Chicago Sun-Times

Owners, managers of Lincoln Pk. nursing home accused in suit of covering up theft from resident

- BY MITCH DUDEK, STAFF REPORTER mdudek@suntimes.com | @mitchdudek

When managers and owners of a Lincoln Park nursing home learned employees had stolen more than $700,000 from a 98-yearold resident who has Alzheimer’s disease, they didn’t fire them or go to authoritie­s — they sought to cover it up, according to a lawsuit filed Thursday.

The Cook County public guardian’s office filed a 335-page complaint seeking monetary damages for four entities that own Symphony Residences, several managers and the five employees accused of stealing Grace Watanabe’s life savings.

Public Guardian Charles Golbert’s lawsuit said a nursing home executive resorted to locking Watanabe in her office to keep county social workers from moving her to another nursing home.

Word of the standoff got back to Golbert, who dispatched Dawn Lawkowski-Keller, an attorney who works in his office’s financial recovery unit.

After a shouting match, Lawkowski-Keller boiled it down for Symphony Executive Director Erika Cruz: “You have 5 minutes or we’re calling the cops.”

Cruz released Watanabe.

An investigat­ion by Golbert’s office later concluded that five nursing home employees used Watanabe as their personal piggy bank — draining her life savings through a series of ATM withdrawal­s, forged checks and other payments.

While not accused of taking part in the theft, the lawsuit alleges Cruz and other nursing home executives were aware of it and didn’t report it to law enforcemen­t.

A representa­tive of Symphony, reached Thursday via email, reiterated a statement previously sent to the Sun-Times: “Upon learning of the incident involving Ms. Watanabe, we immediatel­y notified law enforcemen­t authoritie­s to investigat­e and seek restitutio­n for Ms. Watanabe, and we are cooperatin­g with those agencies.”

Two of the five employees accused in the civil suit of stealing from Watanabe have been charged criminally with financial exploitati­on of an elderly person.

Bank regulators noticed irregulari­ties and brought the case to the attention of authoritie­s.

A separate civil suit filed by Golbert’s office seeking informatio­n from Symphony is stalled while company executives appeal a September court order compelling them to testify. They are being fined $400 for every day they defy the order and remain silent.

“We can’t wait for them,” Golbert said. “My client is 98 years old, and they’re trying to run out the clock.”

Should Watanabe pass away before the conclusion of the civil suit against Symphony, the beneficiar­ies of her will — Misericord­ia and Mercy Home for Boys & Girls — could step in as complainan­ts, Golbert said.

Watanabe was born in Santa Cruz, California, in 1921 and was held in the Poston internment camp from 1942 to 1946. After her release, she earned a bachelor’s degree in English from the University of Illinois at Chicago.

Members of Chicago’s Japanese community have been attending court hearings to support Watanabe.

 ?? PROVIDED ?? Grace Watanabe
PROVIDED Grace Watanabe

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