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Tag: elder abuse

  • Mom was ‘afraid’ of son, then he killed her in staged break-in, NC officials say

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    A 65-year-old woman was shot dead by her son in 2023, North Carolina prosecutors said.

    A 65-year-old woman was shot dead by her son in 2023, North Carolina prosecutors said.

    Screengrab from Hayworth-Miller Funeral Homes and Crematory

    A man is going to prison after pleading guilty in connection with the 2023 shooting that left his mom dead, North Carolina prosecutors said.

    In June of that year, Donald Ryan Fink called 911 and said his mom, 65-year-old Debra Fink, had been shot during a break-in, according to an Oct. 7 news release by the Forsyth County District Attorney.

    When Kernersville officers arrived, they found the mom with a gunshot wound to the face and tried to save her but weren’t successful, prosecutors said.

    At the time of the shooting, the woman couldn’t walk or stand because she was recovering from knee surgery, the district attorney’s office said.

    During the investigation, detectives found the weapon used to kill the woman and an empty shell casing, along with a damaged doorframe, prosecutors said.

    After talking to witnesses, officers learned Donald Fink had been seen with the same gun earlier that day and that he pointed it at a different woman, the district attorney’s office said.

    Witnesses also told officers no one was seeing coming or leaving from the home, prosecutors said.

    Later, after investigators determined Donald Fink had inconsistencies in his statements, he confessed to staging the crime scene by kicking down the door, the district attorney’s said.

    Although Fink told officers the shooting was an accident, evidence officers found didn’t support this, as he had gunshot residue on his hands and his DNA was found on the gun, prosecutors said.

    Witnesses told officers Fink had stolen money from his mom, had threatened to shoot her before and that she was “afraid of her son,” prosecutors said.

    On Oct. 7, he pleaded guilty to second-degree murder, prosecutors said.

    He was sentenced to 28 years and 9 months to 35 ½ years in prison, officials said.

    Kernersville is about a 90-mile drive northwest from Raleigh.

    If you are experiencing domestic violence and need someone to talk to, call the National Domestic Violence Hotline for support at 1-800-799-7233 or text “START” to 88788.

    Paloma Chavez

    McClatchy DC

    Paloma Chavez is a reporter covering real-time news on the West Coast. She has a degree in journalism from the University of Southern California.

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    Paloma Chavez

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  • Scammers are swiping billions from Americans every year. Worse, most crooks are getting away with it.

    Scammers are swiping billions from Americans every year. Worse, most crooks are getting away with it.

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    The scammers are winning.

    Sophisticated overseas criminals are stealing tens of billions of dollars from Americans every year, a crime wave projected to get worse as the U.S. population ages and technology like AI makes it easier than ever to perpetrate fraud and get away with it.

    Internet and telephone scams have grown “exponentially,” overwhelming police and prosecutors who catch and convict relatively few of the perpetrators, said Kathy Stokes, director of fraud prevention at AARP’s Fraud Watch Network.

    Victims rarely get their money back, including older people who have lost life savings to romance scams, grandparent scams, technical support fraud and other common grifts.

    “We are at a crisis level in fraud in society,” Stokes said. “So many people have joined the fray because it is pretty easy to be a criminal. They don’t have to follow any rules. And you can make a lot of money, and then there’s very little chance that you’re going to get caught.”

    A recent case from Ohio, in which an 81-year-old man was targeted by a scammer and allegedly responded with violence, illustrates the law enforcement challenge.

    Police say the man fatally shot an Uber driver after wrongly assuming she was in on a plot to extract $12,000 in supposed bond money for a relative. The driver fell victim to the same scammer, dispatched to the home midway between Dayton and Columbus to pick up a package for delivery, according to authorities.

    Homeowner William Brock was charged with murder in the fatal March 25 shooting of Lo-Letha Hall, but the scammer who threatened Brock over the phone and set the tragic chain of events in motion remains on the loose more than three months later.

    Brock pleaded not guilty, saying he was in fear for his life.

    Advantage scammers

    Online and telephone rackets have become so commonplace that law enforcement agencies and adult protective services don’t have the resources to keep up.

    “It’s a little bit like drinking from a fire hose,” said Brady Finta, a former FBI agent who supervised elder fraud investigations. “There’s just so much of it, logistically and reasonably, it’s almost impossible to overcome right now.”

    Grifts also can be difficult to investigate, particularly ones that originate overseas, with stolen funds quickly converted into hard-to-track cryptocurrency or siphoned into foreign bank accounts.

    Some police departments don’t take financial scams as seriously as other crime and victims wind up discouraged and demoralized, according to Paul Greenwood, who spent 22 years prosecuting elder financial abuse cases in San Diego.

    “There’s a lot of law enforcement who think that because a victim sends money voluntarily through gift cards or through wire transfers, or for buying crypto, that they’re actually engaging in a consensual transaction,” said Greenwood, who travels the country teaching police how to spot fraud. “And that is a big mistake because it’s not. It’s not consensual. They’ve been defrauded.”

    Federal prosecutors typically don’t get involved unless the fraud reaches a certain dollar amount, Greenwood said.

    The U.S. Justice Department says it does not impose a blanket monetary threshold for federal prosecution of elder financial abuse. But it confirmed that some of the 93 U.S. attorneys’ offices nationwide may set their own thresholds, giving priority to cases in which there are more victims or greater financial impact. Federal prosecutors file hundreds of elder fraud and abuse cases annually.

    The Federal Trade Commission says the “vast majority” of frauds go unreported. Often, victims are reluctant to come forward.

    A 74-year-old woman recently charged with robbing a credit union north of Cincinnati was the victim of an online scam, according to her family. Authorities say they believe the woman was preyed on by a scammer, yet there is no record she made a formal police report.

    “These people are very good at what they do, and they’re very good at deceiving people and prying money out of them,” said Fairview Township, Ohio, police Sgt. Brandon McCroskey, who investigated the robbery. “I’ve seen people almost want to fist fight the police and bank tellers because they … believe in their mind that they need to get this money out.”

    A devastating scheme

    Older people hold more wealth as a group and present a ripe target for scammers. The impact can be devastating since many of these victims are past their working years and don’t have much time to recoup losses.

    Elder fraud complaints to the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center rose by 14% last year, with losses increasing by 11% to $3.4 billion, according to a recent FBI report.

    Other estimates put the annual loss much higher.

    A 2023 AARP study calculated that Americans over 60 lose $28.3 billion each year to fraud. The Federal Trade Commission, seeking to account for unreported losses, estimated fraudsters stole a staggering $137 billion in 2022, including $48 billion from older adults. The authors of that study acknowledged a “considerable degree of uncertainty.”

    In San Diego, 80-year-old William Bortz said criminals stole his family’s nest egg of almost $700,000 in an elaborate scheme involving a nonexistent Amazon order, a fake “refund processing center” in Hong Kong, doctored bank statements and an instruction that Bortz needed to “synchronize bank accounts” in order to get his money back.

    Bortz’s scammer was relentless and persuasive, harassing him with dozens of phone calls and, at one point, taking control of his computer.

    Even though he was the victim of a crime, Bortz struggles with self-blame.

    “I understand now why so much elder abuse fraud is never reported. Because when you look back at it, you think, ‘How could I have been so stupid?’” said Bortz, who retired after a career in banking, financial services and real estate.

    His daughter, Ave Williams, said local police and the FBI were diligent in trying to track down the overseas scammer and recover the money, but ran into multiple dead ends. The family blames Bortz’s bank, which Williams said ignored multiple red flags and facilitated several large wire transfers by her father over the course of eight days. The bank denied wrongdoing and the family’s lawsuit against it was dismissed.

    “The scammers are getting better,” Williams said. ”We need our law enforcement to be given the tools they need, and we need our banks to get better because they are the first line of defense.”

    The Justice Department contends industry needs to do more, saying the U.S. can’t prosecute its way out the problem.

