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In January 2024 I found my dad half-dead in the hospital thanks to his new wife and her predatory elder abuse “friend group”. I live in TX, they live in CT. I flew up after receiving threatening and harassing phone calls from the new spouse and found him there only thanks to the police dept. She quickly blocked my sister and I from his medical and then legally banned us from seeing him. I had to file for Conservatorship which she delayed and it finally went to third party court assigned. (In CT, that is an attorney). My father never transferred the TX deeds to me but it was in his will 10 years ago for the TX properties to go to me. I have a long email history to back this up. He has a recent dx of Alzheimer’s and on top of that I think cult-like techniques and brainwashing were utilized on my dad. He apologized profusely saying he’d been coerced into signing things he didn’t want to, etc…. He is extremely codependent on the new spouse (trauma-bonded), she seems to have been his “handler”. He has described torture and neglect experiences to me as well as coercive control as well as financial exploitation. The new spouse’s lawyer is her friend who is also in the group (very very unethical and a scary unpleasant person). It’s four months later and I’m still in complete shock. I haven’t been able to prove the abuse to authorities yet but hopefully will be able to once I get on his medical and find out what the hell happened to him. My dad is a Veteran and she blocked him from going to the VA earlier in the month, This is a nightmare situation and I have been forced into financial duress the past few years through them scapegoating my daughter and I and them causing me expensive issues (which I am only putting together now). Obviously I have forgiven my dad — he is a victim in this and obviously I had not realized he was experiencing dementia or that he was in an abusive situation (he was covering for her well). In CT the marriage laws are strong…AND…this woman’s lawyer friend is beyond unethical and one step away from getting disbarred in the state of CT (I wouldn’t put *anything* past her). I’m a disabled single mom and those properties or the income from them would be my daughter’s inheritance. Although my father apparently has lots of money tucked away, I’ve had to raise her in near poverty conditions.



My father is saying he didn’t marry the woman and would not have married her and didn’t sign any marriage certificate. The certificate looks real however (I’ve had it checked 4 times) and it’s dated on the anniversary of my mother’s death. Aka the woman I’m dealing with is a psychopath who targeted my family 10+ years ago. She also has the same name as my deceased mother. I believe away from almost killing my dad that she is also a criminal/ grifter who is doing some kind of identity theft or title scam or foreclosure scams. I have already got Aura for us plus a title lock to alert me if she transfers the deeds before he dies. Any help on how to protect the property in TX is helpful! I’ve been terrified for my dad’s life and my brain is not working!! But I do need to protect myself and my daughter from this maniac going forward as well. Thanks in advance!



Also, any ideas on how to cream this lady like put her behind bars or else get an almost 2 year marriage annulled/ dissolved would be great too, I’m overwhelmed (understatement!)

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I'm wondering if a forensic accountant would be useful in this situation...? They aren't cheap but so is losing to that psycho exploiter.
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First, I am sorry to say it but what court would look into something like that, cult involved, alleged elder abuse group, wife who is criminal you believe but how can you prove it? Dad with dementia who was half dead but can you again prove he was abused, harmed by wife or cult friends.
I am sure there was something nefarious, but you would need actual evidence.
Dad’s will is not an issue as he had every right to change it.
Nobody can give you ideas how to cream this lady as you put it or get marriage annulled.
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Reply to Evamar
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Thanks to Geaton for pointing out to me in all this confusion, (or my OWN confusion) that our OP was not granted conservatorship, but another party was, one appointed by the court.
Pipsqueak, ask this Fiduciary for an hour of his or her time to fill in what you know (and what you have PROOF of). After that, really, and their having your number for questions, you can relax and leave it in his/her hands. No choice in that really.
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Thats the problem You are in Texas and He is in Connecticut . If you were in the same state life would be Much easier . My Dads will was filed in Massachusetts while he was of sound Mind But my sister has taken him to California 17 Months ago - I do have a medical certificate of his diagnosis stating " He can Not Make financial decisions . " Why can't the Conservator help you Out ? Can You speak to your father In Private ? You could ask APS to go Visit him and Have a isolated visit to see If he wants to move back with you But I Have Not had Much Luck with the People at APS . You need to be In the same state to get anything legally done . I would want him away from this woman . Try APS In Connecticut you May have some luck - ask that he be met with alone with out prying eyes and ears .
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You have an attorney who helped you get conservatorship over your father.
So you have that, and now have control of his finances to use for his benefit.
And having an attorney matters now, not the opinions of 100s of strangers on a Forum.

