This Guardian Enriched Herself Using the Finances of Vulnerable People In Her Care. Judges Let It Happen.

Judges allowed one of New York’s most prolific guardians to engage in apparent self-dealing as she transferred $1.5 million of her wards’ money to her own company.

This Guardian Enriched Herself Using the Finances of Vulnerable People In Her Care. Judges Let It Happen.

In New York, more than 28,000 adults are under the care of legally appointed guardians. But the system is in shambles, and weak oversight has enabled guardians to abuse, neglect and defraud the very people they are supposed to care for.

Reporting Highlights

  • Apparent Conflict of Interest: One of New York’s most prolific guardians used her own health care company to treat vulnerable people whose finances she controlled, an apparent violation of state law.
  • Profiting at Wards’ Expense: ProPublica found at least 20 instances in which Yvonne Murphy referred wards under her care to her own agency, which charged them $1.5 million for services.
  • Lax Judicial Oversight: Judges allowed the legally questionable arrangements for years — even when officials flagged the apparent conflict.

These highlights were written by the reporters and editors who worked on this story.

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