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I had a room for rent. I saw a post on FB there was a 70 YOF looking for a room to rent. I had one, so I contacted the poster. The poster was a nurse aide for roommate ("S"). The nurse aide said "S" was independent, took care of herself, used the bathroom on her own and used pull-ups for "just in case she didn't make it), feeds herself, washes and dresses herself, etc. "She uses a walker but other than that, all good."


My new roommate "S" has been here 3 weeks. She has physically been in the bathroom 2 times to shower. She has been laying in bed, wetting and pooping in the bed. Filling diapers and dropping them in a bucket next to the bed or on the floor next to the bed. Her nurse aide comes M-F between 9 am. and 3p.m. to help with more challenging things, like laundry, shopping, cleaning. I have not seen the nurse aid take soap and water into her room to bathe her and she has only been in the shower twice. She has half of one kidney and drinks tall cans of Long Island Iced tea every day. She chain smokes cigarettes and smokes weed. She stays in the bed, drinking, smoking, laying in her waste and next to her waste. She opens the windows and leaves them open with temperatures ranging from 30-50 f outside. My heat is running non-stop. The ammonia odor is so strong, I got sores in my nose and it set off the carbon monoxide and explosive gas detector in the kitchen. My washer and dryer wreak of ammonia and poop. At most, she has 30 hours per week with an aide. The other 138 hours per week, she is on her own and not performing any self care other than feeding herself long island ice tea, smoking cigarettes and weed. She is choosing to stay in the bed laying in her waste and with her waste laying around her in balled up blankets on the floor and a short open trash can. I couldn't take the odor anymore and started knocking on the door and pulling her trash out of her room but it is very hard to do with the smell as strong as it is. (She has half of one kidney on top of this.) If her nurse aid doesn't come that day she doesn't eat or drink anything besides the long island ice tea, and she doesn't clean her body or clean up her waste. I had a talk with her because I know she CAN get up and use the bathroom and clean herself up (per her nurse aid) but she chooses not to. I told her I could not allow what is happening here continue. By definition, if she is unable to perform the basics of self care, she needs assistance 24/7. She is harming herself but she is also harming me. I have spent a fortune on odor absorbers, candles, odor blocking detergents, etc. And now my electric bill is going through the roof. I'm freezing to death and can't breathe in my own home. I ran her blankets through the washer for 5 hours, washing over and over and using baking soda and vinegar and odor blocking detergent and still couldn't get the odor out. One blanket was full of burn holes. What can I do? I can't live like this and I can't become her 24/7 caretaker. I caught the windows in her room still open in the middle of the night with her sleeping next to the window with it 38 degrees outside and my heat running non-stop. Her behavior is putting both our health and safety at great risk. When she has a doctor appt, she straightens right up, acts competent, and her aide is right there with her. She comes back here and reverts back to bedridden drinking, smoking, filth, windows open, no self care or bathing, and laying with filth. What course of action can I take to get her the care she needs and to protect my own health and safety? I'm in my 50's. I can't live in waste and cold. I have 2 jobs and my own health problems, I can't be her caretaker at the level she needs.

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I would so like to know if OP got the person out of her house. Would be nice to know that the system worked.
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Demlynp, so happy to hear that you are getting rid of this scammed artist. Well done! Thank you for the detailed update.

It is so very hard to imagine that we have to be careful when dealing with seniors. I was raised to respect my elders and this gave me the idea that they were respectable, I still do but, with a CYA mind set, especially when I could get into a mess. So sad. Unfortunately, it's the world we live in and now we have to worry about little kids pulling weapons and trying to kill us. People are going to hell in a hand basket, quickly.

Please don't stop wanting to help, use this as a learning experience and always keep it in the back of your mind when you are looking at helping.

I think that your experience has taught us all some things. I know that I was completely dumbfounded that the situation happened as it did for you. I am afraid this is the new normal in the US. Not enough employees to do a good job and definitely not enough first responders to serve the community. Thank you for sharing.

ps: I am glad this wasn't a trolling expedition. It happens to frequently and I am afraid we are all a bit jaded because of it. I do apologize for you being questioned about your authenticity.
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Do you have a lease agreement? She violated it 1000 times over. S is not who you thought she was & her fake “Aide” is part of the scheme. An idea…when fake Aide is not there, call ambulance & have S removed from your home. Don’t accept her back in your home. Explain to EMS so they know situation that she’s incapable of taking care of herself. Change locks on doors after she goes to hospital. Good luck & hugs 🤗
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I have a friend who does the same thing with relatives. Takes them in and then suffers the consequences. A nephew stole from her.