    “Private industry — including the tech, retail, banking, fintech, and telecommunications sectors — must make it harder for fraudsters to defraud victims and harder to launder victim proceeds,” the agency said in a statement to The Associated Press.

    A way forward

    Banking industry officials told a Senate subcommittee in May they are investing heavily in new technologies to stop fraud, “and some hold great promise.” The American Bankers Association says it’s working on a program to coordinate real-time communication among banks to better flag suspicious activity and reduce the flow of stolen funds.

    But industry officials said the banks cannot singlehandedly prevent fraud. They said the U.S. needs an overarching national strategy to combat scammers, calling the federal government’s current efforts disjointed and uncoordinated.

    Law enforcement agencies and industry need to join forces to fight fraud more quickly and efficiently, said Finta, the former FBI agent, who launched a nonprofit called the National Elder Fraud Coordination Center to cultivate better cooperation between law enforcement and major corporations like Walmart, Amazon and Google.

    “There’s very, very smart people and there’s very powerful, wealthy companies that want this to stop,” he said. “So we do have the ability, I think, to make a greater impact and to help out our brothers and sisters in law enforcement that are struggling with this tsunami of fraud.”

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    Michael Rubinkam

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  • 3 men from Virginia accused of roofing scam in San Mateo County

    3 men from Virginia accused of roofing scam in San Mateo County

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    SAN MATEO – Three men from Virginia are under arrest in San Mateo County after police said they took part in a roofing scam that defrauded elderly residents on the Peninsula.

    According to the San Mateo Police Department, officers launched an investigation in Nov. 2023. Investigators learned that a group of men who purportedly had “Irish accents” operated a fake construction company called “Statewide Roofing and Siding.”

    Police said the suspects used a fake contractor’s license, performed work that was likely not needed and overcharged for work that was not completed.

    Investigators worked with other police departments in San Mateo County and found additional victims of similar scams, police said.

    On May 7, San Mateo police received a report from another victim who said that he believed that the company he hired to fix the roof of his mother’s home was scamming him.

    The victim said after a “free” inspection, the company initially determined that minor repairs were needed. Eventually, the company said that additional work was needed and finally suggested that the entire roof needed replacement.

    Investigators learned that the suspects had used fake names and used another company name “Teco Roofing and Masonry”. All three suspects were contacted by police the next day and were arrested and booked into the San Mateo County Jail.

    san-mateo-roofing-scam-suspects-051624.jpg
    (L-R) Charlie Anderson, David Anderson and Darren Temple are accused of a roofing scam in San Mateo County. All three were arrested on May 8, 2024.

    San Mateo Police Department


    The suspects are identified as 22-year-old Charlie Anderson, 39-year-old David Anderson and 40-year-old Darren Temple. All three men are residents of Herndon, Virginia, a suburb in the Washington, DC metropolitan area.

    Police said the suspects are facing charges of theft from an elder or dependent adult, obtaining money by false pretenses, fraudulent use of a contractor’s license and conspiracy.

    Jail records show that all three men remain in the San Mateo County Jail as of Thursday, with their next court appearance set for May 22.

    Police said Thursday that they are searching for additional victims. Anyone who may have had roofing work done with the companies are asked to contact Officer Thornburg of the San Mateo Police Department at 650-522-7650. 

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    Tim Fang

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  • DeSantis suspends Orlando commissioner Regina Hill days after arrest

    DeSantis suspends Orlando commissioner Regina Hill days after arrest

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    Photo by Monivette Cordeiro

    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis suspended Orlando City Commissioner Regina Hill today, days after she was arrested and indicted for alleged elder abuse and fraud. The suspension came less than two hours before she was set to join a City Council meeting.

    DeSantis’ office at 12:12 p.m. Monday issued an executive order formally suspending Hill from her role as City Commissioner for the city of Orlando. Hill has served as the representative of the Parramore neighborhood and other parts of west Orlando since 2013. The executive order was emailed to the media about 15 minutes ahead of the start of the council’s 2 o’clock meeting.

