How did ‘toyboy’ secretly wed our dementia patient mum?
When a man 23 years her junior befriended and moved in with elderly widow Joan Blass, her family was deeply concerned.
The grandmother had been diagnosed with severe dementia, and could barely recall her own name – let alone that of her ‘toyboy’.
After developing cancer too, Mrs Blass died in March 2016 aged 91. But her family’s nightmare had only just begun – for they discovered she had secretly married Colman Folan, the man who had becomeher live-in carer, five months earlier.
The marriage meant her children Michael, 53, and Daphne, 62, losing their £210,000 inheritance as the registry officeceremony annulled her will.
Mrs Franks says her mother – who still wore the wedding ring given to her by late husband Ron, who died in 2008 after five decades together – will not have realised she had remarried.
Mrs Franks was forced to take Mr Folan, now 70, to court over the right to organise the funeral arrangements.
But a four-day hearing at leeds county court ended with the judge siding with Mr Folan – and Mrs Franks and her relatives were left with a £200,000 legal bill. This resulted in them handing their £175,000 half- share of their mother’s house to Mr Folan, topped up with their savings.
Mrs Blass was eventually buried in an unmarked grave in a town she had no connection with. noneof her relatives were invited to the funeral. Mrs Franks, who is now campaigning for a change in the law to protect people like her late mother, said: ‘It is impossibleto describe the level of shock and distress that we felt on learning of the marriage.
‘When I found out I felt like my knees were buckling and that I was going to faint. I cannot statetoo strongly how devastated my mother would have been if shehad known that the marriagewould disinherit her children.’
A complaint to police led to a filebeing sent to the Crown Prosecution Service to consider a ‘forced marriage’ charge, but lawyers decided against prosecution.
Mr Folan met Mrs Blass in 2011 – the year she was diagnosed with vascular dementia.
Having struck up a conversation as he walked past her house in leeds, he moved in with the widower a month later. Mrs Franks and her husband, who lived next door, were worried about Mr Folan but could do nothing about therelationship as there was no evidenceof mistreatment.
Mrs Franks said: ‘Mum never seemed to know he lived there. She was asking, “what is his name? Where did he come from?”’
The couple married in Blackpool in October 2015. The only witnesses were Mr Folan’s son and a member of his pub quiz team. ‘[He] never told anyone about [themarriage], because, I suspect, he
‘I felt like I was going to faint’
had found out that there is a gap in the law,’ Mrs Franks said.
She contacted Blackpool registrars to find out why no concerns were raised, only to be told Mrs Blass seemed happy on the day.
Mr Folan still owns the housebut no longer lives there. He could not be reached for comment.
Earlier this year he dismissed theaccusations, saying he and Mrs Blass had a ‘loving’ relationship and insisting she had the capacity to go ahead with the marriage.
A Crown Prosecution Servicespokesman said: ‘We reviewed this case carefully and concluded that there was not sufficient evidence for a realistic prospect of conviction.’