Kidney dialysis. My Mom lived from 80 to 89 with one kidney that worked half capacity and dialysis was never mentioned. I think you #s need to be at a certain point before dialysis is required.

IMO, a legit aide working for an agency or Medicaid is not put in charge of finding a place for their client. If on Medicaid, Social Services could help with this.

I would call APS again.
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dear OP,

your last sentence in your original question says:
 "I can't be her caretaker at the level she needs."

so you are somehow involved in S's care.
maybe you get paid.

no landlord writes, "I can't be her caretaker at the level she needs."

in any case, in my opinion, the story doesn't make sense.
and i feel S is in danger.
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sp19690 Dec 2021
This poster reminds me of Stacy who wanted G out of her house but somehow was forced to take care of her.
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Demlynp,

It doesn't matter if smoking weed is legal in your state. If you do not allow smoking in your house, then it's illegal in your house.
Tobacco has never been an illegal substance in any state. See what happens if you try to light up a cigarette on a plane or a hospital. You will get arrested.
Same applies to your property. Make sure the police know your house is smoke-free and your tenant does not abide the rule.
Then the next time your tenant lights something up in your house, throw a bucket of water in her face. Do the same with her aide.
If you really want to ensure the lesson is learned, add some ice cubes.
One of them will call the cops I'm sure. Assuming that you're not lying and your problems are not an exercise in trolling, the police will see the scene in your house. You most likely won't even get any charges. If you do they will be misdemeanor. It's worth it.
Please grow a set.
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OP, the aide has no reason to talk to you about the doctor's appointments/how the appointments went. i don't think that's what happened (that the aide talked to you). i think you know about the appointments, because you're involved in S's care.

the story you give, makes no sense.

you're stealing our time/energy.

kind-hearted people on the website trying to give you advice -- but it's common sense advice we're all giving you. anyone would have thought of calling the police, APS, checking ID/passports before renting to someone.

no one just lets anyone rent their place.
anyone can be a criminal, murderer, etc., posing as a little, old lady with an "aide"/criminal. you know that, OP.

your story makes no sense.
----------------------there are important facts you're not telling us.

who knows, maybe S is your mother.

there is no reason for you to know so much about S's health conditions (kidney, etc.), unless you're actually supposed to be caring for S too.
---and now you're worried what trouble you might get into.

S needs helps. (if S exists)
i think S isn't able to call for help.

OP, call APS. call the police again.

and don't waste other people's time/energy/kind-heartedness.
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bundleofjoy Dec 2021
dear OP,

you wrote:

"The aide lied to get an incontinent bedridden alcoholic a room. If the aid is controlling the situation, keeping her drunk/stoned, blocking her from getting 24/7 care, AND not providing care while taking her money"

again, if this is the case, call APS and the police again.

if S is being financially abused, or physically abused/neglected, it's a crime.
call the police.

the aide lied to you OP (S turned out to be bed-ridden, etc.) (you OP don't know what else the aide lied about)

and i also don't know which facts you wrote are real/not real.
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Even though the poster replied below i still think this is BS. How did aide know APS was coming? It's not their house and the poster could have let them into the house regardless to let them see the condition and smell of the room.

Next OP refuses to get identification from aid or renter.

Next OP feels weirdly responsible for well being of complete stranger who is crapping all over the room she uscrenting and literally doesn't give a crap (literally) about this OP or ruining their house.

OP was given advice to call police and not give details which they ignored and claim police have done nothing.

Plus if this woman was as much of a disgusting unwashed person as they say when she met the potential renter shouldn't her apperance and smell been red flags?
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bundleofjoy Dec 2021
i totally agree it's BS.
100% made-up, 80% made-up, whatever.

OP is wasting our time/energy.

somehow OP is involved in S's situation, in a guilty way.

i actually believe S in innocent, needs help, can't call for help.

OP, please get help for S.
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JMO. I think this is fake.
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OP, I just saw your post. You may wish to copy and paste it on top like my reply, so everyone can see it more easily.

Look. My family is about to be changed drastically because of social media behavior. I 100 percent see how this can happen.

But you also have to protect yourself. So by tomorrow, you deliver them a written document saying that as of 1/3 at 12:01 a.m., she and all possessions she cares to retain are out. Insist that they both accompany you to the bank or whatever notary service you use and sign it, so they'll know you mean business.