    “Regina I. Hill is prohibited from performing any official act, duty, or function of public office; from receiving any pay or allowance; and from being entitled to any of the emoluments or privileges of public office during the period of this suspension, which period shall be from today until a further Executive Order is issued or as otherwise provided by law,” DeSantis’ order reads, in part.

    Under Florida law, DeSantis is authorized to suspend any elected municipal officer who is indicted or informed against for the commission of a state felony or misdemeanor, the order states. The governor may also suspend from office an elected municipal officer for “malfeasance, misfeasance, neglect of duty, habitual drunkenness, incompetence, or permanent inability to perform official duties.”

    According to the city charter, Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer has 10 days after a suspension to call a special election, which must occur within 45 days of being called.

    During the city council’s scheduled meeting Monday afternoon, Dyer said city staff will be working with the Supervisor of Elections office to schedule that special election for Tuesday, May 21.

    City council plans to hold a special meeting to discuss the logistics of that process on Monday, April 8, Dyer added, with Hill absent from the dais.

    Commissioner Hill, a Parramore native, was arrested last Thursday following a grand jury indictment on felony charges of elder exploitation, personal identification fraud and mortgage fraud. The Florida Department of Law Enforcement has been investigating Hill for over a year, and the investigation, per the agency, is still ongoing.

    Hill pleaded not guilty last week to the seven felony charges she faces. The 58-year-old city commissioner was reportedly bailed out of Orange County Jail Thursday afternoon, the day of her arrest, on a $40,000 bond. If convicted of all charges, the FDLE has stated that she could face up to 180 years in prison.

    Hill, who has an arrest record dating back decades, has been accused of exploiting a 96-year-old constituent and defrauding the elderly woman by spending over $100,000 of the elderly woman’s money for Hill’s own personal benefit or best interest, using those funds for personal purchases such as vacations, home renovations for one of the victim’s properties, a facelift, and expensive perfume. (The victim is described in court documents as having a cognitive disability and age-related infirmities, so we are not naming her for privacy reasons.)

    The FDLE alleges that Hill also fraudulently obtained a second power of attorney to buy a home worth more than $400,0000 with the elderly victim as the co-signer. The victim allegedly told FDLE agents that this was done without her knowledge or consent. Hill has denied the allegations, and told Spectrum News 13 in a statement last week that she “loved and cared for” the elderly woman “like my own family.”

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    McKenna Schueler and Chloe Greenberg

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  • Orlando commissioner Regina Hill arrested, indicted for alleged elder abuse and fraud

    Orlando commissioner Regina Hill arrested, indicted for alleged elder abuse and fraud

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    Photo by Monivette Cordeiro

    Orlando city commissioner Regina Hill was arrested Thursday following a grand jury indictment released the day before on charges of elder exploitation, personal identification fraud, and mortgage fraud.

    Hill, a Parramore native first elected to represent her home neighborhood and other parts of west Orlando in 2013, has pleaded not guilty to the seven felony charges she faces. The 58-year-old city commissioner was reportedly bailed out of Orange County Jail Thursday afternoon, on a $40,000 bond. If convicted of all charges, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement states that Hill could face up to 180 years in prison.

    Hill has been accused of exploiting a 96-year-old constituent and defrauding the elderly woman by spending over $100,000 of the elderly woman’s money for Hill’s own personal benefit, including personal purchases such as vacations, home renovations, a facelift, and expensive perfume. (We are not naming the alleged victim for privacy reasons.)

    The FDLE, which has been investigating Hill’s alleged mistreatment for over a year, also said that Hill fraudulently obtained a second power of attorney to buy a home worth more than $400,0000 with the elderly victim as the co-signer. This was allegedly done without the victim’s knowledge or consent. Hill has also reportedly been living with her son and his girlfriend in one of the victim’s vacant homes.

    Hill has been accused of manipulating the woman by securing power of attorney over her shortly after they first met in 2021. The victim is described in court filings as having a cognitive disability and age-related infirmities.

