After taking care of my dad for 13 years, my sister kidnapped him and will not let me see or speak to him. She took over his accounts that he had his and my name on. He gave me his house but now she is trying to evict me and turned off my utilities. I have POA and her name isn't on any of the accounts and she has not lifted a finger to help me this whole time, except having him over her house a few times this last year. Is there anything I can do?
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As far as your sister kidnapping your father... I wish my sister would have gotten involved in Mom's care, she only listens when money is involved. She was abusing the funds for a short time, paying herself or using an aid for her weekends to be free of children or Mom , which would have been fine if she realized the money Mom had was very minimal and we needed to use money for a caregiver or aide to lengthen Mom's time to stay at home. All sis did during her caregiver time, was complain to me, about everythng that she couldn't handle, all that Mom was doing wrong, when in reality, Mom was doing these things because my Sis wasn't watching Mom when she was supposed to. So after I realized this was all a problem I took over and Sister was/is stil not helping she's just a thorn in my side. In everyones elses eyes, prior to Mom's dementia, I was the irresponsable one and sis was the well edjucated smart one(they forgot one thing, money means nothing to me but my Mom's life and happiness and safety and quality of life means everything to me). Well... Now Mom is doing excellent and I feel great about all my efforts and craziness for doing so, and careing responsability's.... but I LIVE with a clear conscious I am not so sure about my sister's conscious. I included her in every detail she's even on POA paper's the bigggest mistake (I requested that she be on the papers,I am kicking myself now). So my advice is TO.... do whatever it takes for your Dad's best daily quality of life! If you and your sister agree great if you can't... If your heart is in the right place, any task with Dad as your focus, will go smoothly. Taking care of a human life is the most important life lesson, if you stay focused on Dad Goals, although it may be difficult, it's not impossible.
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If your dad is competent the POA isnt in effect and he can change it.
If the POA is in effect then you are assigned by your dad to make his medical decisions when he is incompetent and you should do so.
A representative payee is an individual or organization appointed by SSA to receive Social Security and/or SSI benefits for someone who cannot manage or direct someone else to manage his or her money. The main responsibilities of a payee are to use the benefits to pay for the current and foreseeable needs of the beneficiary and properly save any benefits not needed to meet current needs. A payee must also keep records of expenses. When SSA requests a report, a payee must provide an accounting to SSA of how benefits were used or saved.
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IMHO the key in the above is:
"someone who cannot manage or direct someone else to manage his or her money". If the person has directed you to "manage his or her money" then you can just do it. You do not have to go thru the AR payee nonsense.By this I mean the AR process (below). Why make things more cumbersome?
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As per SS web: (to become a AR)
You must then submit an application, form SSA-11 (Request to be selected as payee) and documents to prove your identity. You will need to provide your social security number or if you represent an organization, the organization’s employer identification number. SSA requires you to complete the payee application in a face-to-face interview (with certain exceptions).
Also-Determine the beneficiary’s needs & use payments to meet those needs;
-Save any money left after meeting the beneficiary’s current needs in an interest bearing account or savings bonds for the beneficiary's future needs;
-Report any changes or events which could affect the beneficiary’s eligibility for benefits or payment amount;
-Keep records of all payments received and how they are spent and/or saved;
-Provide benefit information to social service agencies or medical facilities that serve the beneficiary;
-Help the beneficiary get medical treatment when necessary;
-Notify SSA of any changes in your (the payee's) circumstances that would affect your performance or continuing as payee;
-Complete written reports accounting for the use of funds; and
-Return any payments to which the beneficiary is not entitled to SSA.
And then -SSA will send you a "Representative Payee Report" once a year. When you receive the Report, you should either fill it out promptly and mail it back or follow the directions that you receive with the Report and submit the Report online.
The AR may be reimbursed for reasonable actual out-of-pocket expenses incurred on behalf of the beneficiary. For example the cost of transporting the beneficiary to a doctor’s appointment (such as cab fare, mileage and tolls); postage to pay the beneficiary’s bills, and fees for money orders is considered out-of-pocket expenses. The amount of reimbursement must correspond with the actual expense you incurred for the beneficiary. You must keep records of your out-of-pocket expenses.
The law requires most minor children and all legally incompetent adults to have payees.In all other situations, adult beneficiaries are presumed to be capable of managing benefits.
Above from SS website.
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Again, IMHO if your parent directed you to manage their affairs then just continue doing so. Don't worry about the AR payee stuff. Most AR are parents who get SS for their kids or a family member who does this for a profoundly disabled adult who can't do for themselves. If it ain't broke don't fix it.
What is a Representative Payee?
A representative payee is an individual or organization appointed by SSA to receive Social Security and/or SSI benefits for someone who cannot manage or direct someone else to manage his or her money. The main responsibilities of a payee are to use the benefits to pay for the current and foreseeable needs of the beneficiary and properly save any benefits not needed to meet current needs. A payee must also keep records of expenses. When SSA requests a report, a payee must provide an accounting to SSA of how benefits were used or saved.
NOTE: Having power of attorney, being an authorized representative or having a joint bank account with the beneficiary is not the same thing as being a payee. These arrangements do not give legal authority to negotiate and manage a beneficiary’s Social Security and/or SSI payments. In order to be a payee a person or organization must apply for and be appointed by SSA.
My mom has a single account that her SS & annuity are direct deposited into. I am signature on the account & I am the POD (pay on death) on the account. The checks read her name & my name. Her SS# is the only one on the account, therefore she owns the account, it is her account wholly.
It is from this is from this account that her LTC/NH Medicaid asset co-pay is paid via a check that I write every month and from this account I write checks for whatever personal expenses she has that the monthly $ 60 allotment from Medicaid for personal care is for, like to pay the hairdresser at the LTC/NH. I do not need to be the authorized representative payee or any of that nonsense.
The AR should be an issue only when the SS check reciepent does NOT have a bank account &/OR is unable to cash the check because of health or mental state and the AR needs to deposit the check into their(the AR's) personal account or cash it for the person.
For the bank whether I am DPOA for her is not the issue, what counts for the bank is that I am an authorized signature on the account approved by the account owner (which is my mom). Whether my mom did that in 1980 or yesterday. SS concern is that the person who is the SS# on the check matches up SS# to the bank account they are depositing it into.
naheaton is right too - something does not add up here, normally if someone is kidnapped, you call the police!! POAs, guardianships, trusteeships if abused can be taken away by a court, which requires lawyers if its going to be contested at all. Make sure you have evidence of what you have done for dad as POA if you will be fighting to get him back. And, seriously - Let us know what is really going on if you can??
A note: never make bank accounts jointly owned or put an elder's house in your name. This not only evokes anger and suspicion in family members (causing them to do things like THIS) but more importantly, it affects qualification for Medicaid which might be needed down the line.
A qualified attorney is your best resource right now.
Blessings,
Shelley
All these issues are sticky, you'll need to hire an experienced lawyer to help. To begin your search for the best lawyer for the job, contact the local bar association and ask whether it has a lawyer referral service that includes those who specialize in elder law or conservatorships. You can also contact the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys for a referral to its members in your area. Good luck.