Tell them that it's this, or that your lawyer will be involved and so will APS if this does not happen, if the smoking does not stop, and that you expect the fecal to be dealt with by the aide, every day. Make it implicitly clear that the 3rd is absolutely a gift that you're doing, report that aide to FB mods and admins,
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bundleofjoy Dec 2021
i agree with you, peggysue.

at the same time, i have a feeling this whole story is 100% or 80% fake.

in any case, big facts are missing.
what's really happening might be quite different from what OP is saying.
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BurntCaregiver - there's no reply button for me to respond to each of your posts. Strange some have it and some do not. I didn't know about a folder from the agency that gets signed on-site. This is new information to me. There is no folder that I am aware of. I haven't seen one. I've never rented out a room to anyone before. I thought a 70 year old woman looking for a room with a meager fixed income would be fairly safe and if she had an aide, there must be some oversight and screening already done. I screwed up. It didn't dawn on me to ask for the agency name or contact info at the time - it appeared the agency appointed her to find S a room by the way she was pursuing and arranging it. I shouldn't have trusted them. I don't know if I missed any of your questions.
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sp19690 Dec 2021
Did it dawn on you to ask for ID from both the renter and the aid too?
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Maybe Stockholm syndrome?
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I am questioning why the roommate isn't on dialysis since she has 1/2 of a kidney which I assume that is all the roommate has. Plus the roommate is drinking alcohol which isn't allowed for even a person with one full kidney. Plus the roommate would need to be on a renal diet.

As for the open windows in the roommate's bedroom, common sense would tell a homeowner to close the vents in that room and keep that bedroom door shut at all times.

Also, how does the homeowner knows how her roommate acts at the doctor's appointments, unless she is there?

Sorry, just too many holes in this story.
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Demlynp Dec 2021
I questioned the same thing regarding her kidney's (dialysis, alcohol, diet, water). I asked the aide, who said her doctor said she wasn't a candidate for dialysis and her doctor knows she drinks.
On the windows: the door is closed, there's a draft blocker laying across the floor at the base of the door. I'm not closing the heat vent to a 70 year old's bedroom. Just because she neglects herself and her aide neglects her - does not make it ok for me to cause her harm.
I know 2 things of her doctors appointments: What her aide tells me after an in-person appointment. And what I can hear over a telehealth appointment in the next room.
I came here to ask who to contact and what can I do (legally). I could post pictures and videos, screenshots of messages, names, report numbers, etc. and I could just change the locks, toss them out and hope for the best but at what expense to myself legally?
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Call social services and evict her. That’s all you can do. If you are renting, move.
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This post is obviously fake. No one is going to let a stranger crap all over their house, get them out of the house and let them back in for another 2 weeks or so.

Now if it is real you don't let someone move in you should have asked for their ID the aides ID so you know who the hell you moved into your house.
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bundleofjoy Dec 2021
100% agree with you.
the story is fake.

shame on you OP, wasting our time/energy.

maybe parts of the story are true, or all fake. either way, OP is stealing our time.
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Additionally, I would take pictures and document EVERYTHING that's going on, and contact APS again. This time, make an appointment with them and go to their office with all of the documentation. The fact that this CNA grabbed your "tenant" and RAN out of the home rather than face APS is a HUGE red flag that they are taking advantage of the system. If you can pick APS brain about what they're (CNA/"S") are doing, and it's not legal, then that DOES become a matter for the police.
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sp19690 Dec 2021
Do you really think this happened. That APS came and the aide took this stank ads woman and ran out of the house and then this person let them come back in? Their crap would have been on the curb so fast. If that was me.
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Why rent to someone who didn’t present ID? Or the name of the agency paying rent. I had duplex in Ohio. It was rented by an agency for three young men with caregivers. I was given ID for the young men and their caregivers. I had all contact info on the agency. One young man’s parents gave me their info.
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Isthisrealyreal Dec 2021
Becky, exactly. This is how 48 hours stays on the air.

Some random person allowed to move in with no background check, reference check or valid state issued ID's check and next thing you have an unsolved crime.

I can't imagine. I wouldn't even hire someone to work in a public place, with lots of people around without doing this, forget about sleeping in the same house.
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"The aides solution to the problem is #1 She is moving S out on Jan 3rd."

Nope. Nope, nope, nope, nope, nope. Do you know what the aid picked the magical date of January 3rd? Because I will bet that's the amount of time that your state uses to establish permanent residency, at which point she will have SQUATTER'S RIGHTS. Which means you can't just throw her out, you will HAVE to evict; AND she can refuse to pay rent, etc. - do all of the things that will make her a MORE terrible tenant.

