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My Brother and Mother co-own a house. He is often late with his half of the mortgage payment, which makes my mother very anxious. After my dad passed away in September, she used the bulk of her funds to pay for his funeral. There was several thousand dollars left. My sister moved in with her with the agreement that she would pay 100 dollars a week to help with the mortgage and buy her own food. She has been living with my mother for 9 1/2 months and has contributed a grand total of 300 dollars and my mother is paying for all of the groceries to support her and she often brings her grandson over for week-ends and my mom is expected to feed him as well. My mothers funds have gradually dwindled down to nothing. SHe has credit card debt, mortgage debt, many health issues with costly prescriptions and falls far short of meeting those obligations. She has dementia and is continuing to pass out signed checks and credit cards to my siblings on demand. She doesn't seem to have the awareness of her financial jeopardy; and my siblings seem to have no compunction about asking her to provide for their needs. It is quite a mess.

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I agree. fly to mom. set up a joint account and if she is competent have her transfer her current monies to the new account that you can manage. Just as important, can you be her POA. You can call attornies in advance but do not mention the dementia yet if she is still competent. A good elder attorney can help you better than us.
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Yikes, sounds like a bad situation, but is there any silver lining to your siblings living with mom? Are they by caring people who will stay there with mom if she starts to need lots of help? If not, it might be best to start the process of having mom qualify to enter a nursing home. But if they are dependable in terms of caring for mom, there might be some positives in this situation. It sounds like your siblings have about reached the bottom of mom's bank account. At that point, you'll actually be able to stop worrying about your mom's finances if her monthly income is enough to provide for her necessities. She can just stop paying on her credit card debt (and shred the card!). Your mom probably has little need for a good credit rating at this point and, frankly, it will take a long time for them to come after her over it (ignore the obnoxious calls and collection notices). With your brother as co-owner, the house becomes his problem. He's at an age where he should be protecting his credit rating by at least paying his half of taxes and mortgage each month.

I'd focus on getting control on your mom's essentials. Open an account in both your names and have her monthly income deposited there. I know, easier said than done! But if that's where you focus your energies (instead of your anger at bro and sis for bilking mom), you can win. Explain that it's your contribution to caring for her. You can pay her important bills (not the credit cards!) and write her a monthly check for her discretionary spending (try not to think about whether or not she's handing it all over to your siblings).

This is a tough situation, channel your energy into actions that can make it better (and, to preserve your sanity, have regular, long, anger-venting sessions with a good friend !).
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I am in the same boat - only having to fight two brothers who are draining my poor Mom's account. They have turned against me and managed to turn the rest of our family against me as well. I am 1000 miles away from My Mom and brothers which makes it even more difficult. Any attorney is the only answer! Get it going now.
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You're right that this is a mess. Since your mother has dementia, it may help to see if you can get her away from this family and into a nursing home. Her house could be sold to pay off her debt and what is left would pay nursing home costs until she qualified for Medicaid. She may feel protected in a controlled environment and she'd have peer interaction and socialization.
Other than that, there isn't much you can do unless you want to get an attorney to help straighten this out. Your mother is giving over the money of her own free will, so her dementia would need to be brought to light and then the attorney may be able to stop this exploitation. This could be a lengthy process, however. Also, this approach will likely end your relationship with your siblings. It's a tough choice. One consultation with an attorney, at least, may give you some ideas of how to move forward. Good luck,
Carol
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