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My husband was in an Alzheimer’s Facility. He lured a female patient into his room and barricaded the door. The administration got in and found my husband naked from the waste down. The female was laying in the bed fully clothed. He is aware of what he was doing according to staff. Police investigated and no charges were made. The second facility he fondled another patient and it was consensual according to the investigation. I can’t get over this because he was lucid enough both times. The staff/psychiatrist acknowledged that he is aware of what he was doing. I am at the point I can’t go visit or even see a picture of him. I get angry, very angry! Should I just stop going and call him only?

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So there has been no rape right?

Do you see a therapist? that might help you.
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EnoughNonsense Sep 2022
I talked to so many people,I decided to stop. Each one had their brown opinion. There was no rape because the administrator broke the door in! My husband was ready.
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Doesn't sound like anything progressed to something near rape for goodness sakes. He's obviously having some serious issues. He may be aware of what he's doing but doesn't sound like he knows that it is wrong. Maybe there's a little bit a med they could put him on to slow him down a bit??

Try not to get so angry. It's the ALZ not your husband (assuming he was not like this before). His behavior needs to be controlled as it is quite inappropriate.

So sorry you are having to deal with this.
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EnoughNonsense Sep 2022
His brain isn’t that far gone. He isn’t getting worse at all. He has been in four facility and at least one psychiatrist said there might be something else. Education isn’t the answer. He has been evaluated in a psychiatric hospital and they all agree it might be a mental illness and not Alzheimer’s but there is no definite answered. His sexual behaviors did not pass and will not. He knew he was wrong because he couldn’t look me in the eye nor another family member. Alzheimer’s patients can and will look you in the eye. They don’t don’t right from wrong, He does
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You know it saddens me that you say that "according to the staff" he's aware of what he's doing. I mean really??? Your husbands brain is now broken and will never get better. What part of that does the staff and you not understand? He is NOT aware of what's he's doing, and if he was in his right mind would probably be appalled at his actions.
This is so very common in memory care units,(and other facilities as well)and in most cases the staff is well aware of how to handle it.
You now have to do your best to separate the way your husband used to be before his dementia, and the man he has become. He's still your husband, but now his brain is broken.
And because folks with dementia only continue to get worse, this behavior will more than likely pass and he will be on to another.
I would recommend watching some of Teepa Snows videos on YouTube, as I'm sure she has some regarding this issue, along with educating yourself more on dementia so you can better understand what your husband is going through.
I wish you the very best.
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EnoughNonsense Sep 2022
His brain isn’t that far gone. He isn’t getting worse at all. He has been in four facility and at least one psychiatrist said there might be something else. Education isn’t the answer. He has been evaluated in a psychiatric hospital and they all agree it might be a mental illness and not Alzheimer’s but there is no definite answered. His sexual behaviors did not pass and will not.
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I would divorce him ASAP, this could get real nasty and expensive. He may not be totally gone due to dementia, but he is definitely mentally ill.

Forget about visiting or calling, hire an attorney and protect yourself. It is all in the records.

Be proactive just don't sit with your hands folded, hoping for a miracle, isn't going to happen.
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Why is he in a facility if he "is not that far gone".

Dementia causes heightened sexual responses. My daughter worked NHs and has walked in on a couple and turned around and walked out.
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Cover999 Sep 2022
LOL
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Enough, you have to do whatever you can deal with.

It is okay to not see him, not call him or to even divorce him.

Do what you need to do for you, nobody can really help you decide but, we can sure cheer you on in whatever you decide.

Personally, I would give the psychiatrist permission to drug him into a stupor and keep him like that. Especially if sexual aggression is something you know isn't going to change. It will get to a point that no facility will take him.