IF THERE IS NO LEASE SIGNED tell this CNA she has 24 hours to get this woman out of your home, or you're packing up her stuff and throwing it outside...because I guarantee, once she can establish residency, you will NEVER get rid of her! It sounds like they BOTH know how to game this system, don't fall for it! Act sooner, though, because your window of opportunity is quickly shutting.
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sp19690 Dec 2021
Damn straight.
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Just a thought. If this person is a Certified Nurses Aide, report her to the State. In my State the Nursing Board is in charge of licensing CNAs.
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bundleofjoy Dec 2021
i think that’s a good idea.

however, i don’t think the aid is really a nurse.

and OP, writing:
“I have spent a fortune on odor absorbers, candles, odor blocking detergents, etc.”

nobody does that.
the story doesn’t make sense. no one would continue renting to someone with all those problems AND spend their own money on deodorants, etc.

they would simply ask S to leave; evict; call APS; do something.
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Call adult protective services and report her as a senior who is abandoned and in need. If this doesn't work call an ambulance. Whatever story you give them it better be good enough to get them to take her to the ER. At that point whomever is responsible for her will be contacted. Refuse to let her return to your home which is unsafe for her and for you. Again, whatever your story is it better be good, because if the adjudge her competent they will allow her to return to HER home, which is YOUR home.
I guess the best this can do once such a grave mistake is made is to let it serve as a lesson to others. In many areas of our country (my own San Francisco is notorious for it) a renter has many rights, and getting them out even when it is a room rental can be agonizingly awful.
If all else fails you are left with a tenant/landlord attorney to help you, one who practices in your area.
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PeggySue2020 Dec 2021
Remember that movie Pacific Heights, Alva? This is like a mini-version of that.

I'd start with keeping the remote control on my person. Cut her off from the TV. Call her ISP with help to change her WiFi password. And pictures pictures pictures. Probably best if they do know you're taking them, and so are your friends.

At the next opportunity that they depart, change the locks on the front door. Even in SF, possession is nine tenths of the law. I doubt the grifters are gonna sue where she's at, especially with all the pictures and documentation.
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Let me start by asking if this CNA she has is the only contact you have for her. Does she have any family that you know of?
Is she still in charge and making decisions for herself? Or does she have a conservator/guardian who does? That is the person you need to communicate with if she does.
Did you at any time agree to help out with some of her caregiving needs and did you accept payment at any time for caregiving? If you did, that changes everything.
It's time for you to put in a call to APS and have a serious talk with them. Tell them she is an extremely vulnerable at-risk adult and it's an emergency. Tell them everything. That she spends her days laying in her on piss and sh*t, drinking alcohol, and smoking pot.
The next time she's burning one in your house, all the police. You don't have to tolerate that. If you've accepted payment to help with her caregiving, tell them that too. Don't leave anything out.
If she's drinking and getting high with her CNA, report the aide at once to the agency she works for, to APS, and to the police.
Then you will have to head to the courthouse and have her served with eviction papers.
I would ask you why you even allow smoking in your house to begin with? New rule, no smoking in the house. If she wants to smoke she must go outside. You can enforce this rule by throwing her cigarettes and weed down the toilet if she smokes in the house.
It certainly sounds like you're in a tough situation, but seriously you have to grow a set and get this woman and her aide out of your home.
Stop being nice and trying to reason with them. Call APS now. Call the cops the next time she tries to smoke weed in your house.
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bundleofjoy Dec 2021
i agree with everything you say, burnt.

there is some reason however, that OP isn’t doing all the common sense advice you, and everyone, is giving.

there’s more to this story. maybe OP is involved in some guilty way, with all this.

or it’s all made up.
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Dem, you made a judgment on what was wrong instead of saying a medical emergency. I told you not to give to much information and just what to say. This is why.

Sorry but, a drunk that has shat themselves is VERY different then a medical emergency. As you found out.

I would call APS, there are all kinds of waving red flags about this situation. If you are really concerned you will call daily to get the authorities involved.

Glad, I agree, I hope this isn't a trolling expedition.
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Maybe you should have refused to let her back in. Should have gotten all her stuff together, boxed it up and left it in your front step. Protected. I doubt the woman has enough money to sue you. You can prorate her rent. Hopefully, you only gave the aide a key to the front door. As soon as they leave again, get the lock changed right away. I may take a picture of the woman to worn others of this scam. Make sure when she leaves, she takes everything. I doubt she took the woman to the Drs.

