Follow
Share

I will try to keep this short but it is a crazy situation that began many years ago and has only gotten worse.


My niece, was raised by her fathers parents after a long custody battle. The grandparents that raised her are wealthy and she was given anything and everything she ever wanted. That is until she turned 17. At that point she asked my mother if she could move in with her. That's when 2 of my sisters and I noticed things were not normal. The kid was lazy, selfish, mean to mom, had issues in school and dropped out. Mom refused to believe that she was anything less than perfect.


This went on for a couple of years but nobody knew Mom was financially supporting her. Mom always told people her other grandparents were paying for things but the bank statements showed otherwise. Turns out, within about a year mom financed 3 vehicles for her grandchild and eventually one of the cars was repossessed by the bank because my niece never made a single payment. Mom was the co-signer and ended up having to pay almost $10,000 after the bank sent it to auction.


She also paid for multiple vacations in the two year period including several of my nieces friends. Mom denied giving her anything and would get angry when anyone tried to talk to her about it. Between checks, debit card charges and credit card charges upwards of $50,000 was spent on this one grandchild. There is no way of knowing how much cash was given.


Mom had said at one time she was worried that my niece would commit suicide so didn't want to upset her. I feel my niece might have used that go get mom to feel sorry for her and gave her everything she asked for so she wouldn't hurt herself.


Most of her other grandchildren have stopped visiting her. Not because they feel entitled to any of the money but because she makes a point to tell them how great the other one is and how good and successful she is when it is clear she is not.


Mom is now broke and in danger of losing the home her and Dad built. 2 of my sisters and myself have all talked to Mom and we were all yelled at and accused of picking on a poor kid who has troubles. My nieces mother lost custody of her as a baby and has never attempted to be a mother so has been no help in the matter.


I know one of the three of us should take over as Mom's power of attorney but there are legal costs that we are not in a position to afford and the way we were all verbally attacked when bringing up the money she's given away, we are reluctant to force anything.


We help out where we can but it is getting stressful and there are hurt feeling and some level of anger because of the whole situation. My sisters help out with cleaning and yard work and so on. I help with home maintenance, yard work, vehicle maintenance and whatever else I can. The three of us are stressed and angry and feeling the affects of anxiety.


Now Mom has been reduced to applying for any and all assistance she can and is at risk of losing everything. She has already sold most of the land her and Dad had and all that is left is the house and a few acres of land. The money for the land that was sold too cheap is gone and there is nothing left.


Would my nieces behavior be possibly considered elder abuse? Mom did give her most of the money and allowed her to help herself (including some forged checks) but it was money she couldn't afford and done so out of guilt or pity.


Thanks in advance for any advise or guidance you can provide.

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
I agree. Unless mom is deemed incapacitated, she is allowed to make her own bad decisions for all the wrong reasons. You can always make an APS report anonymously and let them determine if there is foul play.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

I would only consider it elder abuse if your mom has already been diagnosed with dementia or alzheimer's and your niece is still taking from her knowing she has a brain disorder. My brother did the same thing. He thought it was perfectly okay to take money from my mom. However, this was also after mom had been tested by a doctor and the doctor said she had dementia. I couldn't do anything because the social worker said it was just a person with dementia making bad decisions. He was also given over $15,000 by mom's husband. Sadly, some parents feel sorry for the black sheep and over indulge them. They feel bad or guilty for the "child" that isn't doing well, and try to make up for it with money and gifts. This is no matter how old their "child" is. I would just disown the niece. I would also limit time with your mother if it's causing too much anxiety. If she has dementia it's no use to try reasoning with her.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

I'm so sorry for your sad and stressful situation. If you are on this forum for any length of time, you will read at least 2 or more of your exact same story posted here every day. And that's just on this website, not all the others as well. The niece did not commit abuse. Your mother committed enabling. There's nothing you can do about it...the money is gone.

If your mom has all her mental capacities you have no power unless she is a physical danger to herself or others. I don't think calling APS will be of any use as they are worried about seniors not eating, being physically abused by others, being sick without medical help or aid, etc.

I'm not sure I would even maintain your mom's home as it will eventually need to be sold to pay for her elder care (towards Medicaid). You and sisters may never inherit the house or land if she is broke at 78 (if that was a hope in your family). There's no point in the siblings spending money towards maintaining a house no one can afford. There's no reason for your mom to live in such a big place when she could be in section 8 housing and not blowing your money as well. But you would get a legally accurate answer from an elder law attorney, so I would consult an experienced one, even if it seems expensive it will be money well spent. Again, so sorry. Blessings and best of luck to you.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

Hopefully Mom doesn't need Medicaid in the next five years because the money spent on her grandchild will cause a penalty.

The cost of a POA should not be that much but Mom has to be agreeable to assign someone. Then it depends if you can get an instant one or she has to be incompetent. Office of Aging may have a number for Legal Services that charge by scale based on Moms income.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter