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1) Do you have a Power of Attorney? If not, can you get mother to execute one? Tell her that without it, she will be controlled by the state if anything goes wrong, no rights for you or other family to work in her best interests. And she will pay heavily for the ‘privilege’ of being controlled by strangers.
2) If there is a POA, read it and find out when it ‘kicks in’? If M needs a doctor to diagnose dementia, tell her that it’s a requirement to go for a test as she’s coming up to 100. If you can activate the POA, you can fire the carers.
3) If neither of these options work, get some evidence about the caregiver abuse (of your mother, not you) that you think is happening. Then give the carers the option of you taking it to the police for prosecution, or them quitting. If your evidence is solid, M won’t need to fire them – they will exit left themselves.
4) Stop whatever support that you give to prop up the situation. Let it fall over. Then call APS.
5) If M gets a diagnosis saying that she has legal capacity, give up. Stay away, and don’t let yourself get upset about something you can’t fix.
It’s a tricky one.
I see in your profile that your Mom has Alzheimer's/Dementia, so please note that is not uncommon for someone with memory issues to make up stories. It would be unfair to accuse someone of those things when, in fact, it is not happening.
Your mom has the control, let her have it and good luck to her.
Report any crimes committed against an elderly person. Reporting them will prevent them from harming not only your loved one but others as well.
According to your profile you are not the POA and your elder insists on using these caregivers you do not like, or suspect of stealing. If your elder is not incompetent then she is in charge of who cares for her. As I said, if you have evidence and proof of stealing you should go to the police or involve Adult Protective services.
If you elder is incompetent then the POA, guardian or conservator should fire people they find to be stealing.
If this isn't a hired caregiver, the POA should step in and consult a lawyer.
Or file a police report.