    Reportedly, the two met after code enforcement informed Hill of dilapidated conditions of the victim’s home. A circuit judge in Orange County issued a temporary protective injunction, cutting off Hill’s access to the victim’s money and all contact with the victim, earlier this month.

    Hill has denied the allegations of mistreatment, which come from Tampa-based woman Adriane Alexander. According to court filings by the victim, Alexander is the daughter of a lifelong friend of the victim’s and has known the victim all of her life. Alexander displaced Hill and secured power of attorney over the elderly victim in February.

    Hill has specifically been indicted by grand jurors of Orange County on seven charges: three counts of exploitation of an elderly person in excess of $50,000; one count of a scheme to defraud $50,000 or more; two counts of personal identification fraud; and one count of mortgage fraud exceeding $100,000.

    The FDLE has reportedly declined to comment on any allegation of abuse of office, as the agency was strictly investigating Hill as a private citizen, according to The Daily Beast. A city spokesperson told Orlando Weekly in a statement that the city is aware of Hill’s arrest and the charges levied against her, but said the city does not have the authority to discipline an elected official “as that power lies with the Governor.”

    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis does indeed have the authority to suspend local elected officials (as when he suspended state attorney general Monique Worrell), and told reporters on Wednesday that if a grand jury did indict a municipal elected official, he “would suspend.”

    The city spokesperson confirmed that, pursuant to the city’s charter, the city would be prepared to conduct a special election to temporarily fill Hill’s District 5 seat, if Hill is indeed suspended. The city did not respond to our request for comment on how long they have been aware of the FDLE investigation into Hill.

    Hill is no stranger to legal troubles, nor life challenges. She has a decades-long history of arrest records dating back to the 1980’s, ranging from DUIs to an arrest in Alabama last year for misdemeanor public intoxication and disorderly conduct charges that were later dropped. She’s also faced significant challenges, from suffering the loss of her 24-year-old daughter Arvonni in 2015, to the the loss of a niece in 2021, who was killed at a local gas station.

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    McKenna Schueler

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  • FBI warns of

    FBI warns of

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    FBI warns of “phantom hacker” scam targeting seniors – CBS News


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    Online scammers known as “phantom hackers” who operate as fake tech support specialists are targeting older adults, sometimes bilking them out of hundreds of thousands of dollars. One Navy veteran lost $800,000 to such a scam. Jeff Pegues has his story.

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  • This community’s quarter century without a newborn shows the scale of Japan’s population crisis | CNN

    This community’s quarter century without a newborn shows the scale of Japan’s population crisis | CNN

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    Tokyo
    CNN
     — 

    When Kentaro Yokobori was born almost seven years ago, he was the first newborn in the Sogio district of Kawakami village in 25 years. His birth was like a miracle for many villagers.

    Well-wishers visited his parents Miho and Hirohito for more than a week – nearly all of them senior citizens, including some who could barely walk.

    “The elderly people were very happy to see [Kentaro], and an elderly lady who had difficulty climbing the stairs, with her cane, came to me to hold my baby in her arms. All the elderly people took turns holding my baby,” Miho recalled.

    During that quarter century without a newborn, the village population shrank by more than half to just 1,150 – down from 6,000 as recently as 40 years ago – as younger residents left and older residents died. Many homes were abandoned, some overrun by wildlife.

    Kawakami is just one of the countless small rural towns and villages that have been forgotten and neglected as younger Japanese head for the cities. More than 90% of Japanese now live in urban areas like Tokyo, Osaka and Kyoto – all linked by Japan’s always-on-time Shinkansen bullet trains.

    That has left rural areas and industries like agriculture, forestry, and farming facing a critical labor shortage that will likely get worse in the coming years as the workforce ages. By 2022, the number of people working in agriculture and forestry had declined to 1.9 million from 2.25 million 10 years earlier.

    Yet the demise of Kawakami is emblematic of a problem that goes far beyond the Japanese countryside.

    The problem for Japan is: people in the cities aren’t having babies either.

    “Time is running out to procreate,” Prime Minister Fumio Kishida told a recent press conference, a slogan that seems so far to have fallen short of inspiring the city dwelling majority of the Japanese public.

