Sometimes, people are stealing from a person with Alzheimer's or dementia, thinking they can get away with it since the person has a failing memory. And the person with dementia is rarely believed.
Elders are Vulnerable
Think about that vulnerability. I equate it with a small child in school having to defend herself against a teacher. Who do people tend to believe? The adult. The teacher. But what if the teacher is lying?
Right now, in my home town, there is a couple on trial for signing the woman's father's name to a very large loan guarantee. The father has Alzheimer's. The rest of the family says he was not capable of knowing what he was signing, if indeed he did sign it. And, they think it may be a forged signature. Please realize, no crime has yet been proven. The couple took very good care of the father. He lacked for nothing, according to stories about the incident. What will happen next is up to the courts.
However, we all have heard of times when elders have been swindled. Elder fraud is almost an industry in and of itself. Elders are vulnerable, and often get ripped off by scam artists. They give out their account information to "a nice young man" who wants donations for cancer research, and afterwords, they may find their checking account empty. But that scenario is much different than an elder who doesn't' remember that she set her sweater down in the bathroom, so she accuses a caregiver of stealing it.
Can You Believe Accusations From a Person with Dementia?
So, who is right when an elder says someone is stealing their money or belongings? Is there a nursing home that can claim an employee has never stolen from an elder? An assisted living center? Of course the good ones guard against that with background checks and experienced employees. But still, this crime can and does happen. There are dishonest people working in every industry.