However, unless I am mistaken, any changes he made in his will between that decades old will that leaves things to YOU and your child, will not be changed now due to his dementia.
Also, he may have left this woman as the executor of his will and THAT CANNOT be changed either unless you have solid proof of intentional elder abuse.

He has dementia and cannot change documents.
You are conservator and can change certain things such as beneficiary on CDs when they come due and roll over, but not certain other things.

Because this is legally very very difficult, and you are states away, I am assuming, you badly need an attorney.
With that attorney you can and will check accounts, deeds, titles, and etc. If the wife is legally the wife, and if he passes with no will that can be found at all, then the estate will likely be divided wife and children or to wife only. You will learn all options, how to keep records, and all legalities for his state.

Whatever your fathers INTENTIONS were decade or more ago doesn't matter now, because between then and now a person who you tell us is predatory entered his life and took over. This is something we see on Forum all the time. If said predator becomes predator-wife she can change, get him to change, any number of things. You, states away wouldn't even know, let alone be able to control such a thing.

As I said, this is sufficiently complicated that you now need not more confusion via a Forum of folks from all around the world.
YOU NEED AN ATTORNEY
and I wish you the very best going forward.
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Geaton777 Apr 17, 2024
" I had to file for Conservatorship which she delayed and it finally went to third party court assigned. (In CT, that is an attorney)."

Seems the OP is not the conservator.
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Texas is a community property state. The laws regarding spousal rights there are probably different from those in CT. Since some of the deeds are for Texas properties, you should get a Texas estate lawyer to untangle this mess. You don't say whether your dad is legally a CT resident or a TX resident. You don't say whether dad's will is a TX will or a CT will. These things are important details.

This is more than you can manage without professional help.
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Pipsqueak2 Apr 17, 2024
He’s a CT resident. It’s a CT will.
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"I flew up after receiving threatening and harassing phone calls from the new spouse..." what was she threatening you about?

Is the wife still in control of his medical affairs? Are you now his PoA for that?

I'm not sure how this case will work if the conservator is controlling where and how they spend his money because you surely won't be able to afford the legal fees, if you can even pursue it on his behalf. If the house is Willed to you, I'm not sure anything can be done while your Father is still living (and the property was still owned by him). The conservator may need to sell the property to pay pay for his care now that he is ill and cognitively declining. Are you in discussion about this with the conservator? The conservator decides what happens to the property while your Father is alive.

I'm not sure what legal recourse you have on someone else's behalf who is still alive but has a legal guardian other than yourself. This is the main question to ask a lawyer who has experience prosecuting these types of cases (but you will be paying the legal fees).

The "wife" and predator group are savvy -- this isn't their first rodeo -- and have a lot to lose so they will fight you tooth and nail. Depending on what documents she made him sign, I have no doubt they went to work immediately to find and move his money. But now only his conservator knows.
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Pipsqueak2 Apr 17, 2024
You are spot on but somehow my dad kept (most) of his finances away from her. She did print her name on the checks of one of the accounts she’s not on (bank says through a 3rd party check printer). I think the TX properties were kept secret until recently too and when they came out (that they were still in his name), the abuse heightened to almost murdering him when he told her they were mine (I didn’t know I had a problem with this lady — apparently she hates my f*cking guts and has for a while). I sent the police a-knocking in Jan and I guess she got spooked and finally called 911. When he came to in the hospital, he told me to get her off the IRA’s (which were due to roll over soon). Now she’s big mad and coming after the properties.

Yes, if the Conservator needs to sell them for care for my dad going forward, that is one thing. (I think the life expectancy for my dad is covered by his SS and estate right now. If it’s for my dad it’s one thing but I’d rather not let this degenerate harpy black widow have them tho!
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Wow that's crazy. Is your dad willing to divorce this woman? Have you gone to the police? For the marriage license try and contact the priest/pastor/officiant that signed the marriage license as a witness - name is right on the certificate.
They are the ones who file that with the county.