    Amid a flood of disconcerting demographic data, he warned earlier this year the country was “on the brink of not being able to maintain social functions.”

    The country saw 799,728 births in 2022, the lowest number on record and barely more than half the 1.5 million births it registered in 1982. Its fertility rate – the average number of children born to women during their reproductive years – has fallen to 1.3 – far below the 2.1 required to maintain a stable population. Deaths have outpaced births for more than a decade.

    And in the absence of meaningful immigration – foreigners accounted for just 2.2% of the population in 2021, according to the Japanese government, compared to 13.6% in the United States – some fear the country is hurtling toward the point of no return, when the number of women of child-bearing age hits a critical low from which there is no way to reverse the trend of population decline.

    All this has left the leaders of the world’s third-largest economy facing the unenviable task of trying to fund pensions and health care for a ballooning elderly population even as the workforce shrinks.

    Up against them are the busy urban lifestyles and long working hours that leave little time for Japanese to start families and the rising costs of living that mean having a baby is simply too expensive for many young people. Then there are the cultural taboos that surround talking about fertility and patriarchal norms that work against mothers returning to work.

    Doctor Yuka Okada, the director of Grace Sugiyama Clinic in Tokyo, said cultural barriers meant talking about a woman’s fertility was often off limits.

    “(People see the topic as) a little bit embarrassing. Think about your body and think about (what happens) after fertility. It is very important. So, it’s not embarrassing.”

    Okada is one of the rare working mothers in Japan who has a highly successful career after childbirth. Many of Japan’s highly educated women are relegated to part-time or retail roles – if they reenter the workforce at all. In 2021, 39% of women workers were in part-time employment, compared to 15% of men, according to the OECD.

    Tokyo is hoping to address some of these problems, so that working women today will become working mothers tomorrow. The metropolitan government is starting to subsidize egg freezing, so that women have a better chance of a successful pregnancy if they decide to have a baby later in life.

    New parents in Japan already get a “baby bonus” of thousands of dollars to cover medical costs. For singles? A state sponsored dating service powered by Artificial Intelligence.

    Kaoru Harumashi works on cedar wood to make a barrel.

    Whether such measures can turn the tide, in urban or rural areas, remains to be seen. But back in the countryside, Kawakami village offers a precautionary tale of what can happen if demographic declines are not reversed.

    Along with its falling population, many of its traditional crafts and ways of life are at risk of dying out.

    Among the villagers who took turns holding the young Kentaro was Kaoru Harumashi, a lifelong resident of Kawakami village in his 70s. The master woodworker has formed a close bond with the boy, teaching him how to carve the local cedar from surrounding forests.

    “He calls me grandpa, but if a real grandpa lived here, he wouldn’t call me grandpa,” he said. “My grandson lives in Kyoto and I don’t get to see him often. I probably feel a stronger affection for Kentaro, whom I see more often, even though we are not related by blood.”

    Both of Harumashi’s sons moved away from the village years ago, like many other young rural residents do in Japan.

    “If the children don’t choose to continue living in the village, they will go to the city,” he said.

    When the Yokoboris moved to Kawakami village about a decade ago, they had no idea most residents were well past retirement age. Over the years, they’ve watched older friends pass away and longtime community traditions fall by the wayside.

    “There are not enough people to maintain villages, communities, festivals, and other ward organizations, and it is becoming impossible to do so,” Miho said.

    “The more I get to know people, I mean elderly people, the more I feel sadness that I have to say goodbye to them. Life is actually going on with or without the village,” she said. “At the same time, it is very sad to see the surrounding, local people dwindling away.”

    Kaoru Harumashi is a lifelong villager. Kentaro calls him grandpa.

    If that sounds depressing, perhaps it’s because in recent years, Japan’s battle to boost the birthrate has given few reasons for optimism.

    Still, a small ray of hope may just be discernible in the story of the Yokoboris. Kentaro’s birth was unusual not only because the village had waited so long, but because his parents had moved to the countryside from the city – bucking the decades old trend in which the young increasingly plump for the 24/7 convenience of Japanese city life.

