NAPOLEON H. WILSON
WOMAN ALLEGES
RELATIVE
ABUSED, FAMILY KEPT
FROM HIM
By Cash Michaels
Editor
[Originally published in the Winston-Salem Chronicle 11-11-2015]
A
Winston-Salem woman alleges that her late cousin, Napoleon Wilson, was taken
against his will by Forsyth County Dept. of Social Services (FCDSS), and
physically abused while the department served as his guardian. His family could
do little about it, she alleges, because they were blocked from seeing him
several times, and the Forsyth County Clerk of Superior Court held proceedings
without informing them regarding his welfare.
There is still much to be known about the Napoleon Wilson case that is buried deep in the files of FCDSS – files that are not public record even years after his death. But this much is clear – as in a previous case The Chronicle has reported on involving the Forsyth Clerk’s Office, orders issued in an effort to establish a legal guardianship of Mr. Wilson by FCDSS, and uncovered by The Chronicle, were not legal at all, because they were not properly entered into the court record, as mandated by North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure which directs clerks to file-stamp and initial all orders they issue prior to filing.
For Sandra
Jackson, Mr. Wilson’s cousin, the revelations are still painful years after his
passing, because she believes that her elderly loved one, like many others, was
targeted, and then trapped by a system where his legal rights were violated,
his personal well-being and estate corrupted, and there was little Wilson’s
family could do to advocate for him until the day he died.
And Ms. Jackson
believes that this has been happening to many others, for many, many years.
Based on The Chronicle’s preliminary
investigation of numerous files from the Forsyth County Clerk’s Office, she may
be right.
There are
two versions of what happened to Napoleon Hall Wilson, 81, of Winston-Salem in
August 2005 – one through interviews, the other through public documents.
Mr. Wilson
was a proud military veteran and widower who was known for being industrious,
fiercely independent, and kind. He owned property and had been successful in
business. His family respected his generosity and work ethic. They believed
that in his waning years, Wilson’s advanced age required family care,
management and companionship.
According
to documents, Napoleon Wilson was seen much differently by psychiatrists at
Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center (WFUBMC), social workers at
FCDSS, and ultimately, Theresa Hinshaw, then an assistant clerk in the Forsyth
County Clerk of Superior Court’s Office.
In an
August 23, 2005 letter to clerk Hinshaw, Dr. Joseph Williams of the Dept. of
Psychiatry at WFUBMC, wrote Wilson “…was admitted to the adult psychiatric unit
on August 18, 2005 after law enforcement became concerned about his mental
status.” Dr. Williams went on to state that “…the patient had called 911
several times complaining of the garbage collectors in his community trying to
do harm to him.” Dr. Williams also wrote that Mr. Wilson, “…had demonstrated
increased agitation, confusion and memory loss over the course of the past
month,” adding that Wilson’s “caretaker” indicated that he had not been keeping
up with his medications.
The letter
maintained that Wilson had had dementia since 2000 and a history of seizures
that bring about a “…state of psychosis.”
“Because of
these mental and cognitive limitations, it is our opinion that Mr. Wilson is
not capable of conducting health, personal and business affairs in a
responsible manner,” Dr. Williams continued in the August 2005 letter.
“Therefore it would be in his best interest to have a guardian appointed to
oversee these decisions.”
“There are
no known family members available to do this,” Dr. Williams concluded in the letter
to asst. clerk Hinshaw.
By
Williams’ own admission, Mr. Wilson had been in their care at the psychiatric
unit since August 18th, allegedly brought in by law enforcement, but
by the time the doctor wrote that letter on August 23rd, no family
members living in Winston-Salem had been contacted by either the hospital or
police, even though Wilson’s “caretaker” was familiar with them.
Six days
later, that notarized letter, entered on August 29, 2005, was used in a
“Petition for Adjudication of Incompetence and Application for Appointment of
Guardian or Limited Guardian and Interim Guardian” to the Forsyth Clerk’s
Office.