I am so very sorry you are dealing with this situation.
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Cover999 Sep 2022
So he gets none, but she has a chance to get some?
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If you go through a divorce at this time, that adds another difficult life transition at a time when you’re already maxed out on stress over your husband’s illness. There will be division of property to deal with, lawyers to pay and possibly leaving your own home. He’s sick. You don’t have to see him if you don’t like him. If he has committed a crime, perhaps you should consult with the police. Or not. Give yourself some space to decide what to do before you do anything.
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You are very angry and have already formed your own opinions on this situation: that your husband with Alzheimer's who's living in an Alzheimer's Facility HAS raped women, knows he's raped women, knows right from wrong in spite of having Alzheimer's, and that's the end of that, regardless that no charges were filed. Regardless that ISB *Inappropriate Sexual Behavior* is common with AD and that there are medications to control it, you've come here looking for validation to 'stop going to see him and call him only.'

Dementia is a lose/lose situation for EVERYONE. The entire family loses when a member is diagnosed with the disease and everyone suffers. All of the dementias are horrible and ugly, and we witness things we wish to God we'd never witnessed or heard or saw with our own eyes coming from the people we love. They say & do things we never thought they were capable of, yet somehow, they are. Because they have a diseased brain that no longer works properly. They've been known to eat their own feces. Is that 'better' or 'worse' than being found naked from the waist down with a female resident in one's room? They've been known to beat their wife almost to death in a fit of rage, too. Is that 'better' or 'worse' than what your DH has done? In reality, it's ALL horrible.

We can rage at God, the moon, one another......but the fact remains, our loved one is lost to a disease, and that's the truth of the matter. They're not doing things specifically to hurt or spite US, they're doing things b/c their addled minds are misfiring and sending them misguided signals. In your husband's case, his brain is sending him signals telling him his penis is in overdrive & to satisfy it no matter WHAT. Which has nothing to do with you, per se, b/c he's living in a different environment now where he doesn't even have a 'wife' or know what that relationship is all about anymore. If he's 'aware' of what he's doing and that it's 'wrong', he doesn't have the intellectual or emotional capacity left in him to CARE. Whether you'd like to attribute that to 'mental illness' or 'dementia' or 'insanity', what's the difference, really? His mind is gone now.

It is what it is.

Stop going and call only if it will make you feel better. It's okay to be angry, but try to direct your anger at the disease and not your husband, if possible. File for divorce if you'd like, and start a new life for yourself; that's okay to do too; just don't let the anger over his 'infidelity' eat you up alive. Don't apply rules of normalcy to a disease that's anything BUT normal. If your DH wasn't riddled with AD, THEN you could blame him for cheating, but not now. Now he's not responsible for his actions, no matter what the 'staff' or the 'doctors' tell you. Believe that b/c it's less hurtful and anger causing that what YOU are telling yourself: that he's a lying, cheating, womanizer who no longer loves you. What he really is is a very sick man.

With God's help, at some point, our medical scientists will START to understand the human brain a bit better so they can get some sort of grip on the disease that's tearing families apart and killing caregivers who are putting in endless hours at home trying to care for violent, angry, agitated elders who have no control over themselves anymore b/c their dementia has taken their minds over completely. That is my fervent prayer, truthfully.

I wish you grace and peace as you try to come to terms with all that's going on. And I hope you can carve out a new life for YOURSELF in the midst of this whole mess, too, b/c you deserve to.
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Cover999 Sep 2022
The poor guy still has needs. It sounds like the OP is not intimate anymore and doesn't want him to be intimate with anyone else.
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The SCOTUS justice Sandra Day O Connor walked into her husbands facility only to see him holding another woman’s hand. She took his other one.
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Enough - I think you have to accept that there is something seriously wrong with your husband. Whether it be dementia or mental illness - does it really matter? He is behaving in a very inappropriate fashion AND he can not control it. I'm 99.9% sure that he has NO control over his behavior and is not choosing to be sexually inappropriate.