I would call APS again and tell them what you said here.
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JoAnn29 Dec 2021
Thats "warn".
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This is so bizarre I think I would call the district attorney. I wonder if this woman may have been kidnapped or a missing person? The caregiver is keeping her to financially exploit her in some way? Maybe roomie has munchausen syndrome?

Or is someone trolling?
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JoAnn29 Dec 2021
Thats why its probably true because it's so bizarre.
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UPDATE: So I called the police and explained there was an elderly lady renting a room in my house who was drunk and laying in her waste all weekend. I was told this wasn't a police matter because she wasn't committing a crime! I called APS and Social Services to report it. The same day I filed the reports, the aide pulled up, ran in the house to grab the roommate, her dirty bedding, and trash, loaded her in the car and left with her overnight. I'm assuming this means APS or social services contacted her as soon as I hung up. No one has come out to investigate or called me back. They returned the next day, at which point the aide said she took S to the doctor and showed the doctor my messages about the odor. She told the doctor that I was the only person who could smell it. She said the doctor told her that if one person could smell it, typically everyone can smell it. She said she even had her son smell the bedding she pulled off the bed and he didn't smell it either. (Now I know she was making up stories because a doctor wouldn't say that and leave it at that, and I don't believe anyone would intentionally put their face in soaked bedding with waste all over it and say they don't smell anything. I'm betting anyone who hasn't lost their sense of smell within 30-40 feet radius could smell it.) I had two visitors come by an hour after they left with the bedding and trash, and they could smell it (without entering the room) - right down to covering their faces with their shirts.

The aides solution to the problem is #1 She is moving S out on Jan 3rd. #2 Instead of just coming M-F, she is going to come 7 days a week, reducing the length of her stay with her. So S will only have care 3-4 hours a day and the other 20-21 hours per day she will drink, smoke, get high, and lay in her waste. It seems to me the aide is determined to keep control over S. I point blank told her "She needs 24/7 care. I don't know why you wouldn't want her to have that?" She will not tell me the agency she works for. She will not give me next of kin contacts. She will not give me any paperwork on this lady to know who her caseworkers are, anywhere. The aid claims that S makes too much money ($1200 a month) to qualify for medicaid, so insurance will not cover 24/7 care for her. She said insurance covers very little and that insurance is paying for her to come care for S but it isn't enough, so S also pays her out of her own pocket in addition to what the agency pays her. (insert huge red flag here!) The aid also said she eventually plans to move S in with her and her family. I'm beginning to believe the aid is intentionally keeping S intoxicated and completely dependent upon her without any other care for dubious reasons. Twice now S has told me excitedly that her aid was going to give her a shower today - only for the aid not to shower her, but instead, watch t.v. drink smoke and get high with her, then leave. This adds to my growing belief that the aid may be working with this woman for reasons other than caring for her. Another red flag was S said her last landlord was mean, so they took his TV with them. I can't help but wonder if the smell of waste was his complaint and because neither of them is interested in dealing with it, that made him "mean". Now I'm mean for saying laying drunk in waste and collecting the waste and saving it up for whenever the aid comes back is unacceptable. She moved in November 15th and has had 2 showers here. I'm assuming she had a shower at the aids house the day I reported it to APS and Social Services. Each shower was just prior to a doctors appointment. I tried to look up whether or not the aid was holding a current license in Virginia but was unable to find her on the list with any of her last names. I now have cameras in my living areas in case S gets out of the bed and falls while home alone but also to protect my belongings. I'm just mind blown.
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PeggySue2020 Dec 2021
OMG. This sounds like a complete Pacific Heights situation. S needs to exit your home the next time she leaves for anything with the aide.

Take pictures beforehand of her waste, her LI Ice Tea cans, her weed. Put all this plus whatever food she eats, poop ridden clothes in a demo bag. Next time the aide takes her out, have a locksmith ready. Change everything. Ignore them trying to get in. If they break something, call the cops.
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Just to clarify everyone saying you can't just throw her out.

Yeah you can, I would do exactly what I said and let them pursue me through the legal system. Who is going to take you to court when a situation like this was totally misrepresented, the woman is in danger of having her house burned down, it is being ruined with the human waste accumulation and she is being poisoned by the filth. Yep, take me to court but, you are out, legally or not.

