The victim, now 91, had just been released from a local hospital in August 2012 when Sable S. Edwards, 26 (above, left), and Teresa V. Butch, 28 (right), “went up and identified themselves as caretakers and companions for senior citizens,” Leonia Police Chief Thomas Rowe said after they were arrested more than a year later.
“Over a period of time, they were able to gain his confidence and develop a relationship with the man,” the chief told CLIFFVIEW PILOT. “They delivered meals, offered him companionship.”
Four weeks after meeting him, Rowe said, they told the man they had “dire financial circumstances”: Butch needed brain surgery right away and couldn’t afford it.
The trusting victim wrote a personal check for $30,000.
“They insisted it was just a loan,” Rowe said. “They said they had recently inherited a house that was up for sale and that, once it was sold, they would pay him back.”
As weeks passed, they asked for more money for additional medical treatments and procedures for blood disoders, the chief said.
He gave them $104,000.
“He truly believed he was assisting someone in need and would be reimbursed,” Rowe said. “But my detectives learned that they never received any property — or any medical treatments.”
Still, they gained enough confidence to take their elderly victim to an attorney and have his will changed, the chief said.
“He would have given them his home, which is worth about $500,000, and additional cash,” Rowe said.
By then, however, an alert social worker with New Jersey Adult Protective Services got suspicious and called Rowe’s detectives.
When Edwards and Butch got wind of the resulting investigation, the chief said, they got a promissory note from their attorney to reimburse the victim — at $500 a month for the $134,000 that they owed him.
“It comes to 268 months,” said Rowe. “22.3 years for a man in his late 80s.”
Detectives Anthony Mikatarian, Robert Kennedy and Michael Jennings “put their hearts and souls into the case,” the chief said. “They spoke with the victim and showed him how these two were obviously up to no good. The detectives worked very diligently on this case. It was their efforts that brought it to a successful conclusion.
“People like this deserve to go to prison for a significant amount of them,” Rowe said. “They prey on the helpless and the giving, taking money that may have been passed on to kids or grandkids for their education.
“This man’s only sin was that he was a very trusting person.”
The chief also offered some advice: “If you think someone in your family is vulnerable, and you don’t want to see them taken advantage of, get power of attorney yourself.”
At the very least, have a talk with your elders, he said. Tell them of stories such as these and what can happen if they’re not careful.
MUGSHOTS: Courtesy BERGEN COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE
Click here to follow Daily Voice Hackensack and receive free news updates.