I would demand that he be given some kind of med to keep him from being able to act on his desires. What's the opposite of the little blue pill?? It is grossly unfair to the women in the facility he is in that they could be lured and barricaded into his room. Horrible. No amount of talking to him will solve this. Talk to his doc ASAP about what can be tried to calm him down a little bit so he won't do this kind of crap anymore. I'm not talking about putting him in a stupor. But frankly if I had to choose between medicating my husband into a stupor or not medicating him and allowing him to continue to sexually harrass the women in his facility - well, the choice is clear to me.
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Cover999 Sep 2022
What if the woman goes into his room willingly? I recall a thread where a woman was trying to get with a woman's husband

Would what you mention apply to her as well?
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EnoughNonsense, rape is defined by statute, and unless anyone here does that research, the title of your thread can't be answered.

It depends on state law, level of "assault", and other factors.
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Are you still intimate with him or has that time passed? He has "lost" almost everything, maybe still being in a sexual way is all that he has left.

He's "locked" up in a facility while you can still live your life in the outside world.
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BurntCaregiver Sep 2022
OMG... I can't even... How in God's name do you expect the OP to be "intimate" in a freaking nursing home?
There aren't any trailers outside for conjugal visits like at a prison.
Yes, the OP can still live her life in the outside world. If that life includes barricading another person in a room with the intent to rape them, then she will be getting arrested and going to jail.
Being sexual may be as you say, "all he has left" and that is why as an act of compassion he should be medicated.
The female and male residents of the nursing home should not be put at risk because some sexual predator still wants to get it on.
No, I don't think so.
Medicate the bejeezus out the innappropriate sexual behavior.
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'Police investigated and no charges were made.'

so legally, no. (at least for now, but if they've closed the investigation, that's likely the end of it (in my layman's opinion))

Morally? It really comes down to how much control and awareness of his actions he really has, and if he's in an Alzheimer’s Facility, that's difficult if not impossible to know.

'The staff/psychiatrist acknowledged that he is aware of what he was doing.'

So, it's the opinion of the staff and psychiatrist that he was, which leans toward 'yes'. But it's still just that, an opinion. In my own different situation, I go with the opinion of the professionals most of the time. But not always, sometimes, in their extremely busy handling of complicated matters, they don't always get it right.

One reasonable (but not definitive) question would be 'did he do anything like this, completely prior to the onset of Alzheimers?'

If you have the time and the means, I would suggest a counselor or pastor/minister/chaplain, to help sort this out for yourself. You're in a tough situation, and you're hurting. I wish you well.
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BurntCaregiver Sep 2022
anytown,

The OP's father had the door barricaded. He was going to rape the female resident he had in there.
Care facilities medicate their residents into oblivion for anything. Why not medicate him so he can't have any sexual stimulation? It's as good a reason as any for a nursing home.
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Diagnosis? Is he mentally ill? Is he diagnosed with dementia?
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If this behavior has persisted across 4 different facilities, then it is very likely that the disinhibition that we see with dementia is NOT the sole cause of his behavior.
It is likely to become more and more difficult to find facilities to take him, with this persistent behavior that can be so distressing to witness/manage.
I am aware of a few other situations similar to your own.
Placement in a VA facility that was primarily men, and had that 'discipline' of military service built in to it, was the answer for one man with similar problems.
Another is use of medications that may suppress libido, although there are side effects and he would need to agree to take these medications.
If you were interested in getting 'expert' assessment, I would find a geriatric psychiatry clinic that is affiliated with a teaching hospital. An inpatient stay for a couple of weeks will allow a thorough assessment, including medical workups to rule out treatable causes (brain tumors can do strange things) and tease out an underlying mental illness/personality disorder. Neuropsychological testing might be helpful.
All of this requires a lot of work for you in getting it arranged, and figuring out payment for what is not covered by insurance.
For your own needs, a supportive counselor who is not judgmental can be a big help. Good luck to you.
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My GFs mother was a very intelligent woman. When Mr. S was diagnosed with ALZ she read everything she could on the subject. She finally had to place him because he was getting too much for her. Both in their 80s with no family. We went with her to visit him in his MC facility. We walked in on him kissing a woman, What I saw was her leaning up for a kiss and him bending down. So she initiated it. Mrs S said, thats OK I read about this so I know it happens. Yes she knew but reading and seeing are two different things. She left with tears in her eyes.