Have you checked dads signature on the marriage license to see if the signatures look similar to how he signs his name?

Have you checked with the county to see if the marriage license is real or is this a copy your dad had? Call the county directly and see if they have a copy on file. If it is a scam maybe you will get lucky and it was never filed which would mean dad isn't really married.

Now with all that being said. Dad claims he never signed anything BUT he would have had to have done the following to even get a marriage license in CT:

To apply for a marriage license, you and your spouse-to-be must appear in person at the local vital records office of the town where your marriage will occur. The marriage license is issued to ensure that you and your spouse-to-be are eligible to be married. You will need to complete the marriage license application, provide identification and make a sworn statement that the information that you provide is true.

So while dad may be claiming he never signed anything he would have had to have gone to the vital records office in person with this woman to show ID, etc and make a sworn statement to even be married.

That's why I say maybe the marriage license is a fraud document (if you are lucky) and legally they aren't even married. This would be the best case scenario and I hope that is the case for your dad and you.
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Pipsqueak2 Apr 17, 2024
I’ve gone to the Registrar’s four times now and it looks pretty damn official/ on point. I’ve not had a handwriting expert analyze it tho (it’s the epitome of his signature tho - I’ve seen her forging it on other stuff and this one is perfect - maybe almost too perfect, idk). I’ve also found the diner waitress who signed as witness 🤦🏻‍♀️ and she said Yes, she remembers the tiny wedding and no, no coercion.

My dad didn’t know he was married when I visited a couple months later - he thought his wedding present was a late birthday present and after Day 1 (the first time I thought she had slipped him something - after I had asked her politely to not smoke in the house. Three times.), I never saw her again.

Yes, I’ve been to the police. And Adult Protective Services. And all the Social Workers I can reach. And the regional Omsbudsman. And the VA. And contacted state officials. So far not enough proof. I was gonna go to the papers but I’m under legal threat now from her lawyer. The Conservator is aware of my beliefs — that she’s likely a criminal and that I think she was gonna kill my dad if I hadn’t started calling the cops. And that there’s been interference here in TX also. He’s getting the runaround too now so I think he’s starting to believe my “crazy” story.
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The only thing I Can suggest is Moving to Connecticut to be near him or Have him Moved closer to you in assisted Living . It seems Most Lawyers deal with estates and trust or Nursing home neglect . hard to find lawyers who deal with elder abuse such as is in your case . If your dad was Diagnosed with Dementia while he took up with this woman you May have a case . Does your Dad want a divorce ? I would try and have him divorce her before he Passes . Yes it is a Nightmare and yes grifters exist . If you Know of any email transfers you feel are Illegal done By Email you can report to the FBI www.ic3.gov The FBI isMore aware of elder abuse now but wether they have time to deal with it is another matter .
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Pipsqueak2 Apr 17, 2024
Can you explain to me the line “email transfers you feel are illegal” ? —You mean emails she sent signing off as him? Or bank transfer type thing done by email? She DEFINITELY was texting me as him and blocking me from visiting him for x-mas. Of course I feel so stupid in hindsight for not realizing it wasn’t him.
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So dad has a court appointed conservator?
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Pipsqueak2 Apr 17, 2024
Yes! He’s an attorney and was hand-picked by my Attny and my dad’s VA-appointed Attny as a solid and experienced conservator who wouldn’t bend to her lawyer’s aggressive ways. I met a friend of his through an Elder Abuse Council and he says he’s a straight arrow. He’s very busy however so things are taking longer than they should.
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You need to search for evidence. We cannot do this for you. That means it is also up to you to determine if records were falsely obtained and when dad was declared incompetent. You might want to get a criminal lawyer for that. Also balance out legal costs vs value of this home because you still face financial loss. While dad is alive you will need to balance the value of his home and estate vs his need for future custodial care. You do not collect inheritance till after he dies. Now that you are conservator, it might mean that you will have to sell the home for his care away from his wife
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Pipsqueak2 Apr 17, 2024
Thank you! Yes, I’m trying! Yes, it’s one thing if it’s for my dad’s care. It’s another if it’s for this last ditch grifter pos.
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