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My Grandmother passed away 3-1-06 and my Grandfather 12-8-06 they had some $ Not sure how much, I do know about 3 years ago 2 of my uncles talked my grandfather into giving them each $100,000 EACH, to "hold"on to in the event they had to go into a nursing home. I know there were other type of funds too, property, maybe life insurance, cd's. I am not sure what else. My question is what would be the procedure to start an investigation without involving a lawyer, is there state laws.? 1 Uncle took care of my grandparents for about 3-4 years in Florida, not in the same home they were self sufficient till they died. They stole jewelry they knew belonged to other family member as well and all personal property

2007-01-04 14:43:34 · 5 answers · asked by Goldy'S Goodies 1 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

5 answers

You absolutely need a lawyer to help with that. You also need proof - just you saying these things will not hold up in a court of law.

2007-01-04 14:47:25 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

This happens so often and it is so sad. Would you be a legal heir to any of the money--stolen or not? You could look for an
attorney who specializes in wills and probate, etc. (end of life
issues). I think many will take the case pro bono, which means
they will get a certain % of whatever is recovered. This is probably the only way this embezzlement will ever be settled.
Was there a will? I believe the atty would hire an investigator
to prove your case, but these things would need to be clearly understood. See: Here's a case of "Will the dirty deeds come to light?" I sure hope so.

2007-01-04 15:05:33 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Not yet - Obama is still slightly higher than Bush in the approval polls. But Obama's popularity rating used to be over twice what Bush's was, not just a couple of points higher. A year from now, when millions of people lose their work-sponsored health insurance and are down to 29 hours a week, Bush will be demonstrably more popular than Obama.

2016-05-23 04:45:59 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I am sorry about youre grandparents, but the only way that I know how to do something like this is to get you a lawyer. Make sure that your grandparents had a will, and then see what was wrote in it and then you can take it from there.

2007-01-04 14:48:29 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

you would have to prove all of this. and if your grand parents were of sound mind, they could do what they wanted with any assets they had and there isn't anything you can do about it now. besides i bet that those 2 uncles of your have documents signed by your grandparents proving everything is legit? it happened to my family with our grand parents.

2007-01-04 14:49:19 · answer #5 · answered by george 2 6 · 0 0

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