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I visited these cousins recently and they were recounting their tribulations trying to get weapons away and dad into care and being stymied along the way. They are sophisticated professionals, but perhaps they didn't know the right words to say.
I so recall being taught here by others to say "not a safe discharge" and "no one at home to care for her" which made my mom cry and feel abandoned but sure lit a fire under the diacharge department folks!
Did your cousins choose to not take the legal path because they did know about it, considered it too difficult, didn't have full support in the family for it, or felt they couldn't win in the legal system?
I will admit I have had an interest in this topic since I first consulted an attorney about what was needed to challenge my father's competence many years ago. I wanted my mother to challenge his competency when my older brother first began to tap into their financial resources a good 15 years before Mom's health began failing. Mom didn't want to do it and I didn't think he was a risk to anyone else for several years (although I was aware that was at least a possibility) so I gave way to Mom's desires - afterall it was _her_ money her son was taking. I didn't move to challenge Dad's competency until after Mom's health began to fail and Dad pushed my mother and caused a dangerous fall. Between becoming Dad's guardian and defending my mother from eldest brother attempting to get her POAs set aside, I have had a better look into how the system works in my county than I ever wanted.
If my cousins had gone to court to get guardianship (which their mother, my aunt, refused to support saying "I can't go against my husband", this crazy doc would have testified and my cousins would have lost the case.
Sneaking the guns and the ammo out the house was the right thing to do and I don't think that the local cops would have had any issue with it; them seemed relieved to be told that the firearms were gone (they were frequent visitors to the property).
"Probate courts take the family's concerns into consideration as well as a point (sic) doctors to test competency and give the results to the court and the family. Your concerns sound logical and therefore a judge should agree with you and set the stage for you to legally intercede on behalf of the safety of your relative and safety of your family. So why not make sure that you are the legal guardian? As guardian you have the legal right to make these decisions."
I'd like to address the issue from another viewpoint. When I worked as a court reporter for the Juvenile Court, we sometimes had to provide services to the Probate Court for mental health hearing and commitments when the Probate court reporter wasn't available.
I don't recall if they were specifically were for guardianships, although I believe some were. And others were for mental commitment. That was a long time ago and fortunately I don't remember all the trauma and sadness that accompanied them.
And that's my point: these are traumatic, not only for the family, but for the person being evaluated. Unless you've been in this kind of hearing, it's hard to imagine being the subject of evaluation, to be considered as a subject as opposed to someone's beloved parent or relative.
There were of course situations that dictated this kind of intervention. There were others in which the family dynamics factored in heavily on the ability or lack thereof by the family to work with the individual in question. But this also was back in the mid to late 1960s, and guardianships weren't as commonplace as they are now.
As to court consideration and evaluation of all parties' needs and interests, I say HAH! How many court hearings have YOU attended? Have you ever watched as someone sat in literal fear and agony while her/his coping ability and life were discussed? It's very, very emotional, and embarrassing. It's hell for the people being examined like a thing as opposed to a person.
And judges aren't always rational. Some refer for psychiatric treatment or psychological evaluation to shift the decision making to someone else. Some are inclined to get anyone who needs help to be subject to psychological evaluation. One judge was predictable; I knew every time I covered a hearing with his present that he'd order a psych eval, as matter of course. Perhaps it was his philosophy; perhaps it was a CYA move. Whatever, it was emotional for the family.
I do understand your emphasis on proper procedures, and respect that.
I don't challenge the need; I do think though that considering guardianship is not something to be done primarily to take control, make decisions, etc. What I've seen here is guardianship as a reliable alternative, w/o examination of all the issues, including the removal of choice from the subject individual, not to mention the cost if guardianship is granted to an attorney.
I am especially getting experience in decline of energy, leading to less physical and/or mental activities, and that's kind of frightening. But I can also see the valuable benefit of doing nothing, or just reading. They're no a reflection of just sitting and not participating. They're a reflection of recognition that our bodies and brains need more "down time" as we age.
Our system of government provides methods to handle the situation with a compromised senior in a way that protects the senior's rights when someone tries to take advantage of them and the rights of society not to be victimized by a compromised senior. The "system" involves multiple people: a judge, a doctor, a concerned person who wants to become the potentially compromised senior's decision-maker. Too many "children" think if Mom and Dad need some help then they should give up all decision making to their children helpers.
I have seen situations where a senior is living perfectly well in their home with paid service providers (lawn care for the yard, weekday housekeeper in the mornings doing cooking and cleaning, etc.) and a son deciding mom is "wasting" too much money staying in her home (still just spending her monthly income) and "needs" to relocate to a cheaper apartment in the area he lives in. Dad left Mom with enough savings and pension income to maintain a life in their modest house for _years_. According to the son, mom was obviously demented because she would not agree to sell her home, move to a small apartment, and put her son on all her accounts.
Other people decide mom is old enough that she should just do what her children have decided; if she doesn't want to then she's _obvisously_ in denial. I have certainly seen that attitude displayed by some posters here. One example is the child has decided mom should not drive _even_ though she passed a driving test (and the doctor agrees on continued driving) or should not be gardening even though she loves it.
