Doctor Steals From 94 Year Old Mother
Doctor Charged With Stealing 94-Year-Old Mother's Life Savings
Original Post Date: 24th Jan, 2008 - 2:55pm
What a creep! Stealing money from his OWN old mother! Greedy man!
NEW YORK — A physician was charged Wednesday with stealing his 94-year-old mother's life savings of more than $800,000 and leaving her virtually impoverished. "He took pretty much all that she had," Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau said Wednesday when he announced the indictment of Dr. Robin Motz. He said Motz' mother, Minnie, now lives on a small pension and Social Security. Motz, 68, was accused of stealing $832,453 from his mother after taking control of her finances through a power of attorney in 2003. Morgenthau said Motz spent the money on flat screen TVs and other luxuries, travel to the Bahamas, Mexico and Hong Kong, and on his vacation house in Hillsdale, N.Y. "This is a mini-Astor case," Morgenthau said, referring to charges pending against Anthony Marshall, who is accused of massive thefts from his mother, society grande dame and philanthropist Brooke Astor. Motz was arraigned in Manhattan's state Supreme Court where he pleaded not guilty to second-degree grand larceny and second-degree money laundering. He faces up to 15 years in prison if convicted on either count. Motz' lawyer, Sean Dwyer, said his client "is devastated by this, but we're looking forward to the chance to defend him." Justice John Cataldo released Motz on $200,000 cash bail and scheduled his next court date for Jan. 30. Motz, who lives on the Upper East Side with his third wife, is an internist who practices in Englewood, N.J., and has admitting privileges at Columbia Presbyterian Hospital in Manhattan. Minnie Motz, a retired librarian, was mentally alert but had some physical ailments, Morgenthau said. He said Motz told his mother he was using her power of attorney — the legal right to make decisions for her — to consolidate her bank accounts to aid him in paying her bills. In early 2004, Morgenthau said, Motz moved his mother's investment accounts from Oppenheimer & Co. To Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc. Where he had an account. He depleted the accounts by paying his own $400,000 credit card bills, paying a contractor $200,000 for working on his vacation house, paying his racket club dues, and giving large cash gifts to his children…
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