Go to your states website and look up tenant rights. We had a situation that tenants thought they had rights and were going to show us. During the hearing we informed the Judge that we would comply but, every single tenant would be served via Fed-Ex with a 3 day eviction notice. He confirmed for the tenants that they would be obligated to get out within 3 days if they followed the course they had chosen. So there are options available for quick evictions, you or a real estate attorney can get an emergency hearing, even now, to get this danger out of your home. You are not stuck with this situation. You may have a fight on your hands but, you will prevail and you don't have to fight it with her endangering you in your home.
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bundleofjoy Dec 2021
i agree with you.

but something is stopping OP from evicting. i don’t know why.

i think there are more facts about this whole situation that we don’t know about.

i hope you’ll be ok, OP and also S.
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I agree that you should call APS and possibly 911. I would take detailed photos of the poop, diapers, etc to bolster your case. Were the initial conversations with the person organizing the suite for her via email or phone? If they were email, you can probably use those to justify eviction too. Good luck.
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Is there a lease? Or is this a month to month?
You need to file for eviction.
This is going to take a while. Maybe even longer than normal due to COVID there had been a moratorium put on evictions.
You CAN NOT lock her out. You CAN NOT toss her belongings out. It has to be a legal eviction. Most likely the court will give her 30 days to vacate AFTER the court hearing.
Was there any restrictions when she moved in? Did you prohibit smoking? If so that is another cause to evict.

Is your house legally able to have renters? Some villages prohibit it unless there are Fire Department regulations that have been met. As well as Building and Zoning regulations. If you legally can not have renters you might want to use that as a basis to have her removed. Report yourself for having an illegal renter. You may have to pay a fine but the court will require her to move. (if you can not make your house up to code if there are violations)

And if you are not paid to be her caregiver then you can also report to APS the fact that she is a vulnerable senior and is not getting the care that she needs.
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OP needs to be careful, especially in this climate. I have found that the renter has more rights than the landlord. The only thing I see in OPs favor is the renter has only been there 3 weeks.

Just my opinion here but calling 911 won't work. If the renter refuses to go to the ER, the EMTs will not take her. OP can ask that a record be made of the condition they found the renter. If she does go to ER, don't think locks can be changed legally. She can refuse to let her return I would think though. I think when there is no lease its a month to month rental. I think calling APS is the best bet. This woman rented the room under false pretenses. (I bet if a background check had been done, this is probably not the first time) This woman needs help that the OP cannot and should not have to give her. The longer the woman is allowed to remain the harder it will be to get her out. The aide knew what she was doing and it would be interesting to know where they were before this.

Yes! please do not leave us hanging. Come back and tell us how you handle this. Maybe, you could tell the aide you are evicting the renter because the aide gave you false information. If she does not find a new place in the next week you will be calling Adult Protection Services on a vulnerable adult. By calling APS the aide could lose her job so she may get a new place. But be careful. If this is a scam of some sort, these people are very aware of the law and know their rights. I think a letter from a lawyer maybe a good idea.
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notgoodenough Dec 2021
I didn't even notice the 3 weeks. That might change everything, especially if there's no lease. OP should check in her area at what point "sqautters' rights" kick in - she can google it, or call her local law enforcement, they will be able to give her guidelines. In NY state, it is in excess of 30 days (which is why SRO hotels make the tenants move into a different room at day 29).

***IF*** no lease, and under the timeframe for her jurisdiction, the OP can change the locks, throw out the renter, etc, and be within her rights. She should return any funds that were given to her by the woman/caregiver - and return if by check, so there is a record of the transaction! But IF there is no lease, time is of the essence, because the longer this person remains, the greater her rights become. And I would not be surprised if the tenant knows this.
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Do you have a lawyer or a friend who is one? I hate to say, but I have had my son (who is an attorney) make 'a quick phone call' over a few legal things over the years and while it may be a tad sketchy--people hear the word "I'm so-and-so an attorney representing Mrs. E" and somehow this little bulldog can get stuff DONE. This call can be made to the instigator of this 'plan', not the actual person who's living there. W/O a doubt she's breaking some laws...common decency being one.

I think is thisreallyreal has the best plan. Once the EMT's see this--they are mandated reporters o f abuse & neglect and they HAVE to call this in.

Then you haul all her garbage out of the house and change the locks while she's in the ER. Maybe out of basic human kindness give the 'friend' a call and tell her you have physically evicted this person.

TAKE PICTURES. Tons of them.

So sorry--you're probably going to have to replace the carpet down to the plywood and paint and spray down the whole room with pet odor control stuff--and air out the room.
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