CA_Beneficiary
Junior Member
Father was a drinker who thought he found his dream woman (Stanford Graduate, working on passing her Bar Exams, sophisticated, elegant, etc...). He marries this woman, but then drowns in his jacuzzi 6 weeks after they were married.
Over the course of the next two years. The omitted spouse took over the family home of 35 years, sold off a lot of household property despite there being a court restraining order prohibiting the removal of any estate property (i.e., vehicles, outbuildings, tools, firearms, jewelry, etc...). No other family member was allowed back in the home unless accompanied by our various attorneys. Omitted spouse is now on the verge of obtaining 1/3 of the Life Insurance proceeds intended for the Father's grandchildren's educational fund, and 1/3 of the sale of the family home (also intended for the grandchildren's educational fund).
On the eve of all of this we've just learned the following: The Omitted spouse lied to our Father and never had a college degree. Omitted Spouse was a convicted felon (Grand Theft, Forgery, Embezzlement), and she has been running from a huge restitution payment she owed for the last 10 years (nearly $100,000) for the thefts she perpetrated against her employer. Woman also falsified her birthdate on her marriage certificate to our Father (made herself 6 years younger).
This is all very well documented. Can we now have her excluded as the Omitted Spouse primarily for the fraud she committed against our Father and our entire family? This is not a nice person.
Over the course of the next two years. The omitted spouse took over the family home of 35 years, sold off a lot of household property despite there being a court restraining order prohibiting the removal of any estate property (i.e., vehicles, outbuildings, tools, firearms, jewelry, etc...). No other family member was allowed back in the home unless accompanied by our various attorneys. Omitted spouse is now on the verge of obtaining 1/3 of the Life Insurance proceeds intended for the Father's grandchildren's educational fund, and 1/3 of the sale of the family home (also intended for the grandchildren's educational fund).
On the eve of all of this we've just learned the following: The Omitted spouse lied to our Father and never had a college degree. Omitted Spouse was a convicted felon (Grand Theft, Forgery, Embezzlement), and she has been running from a huge restitution payment she owed for the last 10 years (nearly $100,000) for the thefts she perpetrated against her employer. Woman also falsified her birthdate on her marriage certificate to our Father (made herself 6 years younger).
This is all very well documented. Can we now have her excluded as the Omitted Spouse primarily for the fraud she committed against our Father and our entire family? This is not a nice person.