Albuquerque Journal

Court scrambles to replace guardians for Ayudando’s clients

End of August deadline for transferri­ng clients to other guardians looms

- BY COLLEEN HEILD JOURNAL INVESTIGAT­IVE REPORTER

State district judges in Albuquerqu­e have identified 176 people, many of them indigent and all of them incapacita­ted in some way, who relied on Ayudando Guardians for help with everything from living arrangemen­ts to ensuring their funds, however meager, were safe.

Those people fall under court oversight, because the courts, over the years, have appointed Ayudando Guardians as their guardians or conservato­rs and judges relied on annual reports from the company to keep tabs on Ayudando’s clients.

“A guardiansh­ip/conservato­rship offers a higher degree of protection to the individual than other management mechanisms,” explains Ayudando on its web site.

Now that the company and its two principals are under federal indictment for looting client accounts and money laundering, two CPAs with the U.S. Marshals Service are winding down Ayudando business operations. The Albuquerqu­e-based company has lost about half of its employees since the recent arrests of its two top managers.

Chief District Judge Nan Nash and Chief Civil Division Judge Shannon Bacon in Bernalillo County said in an interview Friday that the courts are faced with having to quickly find lawyers who will file cases for replacemen­t guardians and conservato­rs, and to ensure no one slips through the cracks.

“Our intention is to move heaven and earth to make sure every single case is transferre­d in a timely manner and in accordance with the law,” Bacon said Friday.

Bacon has also asked the State Auditor’s Office to conduct an audit of 20 other companies, like Ayudando Guardians, that have contracts with the state Office of Guardiansh­ip to provide guardiansh­ip or conservato­rship services for low-income or indigent and incapacita­ted New Mexicans.

“We are looking into the Office of Guardiansh­ip’s oversight and lines of accountabi­lity for guardiansh­ip companies,” said a spokeswoma­n for State Auditor Tim Keller on Friday.

The guardiansh­ip office provides publicly funded guardiansh­ip/conservato­rship services, paying contractor­s about $325 a month for each client.

In responding to Journal questions, officials with the Office of Guardiansh­ip last week said the agency’s most recent audit of Ayudando was in September 2016. Ayudando has 166 clients through its guardiansh­ip office contract, and is required to carry liability insurance and post fidelity bonds each year.

In Bernalillo County, about 110 clients who have court-appointed Ayudando guardians and conservato­rs fall under the responsibi­lity of the state guardiansh­ip office. That state agency is expected to find replacemen­t companies, but faces budgetary issues and has only about 10 lawyers on contract, the judges told the Journal. Finding lawyers to refile cases for the remaining 66 “private pay” Ayudando clients is underway, and Bacon is also working to recruit guardians ad litem and other guardians to take over Ayudando’s role.

Outside the court’s jurisdicti­on are those clients who gave Ayudando authority to act as their representa­tive payee, managing their monthly income from Social Security, VA pensions or other sources and paying their bills. That group of Ayudando clients will need to find new payees, and if they are now incapacita­ted, that could send another wave of guardiansh­ip/conservato­rship cases into the courts.

Nash and Bacon said they learned that the U.S. Marshals Service, which has federal court authority to operate Ayudando for the time being, is expected to end its oversight by the end of August, so there is a looming deadline to transfer clients to other guardians.

As for those Ayudando employees who remain at work, many appeared shocked and worried about their clients when Nash and Bacon visited Ayudando’s office last Thursday for a meeting with U.S. Marshals.

“I can’t tell you how moved we were about the dedication of the employees,” Nash said. Even before the indictment was handed down, employees were paying for some clients’ incidental­s out of their own pockets, she said.

“They were just as gobsmacked as the rest of us (about what’s happened),” Nash added.

In promising that clients’ funds will be protected, Ayudando’s web site notes, “The guardian/conservato­r must file an inventory which lists all the property of the client and must file accounting­s with the court that reflect all transactio­ns involving that person’s assets.”

But Nash and Bacon said the annual financial reports filed by Ayudando in their courts provided no red flags. Neither judge recalled receiving complaints from Ayudando clients about missing money.

Critics say the annual reports required of guardians and conservato­rs fall short of providing judges with enough informatio­n.

Moreover, a recent lawsuit alleges a $600,000 theft of client funds by another Albuquerqu­e conservato­r, Desert State Life Management. The firm filed annual conservato­r reports, but accounting­s of the client’s trust funds weren’t in the court file, according to a lawyer involved in the case.

 ??  ?? Judge Shannon Bacon
Judge Shannon Bacon
 ??  ?? Judge Nan Nash
Judge Nan Nash

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