My daughter is a RN who has worked in NHs. I said that the aides should not allow this. Keep them apart. My daughter says that the people with Dementia think another person is their spouse. To the point if you try to separate them, they will scream and holler. They are a couple and lots of times their real spouses come to visit. Its what it is, a broken, dying brain.

I am surprised that in all the testing that has been done on your husband that he is not medicated.
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Cover999 Sep 2022
Good for Mr S. Ms S probably was not being "affectionate" with him anymore so he found it somewhere else. For many elders, still being "affectionate" may be all they have left after everything else has been lost.

Should they be denied that as well?

If he's going without, will she do the same if she would have a gentleman or female caller?
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OMG, that is disgusting and no one could blame you if you aren't visiting. Calling is fine. IF at some point you want to start visiting in person again you will. They should keep male and female residents separated when they are in memory care. The rooms should be separated by locked doors and any common areas are supposed to be supervised.
Who knows what your father did to get the female resident in his room to lie down on the bed. If he had the door barricaded he was going to rape her. Was the female resident lucid enough to give consent? Or to scream or fight back?
Do you have his POA and make his medical decisions? If you do, request that they medicate him so he doesn't attempt any further sexual assaults or even consentual 'fondling' of female residents. Can they even give consent if they have dementia?
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Cover999 Sep 2022
In other words "castrate" him?

His wife can feel at ease as well as the other women in the facility?

Keep male and female separated? What if the men takes the liking to other men and females take a liking to the other females?
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Would you have been just as upset if it had been another man?
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sp19690 Sep 2022
I would be equally outraged. A person with dementia make or female cannot give consent. Same as a drunk man or woman cannot give consent. Or a mentally retarded man or woman cannot give consent.

Dementia gives many clues to how human nature and behavior is a product of a person's brain. People like to think they have free will but they are just victims of their own brain chemistry and upbringing. It makes you wonder what is the point of any of this thing called life.
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Enough, if this is facility #4 for him and he has done other sexually or other inappropriate behavior at all the others, it’s just a matter of time that this one like the 3 others prior will want him gone. He’s toast on ever getting info another facility unless
- he/you have the $ to pay for private locked down psychiatric residential facility or
-he’s committed by the State to a institution or
- he’s incarcerated & after term served placed in transitional housing for registered sex offenders & on sex offender list till forever.
Your his spouse, everything is commingled unless somehow everything was separated property from date of marriage. Dealing with stuff like this a speciality divorce atty can deal with…. when you get down to it it’s about protecting your & others interest and get the bad behavior spouse contained and neutralized. The twist is this bad behavior is hubs is a sexual predator that so far has not been arrested. I’m not trying to make light of all this, just trying to get beyond the emotion. You didn’t indicate his age, but if he’s still youngish & healthy, he could have decades ahead of him.

I know you’re beyond mad but I think you have to have a plan in place as to having him placed into a locked down secure facility and he’s placed on whatever medications used for quell his ability to have an erection. He cannot continue to be able to make choices and that means either someone becomes his guardian or he becomes a ward of the State or is committed. I don’t think you can become his guardian as your his wife, but a family member of his can be. None of this is a DIY, find yourself a divorce atty who has experience with mentally ill spouses.

That there was no rape charge placed is probably that the woman was still dressed. And add to this - also imo probably reasons why he has not had charges filed and been cuffed by police and removed before - is that the women involved have had dementia. The women do not have the cognitive ability to answer questions; could not ever be able to testify in court. Unless he is on videotape with sound and beyond clear it was not consensual, situations like this are hard to prove. Law enforcement hates these kind of calls. The women's families aren’t going to want to put their mom through a rape kit, exam, photos being taken of her body at the ER / hospital and her required interacting with SW, trauma staff & police. But the womens family may want to report or sue the facility for not providing a safe and secure living situation. If anything like this happened, you as his wife would be enjoined in any lawsuit or legal filed. If you were aware of anything based on his past and not upfront with the facility, this will come out.