One 89-year-old friend of the family was gardening after supper one night when he had a fatal heart attack; some people say he should not have been in the garden. I say "what a wonderful way to go", still living independently in his own home and doing what he wanted in a beautiful natural setting. Was he "denying" he was an old man when he continue to have a small garden and raise his own vegetables? Our opinions can differ, but _none_ of us have a _right_ to force the old man out of his house and garden because we prioritize his "health" above his right to enjoy his home and garden. We don't get to decide he should stay out of the garden so he can die instead in a facility, possibly after years of "living" without what he considered a good quality of life.
When old age weakens a senior's body it does not always weaken the mind to the point the senior cannot continue to make decisions according to their life choices - those OFTEN do not agree with the people of another generation and differing life experiences. I would point out we have one good example in front of us now. Seniors (who often grew up with friends and family affected by diseases when there were no vaccinations available) have chosen vaccination at a rate that would support herd immunity if only younger people (who were given multiple vaccinations as children and have not experienced annual pandemics) are not.
If a someone is a threat to the safety and welfare of the community they live in, then a people have responsibility to prevent them from being so.
Elderly people have rights. In fact, an mentally-incompetent senior has more rights legally than a perfectly rational young adult who happens to still be a minor.
Now, I've been in senior homecare for a very long time. Caregivers are obligated by the law to report if one of their clients is in danger or is being a danger to themselves or others. I've always provided outstanding care to every elder on my service because I am paid to do so. Believe when I say, I couldn't care less what happens to some "stubborn" elder who won't give up their driver's license. What I do care about is myself. An incompetent senior has no right to endanger my life or the lives of anyone else.
As for elders and guns, well let me clear that argument away in plain English.
If a person has to have a caregiver because they're not able to keep up on washing their dishes or cleaning their own a$$es, they can no longer safely handle or keep weapons of any kind.
You don't mention why you're caring for someone. Does this person have a mental illness or a neurodegenerative disease like Alzheimer's? Does the person you are caring for exhibit delusions, hallucinations? Does the person wander throughout the house or leave the house at 2 AM without your knowledge? I don't know who you're caring for or why you're caring for them, but if you spend 10 minutes with someone with advanced dementia, you'd realize weapons are a significant danger because the person doesn't have the cognitive faculties to know right from wrong. So should I break the law (?) and remove any weapons, or take my chances that my loved one won't do any harm?
Removing, hiding, locking up a weapon from someone living with dementia, prevents the possibility that the person may mistakenly kill a family member when they see a strange man, who is actually a relative, in the house, or is reliving their war days.
No, I'm sorry, if it's against the law I'll take that chance. In fact, it would be neglect not to remove the weapon from the person's access to it. What terrible guilt would the caregiver suffer if knowing that removing or hiding the weapons could have prevented a killing? No guardianship or POA is required. Remove the weapon and call the police if necessary. For a heart rendering story go to:
https://www.pbs.org/newshour/nation/unlocked-and-loaded-families-confront-dementia-and-guns
Defender, I'll be happy to be charged with theft for stealing a parents firearm and ammunition if their mind is compromised and they are threatening others. Same goes for their automobile. I'll sleep better at night with those charges on my record than knowing I allowed my demented father to kill someone because I didn't have the guts to do what I needed to do.
I also follow the law of Duty of Care.
Eg if I am looking after an elderly relative & I have strong belief they may harm themselves or others I can take reasonable steps to prevent this. This may include calling Police, EMS, Mental Health service. This may include removing a dangerous weapon until help arrives.
It is a very fine line - this freedom of choice vs duty of care...
A 90 yr old man drinks whiskey in his own home, alone. OK.
A 90 yr old man drinks whiskey in his own home but past drinking episodes have caused violence towards his wife, stopping home care supports for both entering the home, dehydration, falls with head strike causing brain bleed.
You go to visit & see the whiskey bottle out. Would you hide it?
Almost no one needs to violate their parents' rights and take illegal actions; they just chose to make the assumptions they convince themselves they have the moral authority to do so. Many guardianship cases fail in court because the petitioners cannot sustain the position that the parents are incompetent or acting in _any_ way dangerous to themselves or others; they just are not agreeing to the "decisions" their offspring want, usually relating to stop driving or agreeing to enter a facility or sell some assets. Just because you have decided the person has dementia does not allow you to abuse them, even if you think it is for the "best".
Legally no one has dementia until a doctor says they do and MCI or early dementia does not necessarily render a person incompetent. No one had the right to remove someone's property until a court says you do. Get an emergency order to compel a doctor's evaluation if you must. Or call your state and give them the documentation needed for a mandatory driving evaluation. Do it legally. Don't get caught in the trap of a competent parent or step-parent (or a sibling) pressing theft charges. If there's no legal right to deprive them of their property, the charges of theft will be sustained and you will be in a far weaker position if you need to file for guardianship, particularly if there is disagreement in the family over the parents' care.
I understand that technically, this may not be "legal". But I sure am glad that my cousins took away my uncle's guns and ammo before they took him to court to get guardianship. He thought any crime scene he saw on TV was happening in his own back or front yard and often tried to "help" with his guns.
I doubt the cops who showed up at the door those many times would have survived had been able to access his firearms.
People aren't entitled to dangerous behavior, especially when innocent people get involved. Letting your near-blind grandpa drive and kill someone because "I can't tell him what to do" is negligence. It's called loving your parent enough to step in and make sure they are safe.