    Some recent surveys suggest more young people like them are considering the appeals of country life, lured by the low cost of living, clean air, and low stress lifestyles that many see as vital to having families. One study of residents in the Tokyo area found 34% of respondents expressed an interest in moving to a rural area, up from 25.1% in 2019. Among those in their 20s, as many as 44.9% expressed an interest.

    The Yokoboris say starting a family would have been far more difficult – financially and personally – if they still lived in the city.

    Their decision to move was triggered by a Japanese national tragedy twelve years ago. On March 11, 2011, an earthquake shook the ground violently for several minutes across much of the country, triggering tsunami waves taller than a 10-story building that devastated huge swaths of the east coast and caused a meltdown at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant.

    Miho was an office worker in Tokyo at the time. She remembers feeling helpless as daily life in Japan’s largest city fell apart.

    “Everyone was panicking, so it was like a war, although I have never experienced a war. It was like having money but not being able to buy water. All the transportation was closed, so you couldn’t use it. I felt very weak,” she recalled.

    The tragedy was a moment of awakening for Miho and Hirohito, who was working as a graphic designer at the time.

    “The things I had been relying on suddenly felt unreliable, and I felt that I was actually living in a very unstable place. I felt that I had to secure such a place by myself,” he said.

    The couple found that place in one of Japan’s most remote areas, Nara prefecture. It is a land of majestic mountains and tiny townships, tucked away along winding roads beneath towering cedar trees taller than most of the buildings.

    They quit their jobs in the city and moved to a simple mountain house, where they run a small bed and breakfast. He learned the art of woodworking and specializes in producing cedar barrels for Japanese sake breweries. She is a full-time homemaker. They raise chickens, grow vegetables, chop wood, and care for Kentaro, who’s about to enter the first grade.

    The big question, for both Kawakami village and the rest of Japan: Is Kentaro’s birth a sign of better times to come – or a miracle birth in a dying way of life.

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  • Bedsore.Law Adds Seasoned Trial Attorney Elizabeth Todd to Lead North Carolina Expansion

    Bedsore.Law Adds Seasoned Trial Attorney Elizabeth Todd to Lead North Carolina Expansion

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    Bedsore.Law announces the addition of Elizabeth Todd as an Of Counsel member of the team. Elizabeth will oversee the firm’s North Carolina operations throughout the state, including new offices in Charlotte, Raleigh and Morganton.

    Press Release


    Jun 23, 2022

    For the last 22 years, Elizabeth Todd has devoted her practice to representing victims of nursing home abuse and neglect. She has taken on big insurance companies and nursing home chains – and won.  At a time when most lawyers in the state rejected nursing home cases as not worth pursuing, Elizabeth recognized the need to protect the most vulnerable in North Carolina – elderly and dependent nursing home residents.

    Elizabeth is an active member of the North Carolina legal and charitable communities. She is the former Chairperson of the North Carolina Association for Justice’s Nursing Home Litigation Section, and a former member of the Board of Directors for Friends of Residents in Long Term Care – North Carolina’s only non-profit advocacy group devoted exclusively to improving the conditions of the elderly in the state.

    Elizabeth Todd started practicing law in 1996 after graduating from Wake Forest Law School. While a student, Elizabeth worked for Legal Services of North Carolina in Charlotte representing the state’s most disadvantaged communities. 

    “Elizabeth brings with her decades of experience holding nursing homes accountable. She is tough, compassionate, and a fierce advocate for her clients.  We could not be more excited to have her join the team.” – Jeff Aidikoff, Bedsore Lawyer at Bedsore.Law  

    See Elizabeth’s Bio for more information.

    Bedsore.Law™ is the nation’s first bedsore specialty litigation firm. With offices located throughout the United States, Bedsore.Law is the largest bedsore litigation firm in the country.

    Contact Bedsore.Law™ today for a free consultation or contact Jeff Aidikoff [info@bedsore.law] for inquiries.

    Source: Bedsore.Law

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