3 Strikes

Morris picked up the wooden stick, raised it over her head, and struck Coffee on the right elbow, bodycam video shows. She aimed a second strike at Coffee but missed.

The video then shows that Morris raised the stick over her head with both hands and unleashed three quick hits to Boyland’s body: one to the ribs and two to the head. The second blow to the head drew a horrified reaction from Winchell.

The wooden stick flew from Morris’s left hand as she wound up for another strike on Boyland, the videos show. Morris whiffed in her final attempted hit. The stick ricocheted off the tunnel arch and flew over Morris’s head.

Coffee reached down and picked up an aluminum crutch that had been thrown at police several times during the afternoon. He held the crutch over his head for several seconds, then used it like a plow to push the police line back into the tunnel several feet.

As Coffee pushed the police line back, bystanders dragged Boyland down several steps and began CPR. Nearly three minutes later, they carried her directly in front of the police line and continued doing CPR. No officers moved to lend assistance.

At 4:31 p.m., Boyland was dragged by officers to the back of the tunnel and inside the Capitol. In the process, she lost her jeans, backpack, and top, leaving her clothed only in leggings, according to bodycam video.

First responders perform CPR on Rosanne Boyland just inside the lower West Terrace tunnel entrance at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. (Metropolitan Police Department Bodycam/Screenshot via The Epoch Times)

A SWAT team member in a green tactical uniform began CPR. The D.C. Fire and EMS Department was summoned. Within a few minutes, a team of six to eight first responders was working to resuscitate Boyland. She was hooked to an automated external defibrillator.

Morris watched the resuscitation efforts. At 4:38 p.m., her bodycam captures a female voice—likely Morris—asking, “Is he dead?”

Boyland was loaded onto a makeshift gurney and wheeled to the east wing of the Capitol to meet a medical transport unit from D.C. Fire and EMS.

“When we got into the Capitol, they had her on some sort of dolly or pull cart, and they were pulling her down the hallway towards us,” Capt. Ellen Kurland, an EMS supervisor, said in a Jan. 6 documentary produced by DC Fire and EMS. “We worked her for 30 minutes, and she had been down 20 minutes before we were even able to get to her.”

Boyland was put on an IV and given epinephrine every four minutes to stimulate her heart. The rescue squad requested approval to depart for The George Washington University Hospital at 5:10 p.m. “Authorization was not granted,” read a summary of records obtained by the Boyland family.

The records don’t indicate why the ambulance wasn’t allowed to leave the Capitol for a half-hour after requesting approval. A message from The Epoch Times left at the D.C. Metro Fire and EMS Department hasn’t been returned.

The ambulance finally left the Capitol at 5:40 p.m. for the one-mile trip to the hospital. Due to traffic and road closures, the ambulance didn’t arrive at the emergency room until 6 p.m. Boyland was pronounced dead at 6:09 p.m.

“We are not 100 percent [certain of] when she actually passed, but agree it was in that time frame [4:21 to 4:26 p.m.] and probably before Lila Morris got hold of that stick,” Bret Boyland, Rosanne’s father, told The Epoch Times. “No matter whether Rosanne was alive or not, we were shocked and appalled at the officer’s attack.”

‘Objectively Reasonable’

Troubled by the contradictions in the Boyland case, Gary McBride of Decatur, Texas, filed an excessive-force complaint against Morris with the Metropolitan Police Department in September 2021.

“I don’t condone what happened at the Capitol, and I don’t condone the beating of anyone who is defenseless either,” McBride wrote to the D.C. Metro Internal Affairs Bureau on Sept. 14. “It doesn’t matter if you are a protester, preacher, or politician; you should be held accountable for your actions.”

Two months later, in November 2021, Capt. David K. Augustine wrote to McBride and said, “The use of force within this investigation was determined to be objectively reasonable.”

Cause of Death Disputed

The D.C. Office of the Chief Medical Examiner performed an autopsy on Boyland on Jan. 7, 2021. The cause of death was ruled amphetamine intoxication. Boyland’s family questioned that conclusion.

Boyland had a prescription for Adderall, a medication used to treat attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). There was no visual evidence or witness statements to indicate any signs the drug impaired her on Jan. 6.

