A daughter has written checks to herself and signed her mother's name. They have had a very close relationship and still do. The daughter has paid back the money that was not spent and is truly sorry. Her mother has forgiven her and accepts the returned portion as full restitution and does not want any prosecution.
Now the tricky part...The mother's brother (uncle) is now power of attorney. Not the normal one page form but 10 pages, covering anything imaginable and some. Uncle is threatening to press charges if the close daughter doesn't stop being a part of her mother's life. Can he, as agent have charges brought against the daughter even though the money was taken prior to uncle becoming the agent? (1-2 mos.)
I can't believe what has happened. Mother was of the notion that a trust was being set up. Sister has not had the same relationship over the 30+ years and is now somehow convining the agent to make up for favored past of close daughter, with his control and mother's money
2007-08-02
07:14:33
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2 answers
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asked by
dearly departed
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in
Politics & Government
➔ Law & Ethics
If you are familiar with the laws of the state of Louisiana, I will gladly let you review this document. As I stated previously, there is something terribly wrong about all of this.
2007-08-02
08:01:47 ·
update #1