Your hubs as you described it sounds like he’s still quite lucid and psych/staff have told you he's got some type of mental illness. For everyone’s sake, he needs to be in a facility geared for his type of behavior and getting treatment. Find an atty, be upfront on everything and follow their advice.
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As this story points out, ppl with dementia are increasingly assumed to have agency over sexual situations.

https://www.verywellhealth.com/should-people-with-dementia-have-sex-4156679

A friends mom went into a facility and became hyper sexual. As her children recall, she was Effing up a storm in her last years in the 1990s.

There are always going to be more women then men. Nursing home dalliances and flirting are going to happen.
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When I was in the nursing home last year, a man with dementia came to my room and tried to get in my bed. He knew what he was doing on some level because he said with my broken leg I couldn't run away from him. I screamed and a male nurse removed him from my room. They weren't going to do anything about it. I called the sheriff that I knew and to avoid him being arrested, his family took him to a psych hospital. I've been in four nursing homes and there were problems with male residents at all four.
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BurntCaregiver Sep 2022
OMG, Becky. That is horrible. I can't even imagine. That predator in the nursing home did have awareness because you couldn't run away with a broken leg and he should have been arrested. A resident with dementia should not have even had access to your room or anyone else's. They should be on a locked floor with supervision 24/7.
So if a resident is a sexual predator and a rapist they don't get any criminal charges if they're a resident in nursing home?
That injustice is unbelievable. I am so sorry this happened to you. Honestly, get yourself some pepper spray. Dementia or not give it to someone right in the face if they gert in your bed.
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EnoughNonsense,

He had a woman barricaded in a room with him. It's a good thing the administrator broke the door down. That is the reason why there was no rape.
You would do well to speak to a divorce lawyer and explain your situation to them.
Then stop visiting your husband. In fact, you'd probably do well to let him become a ward of the state at this point. Then get on with your life.
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My very unpleasant father talked his way into respite care in three states (federally funded but poor cross border checking). He bragged to me that when he was in a facility in NSW he used to have sex with a woman who couldn’t remember it in the morning (ha ha ha, he went). Her family found out and removed her from the facility. I think he left that one, and he would never have told me about any trouble he got into.

He was good at faking dementia, ‘poor old man’, you name it, he could do it. I discussed it with the Director of the last place he was at, and she was quite relieved that I realised it.

So yes, it happens, and the guys get away with it. The legalities are really difficult. I wonder if this guy has a past track record from earlier life, not dementia related? Entitlement is at least as common as AZ in the history of rape.

Cover seems to have a lot of sympathy, almost support for entitlement. Men in the armed forces have always managed their sexual urges, more or less. Some of the facilities for younger people (eg bikies who are paraplegic after an accident) allow visits from prostitutes. Perhaps Cover could try those options, instead of his sympathy for this ‘poor old guy whose wife may not fancy him’. Or he could try the little blue pills himself.
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sp19690 Sep 2022
Did you report your father to the facility when he told you about it? As well as let any current facility know they were housing a rapist? People like your dad and the OP's husband need to be in jail not a facility.
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OP - it took a lot of courage for you to share your situation. Your anger is so totally justified. This is a horrible situation for a LO and family members to be in fear for their safety in LTC facility. He is now in his 4th facility and the question remains how will the medical staff / Administration control and manage him to protect the other residents? Maybe this link will help you decide how you might proceed for your future.

Sex Offender Notification Requirements for Long-Term-Care

https://www.americanconference.com/preventing-and-defending-long-term-care-litigation-803l14-mia/wp-content/uploads/sites/1391/2016/08/StateSurvey.pdf
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I am so sorry you are going through this very difficult situation.. Two suggestions..... Look up "medications that cause hypersexuality" and have that discussion with his doctor if necessary. If he hasn't had an MRI recently and this is a new onset, uncharacteristic behavior for him also ask his doctor about getting one. I have had patients initially diagnosed with dementia/Alzheimer's who were discovered to have a brain tumor.
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