First responders pull Rosanne Boyland on a makeshift gurney to meet a transport unit from DC Fire and EMS at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. (Metropolitan Police Department Bodycam/Screenshot via The Epoch Times)

The Boyland family hired Park Dietz & Associates to review the autopsy findings. The Park Dietz forensic pathologist agreed that the manner of death was an accident but concluded Boyland’s death was caused by manual asphyxia. Boyland was cremated, so a new autopsy was not possible.

“Compressional asphyxia refers to a situation in which pressure exerted on the chest or back of an individual impedes normal breathing and often leaves no diagnostic physical findings,” read a summary of the Park Dietz report provided to The Epoch Times by the Boyland family.

Amphetamine toxicity “was not the proximate cause of Ms. Boyland’s death, although it cannot be ruled in or out as a contributory factor,” the pathologist wrote. “The circumstances surrounding Ms. Boyland’s death are not consistent with a drug overdose as the proximate cause and cannot be ignored.”

The original autopsy didn’t note any evidence of injury, except for a four-inch bruise on her right forearm. However, bodycam footage of Boyland being dragged from the tunnel entrance at 4:31 p.m. shows what appears to be a wound on her forehead. Another bodycam view seems to show a long red mark starting on the lower section of her left rib cage.

Winchell told an Atlanta television station in 2021 that Boyland developed a nosebleed after the officer struck her in the face with the walking stick.

“I want you to hear me: She was already blue, and the Capitol police—I kid you not—had been hitting everyone with batons and stuff, understandably,” Winchell said.

“But I’m talking, she is laid out, maybe dead at this point, but they hit her at least two times in the body. And then they hit her once in the face, once right here in her nose, and some blood started coming out of her nose.”

Rosanne Boyland and Justin Winchell in Washington on Jan. 6, 2021. (Boyland family/Screenshot via The Epoch Times)

According to the autopsy, Boyland suffered left and right anterior rib fractures, but those were likely caused by CPR compressions, the Park Dietz report said. The report noted no evidence that a beating or traumatic injury contributed to her death.

“This does not mean that she was not beaten by a police officer, only that she was already deceased at that time,” the Boyland family said in a statement.

The report said it’s unclear what role chemical irritants sprayed by police and protesters might have had on Boyland’s death. Videos show mace dripping off the clothing of protesters near the police line.

“Please stop pepper spraying,” an unknown man near Boyland pleaded at 4:26 p.m. “Her lungs are full of it.”

Police used an unknown gas on protesters in the tunnel at 4:20 p.m. According to security video, a loud explosion was heard seconds beforehand, causing many protesters in the tunnel to drop to the ground.

Chemical agents such as pyrotechnic oleoresin capsicum, delivered via an exploding munition, work primarily on the lungs. Witnesses in the tunnel described feeling like the oxygen was sucked from the air, making it impossible to breathe. The response was panic.

Kephart said crowd-control munitions were a mistake in such a tight and crowded space.

“If you’re using gas munitions to cause the air to be saturated with a gas displacing the oxygen, and causes them to panic and pass out, thereby clogging the ability for them to disperse because they’re passed out, you have created and worsened the problem,” Kephart said.

“This is an absolute symptom of a lack of proper training. This offends common sense.”

Police can allow fear to overcome their training in high-stress situations, but so can crowds like the one in the West Terrace tunnel.

“The same thing is true with the crowds: If fear [strikes], they do the wrong thing,” he said. “They either drop-down, or they try to flee. And in attempting to do either of those two options, they worsen the circumstance in crowd compaction.”

Birthday Filled With Sadness

April 26 was a sad day at the Georgia home of Bret and Cheryl Boyland. Their late daughter Rosanne would have turned 36. Instead of enjoying a birthday celebration, the Boyland family had to confront the grief that has been ever-present since the night of Jan. 6, 2021.

Rosanne’s parents struggle with many lingering questions about her death. Among them is the exact time their daughter died. Bret Boyland said that based on the review of Rosanne’s autopsy and other factors, he believes she died between 4:21 p.m. and 4:25 p.m.

A review of video and audio from police bodycams identified a series of female coughs between 4:25:34 and 4:26:04. Boyland said the coughs were too short for him to tell if they came from his daughter.

Bodycam and security video of Boyland’s time in the Capitol before being taken to the hospital provided some comfort to her family.

“We were glad to get details of life-saving efforts after she was dragged into the Capitol,” Bret Boyland said. “She just got that attention too late.”

Tyler Durden
Fri, 04/29/2022 – 23:00

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