The documents show the petitioner
being a “Maryanne Keller” of “UCBH - Risk Management.” That petition lists
Wilson as “an inpatient in the facility named above,” and his address as
“Sticht Center,” referring to the J. Paul Sticht Center on Aging and
Rehabilitation, part of the Wake Forest School of Medicine.
The petition goes on to state that
Wilson “…has dementia, paranoia and agitation…” referring then to the “attached
letter’ from Dr. Williams.
Page two of that petition notes that Mr. Wilson “lacks capacity” for all indicated areas of “independent living,” adding that “caretaker lives w/him.”
Page two of that petition notes that Mr. Wilson “lacks capacity” for all indicated areas of “independent living,” adding that “caretaker lives w/him.”
Finally, under a section titled
“Recommended Guardian(s),” it is written that if the caretaker is not
interested, “…then FCDSS.”
A receipt shows that a “Maryanne
Keller” paid the required $40.00 filing fee.
On that same August 29, 2005 date,
clerk Hinshaw issued a notice for a Sept. 15, 2005 hearing on the incompetence
petition, and “Order Appointing Guardian Ad Litem,” a clerk-appointed attorney
who is supposed to legally advocate for the patient. That document, which is
not file-stamped as entered, showed that attorney Fred P. Flynt, III was
appointed.
If Mr. Wilson did not want attorney
Flynt, he had the legal right to hire his own attorney to represent his
interests in that Sept. 15th hearing. By all accounts, Wilson had
the means because he wasn’t indigent.
Another “Notice” on the
incompetency hearing for appointing a guardian dated August 29th,
2005 only lists the caretaker’s name and Winston-Salem address – the address
Napoleon Wilson reportedly lived at – as being formally notified to “…appear
and offer evidence as to whether the Respondent (Wilson) is an incompetent
adult and a guardian should be appointed.
The caretaker is not a relative, yet
her name is the only one listed to appear.
It is now eleven days since Napoleon Wilson
was brought in to the hospital, according to Clerk of court records, and yet
there is still no documented effort on the part of law enforcement, the hospital,
the Clerk’s Office, or later, according to Wilson’s cousin, Sandra Jackson, the
guardian ad litem supposed to be advocating for him, to locate any family in
the area.
Ms. Jackson, now in her 50’s, not
only lived at the same address in Winston-Salem then as she does now, but has
also been an employee of the city’s sanitation department for over 27 years. In
addition, she was already a guardian of an adult family member at the time,
meaning her records were already on file at the Clerk’s Office.
But more importantly, Ms. Jackson
told The Chronicle, the caretaker in
question, was actually a woman named “Sarah (The Chronicle is withholding her last name),” Napoleon Wilson’s girlfriend
of several years who was known very well by Jackson, and communicated with her
often. Wilson and Sarah were living together years after his wife had deceased.
So why didn’t any official, from
any of the institutions involved, ask Sarah if Mr. Wilson had family in the area
and how to contact them? Sandra Jackson says that in fact, they did know,
because Sarah did tell at least the hospital since she had to be in contact
with doctors about his medication.
“She told them he has a niece who
could take care of him,” Ms. Jackson told The
Chronicle, noting that she had always thought of Mr. Wilson as an “uncle,”
and referred to him as such, even though they were actually cousins.
In fact, on Sept. 15, 2005, Ms. Jackson
says she accompanied “Ms. Sarah,” to the Forsyth Hall of Justice, Room #243 as
directed, but when they got there, they were told that the special proceeding
had already taken place, and FCDSS had been appointed guardian of person for
Napoleon Wilson.
Sandra Jackson says that what
happened next was nothing less than a horror show, with her being denied being
able to see her cousin for three months, taking pictures of his injuries from
alleged abuse at the all-white facility he was being kept at; and ultimately
being denied her application to become his guardian.
The ordeal, she believes, allegedly
contributed to his death.
In
Part two, Ms. Jackson tells her side of the story, and why she believes that
FCDSS and the Clerk’s Office allegedly conspired to work against Napoleon Wilson’s family.
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