In one
Houston County case, the parents of a young man with cerebral palsy used
his money to buy a truck for use on the family’s Alpaca ranch, noting
that he enjoyed spending time with the animals. The judge ordered them
to repay his estate $21,991 and post a bond of $200,000...
Auditors also raised concerns in several cases about professional
conservators and their attorneys who charged high fees to handle simple
tasks like opening e-mails and answering phone calls. One lawyer,
working alongside a conservator in a Hennepin County case, billed $120
to drop a letter at the post office. He’s appealing an order that he
repay $9,192 in fees...
[The Minnesota system] has evolved
into the only mandatory, online financial reporting system for
conservators in the country. It’s called MyMNConservator, and it alerts
the court to red flags in a protected person’s financial reports. Under the
old system, it was up to judges and their staff to wade through scanned
financial reports, unverified receipts and sometimes handwritten account
summaries. Anderson said the task was nearly impossible...
McBride said many times there’s a good explanation for expenses the
auditors found suspect. But when the expenses involve substantial funds
or valuable gifts that are going to the conservator or the conservator’s
family, “then you get really suspicious,” he said. “Ultimately they
have to manage the ward’s funds to the benefit of the ward and not to
their own benefit.”
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