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Hello,


My 86 year old mother has advanced dementia and lives with me. I am the middle child with a younger brother and older sister.


My brother and I have jobs and younger children to take care of and he also comes over to help with my mother. Our older sister is quite a bit older than us, has grown children and is retired but does little to assist with our mother.


Last year our sister, Darlene, took our mother to the bank to add herself to her banking account. The statements now go to her house (this is the acct where her SS checks are directly deposited) and she's the only one with online access to our mother's account...even though she lives with ME! Now Darlene has been telling other family members (has not said a word of this to me or my brother) that it's time for her to get Power of Attorney over my mother and "it has to be her because she is the oldest." I have seen in the state of CA that it can be shared between siblings which obviously my brother and I would prefer but here are my questions:
1. since she is already discussing this with aunts & cousins rather than her siblings, can she do this behind our backs?
2. Would me and my brother have to agree to it before she could obtain power of attorney?


As you can probably tell, we are not comfortable with her "being in charge" and the fact that she is discussing the matter with everyone but is makes us believe she is up to no good.


Thanks in advance for any insight.


Jenny Ann

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If your Mother had Dementia last year she may not have been competent enough to put sister on her accounts. Its definitely too late for POA now she had advanced Dementia. She needs to be competent enough to assign someone. The only option your sister has is guardianship and that is court appointed and expensive. She then has to report to the State how Moms money is spent.
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JennyAnn Jul 2020
I definitely believe my mother wasn't competent enough when she put her on the account last year.
Thank you so much for your insight. I really appreciate it :)
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JennyAnn, I lot of us here are of the opinion that one should NEVER become the caregiver without having the authority to make the decisions (having POA and access to funds to pay for care).

I would have a conference call with your siblings and inform older sis that mom is coming to her house to stay as of Augest 1. Get this all out on the table; you can't control how much your sister helps with mom, but she needs to be put on notice that her actions have been noted and will have consequences.

Why didn't your mother appoint a POA when she was first diagnosed?

Ship has sailed as to POA, it sounds.
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Your sister can only obtain a POA if your mother is competent and assigns it to her. Since she has advanced dementia, she can’t assign anyone to be her POA. Even if she was competent, if she was going to assign your sister as POA, she would not need you or your brother to agree with it. It’s her choice. But that ship has sailed. Like Joann said, guardianship is the only option and she would have to take your mother in and take full control of her care, OR place her a memory care or nursing home.
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