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They take up a lot of space. My older sister is in nursing home after a stroke. All her income is now the nursing home's. She had sooo much credit and the bills keep coming. I know I am not responsible for them, but I don't know if I need to keep them in a file or something. I already have so much of her possessions in my house and now all these bills piling up.

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Just to be on the safe side, store them in a box, as they come. It is illegal in England to interfere or open other peoples mail I think. Just try contacting each one again and ask for a confirmation letter saying they understand. TELL them again, she has no money and you are not paying them, as it is not your responsibility. They will try and get their money from ANYONE.

GOOD LUCK

Hope your sisters health improves.
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I'd throw it all away. Even though you've spoken to them, a computer decides what gets mailed. I trashed every bill I received from my Mom. You are not responsible for her bills, and no matter how much they try to convince that you are resposible, don't fall for it. The only reason I even opened my Mom's mail was in case there was a check enclosed....if not....trashed.
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You are probably dealing with Collection agencies not the original debtor. Do you have POA for financial than you can open mail. Call the Office of Aging. Ask if they have someone who helps with credit. Maybe they can help you set up a letter to the creditors explaining that ur sister is now on Medicaid and no longer has money of her own. That because of this they need to stop sending bills or making calls. Do not tell them Where She resides. You, even as POA, are not personally responsible for her bills.
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What about sending them back marked Return to Sender?

The real problem is that if you don't get this resolved then you may be plagued by bill collectors for years to come, even after she has passed on. It might be worth while to seek legal advice and have the debt formally written off or at least have your contact information removed.
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If the money isn’t there, it isn’t there. Do not, under any circumstances, send any of your own funds to these companies. Just let it go.
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Well, this situation is not going to resolve itself, and the creditors aren't going to stop sending bills. So I would anticipate reaching this distressing situation and start planning now.

I would definitely save the bills, (even if there are no funds to pay them), not contact the creditors until they contact your sister by mail (never answer calls when the number is unknown), and when you do respond only in writing,, make sure that you understand your sister's rights under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act.

If you do accidentally answer a call for her, don't reveal anything, including your name or relationship, unless the caller reveals his/her identity first. Be prepared for obfuscation; they try to avoid giving out information on who they are or the purpose of the call. Typically they'll indicate they can only speak to your sister. That's a giveaway right there.

When you get creditor letters, and eventually you will, respond in writing only, using a post office box and not your own address, and respond within 30 days of (a) postmark date or (b) your receipt. I hedge on this b/c I haven't read the FDCPA recently, and I don't recall which is the starting point for the running of the 30 day response period.

Send the responses by certified mail, with the return receipt address the PO box you've rented. Obviously keep a copy of the letters you send.

You can either just state that your sister has no funds b/c of her medical condition, or add that she is "judgment proof."

In the meantime, better take inventory of all her assets and make sure they are in fact judgment proof, going to the SNF or the type of facility she's in, and that there isn't anything that can be subject to collection efforts or is lienable.

Did she have a home? Is it subject to a Medicaid lien, or has it been sold? Does she have vehicles? Any pension or other financial assets?

Anticipate that even if you state she's judgment proof, collection agencies may still try to harass you. That's why you NEVER give out your own address, your sister's address at the facility, or phone numbers for any of you or your family.

And even if the bills take up a lot of space, box them up if you have to after inventorying them, and store them in an attic or basement. You never know when you'll need to refer to them, especially if some agency does a family check and discovers you're her sister, and starts sending bills to you directly. You may eventually have to keep them from harassing you. And you never know what some of these shysters will try to do.
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I'd get a legal opinion from an attorney about what, if any defenses she might have, if you are the Durable POA. I'd at least find out what the options are. The statute of limitations may have expired or they may be using some illegal collection practices. 

 You don't say how much the bills are, but, in some states, creditors can step in and file at probate time to get their money owed. I'd figure out what might happen, so no surprises.
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When my x-husband passed I got a bill for a collection agency. I tried to pay the original bill through the bank (credit card) but since they had already handed it over to a collection agency they wouldn't let me pay them. I found out that I was not responsible for the money and sent the collection agency a certified letter saying I would only pay the original lender the money. Once you do that they can only contact you one more time. So they sold it to another collection agency. Sent them the letter and they sold it to another. Once more it was sold to another collection company. After I sent them the letter it stopped. Took close to a year but the calls and letters will stop if you are firm with them. If you can find it at the library, (Amazon has it) get a book called "Stop it" as it has a lot of good info on how to get them off your back.  Stop it, A consumer's guide to effectively stopping collection agency harassment.
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In Quebec I know if you accept a will you accept all debts. So if you are on the will and she passes not sure what the law is in your state.
I would really try to gt it all cleared up before something happens
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All bills and debts are to be honored until death, at which time her estate either pays thru insurance policy or other death benefits. creditors have an obligation and duty to continue the billing process on owed debts until some manner of payment becomes known and available. Since you have been upright and honest in declaring the situation to creditors, you are fine. No money means no money. to be fair, keep track of the amounts legally owed and contact information of creditors and in the event of her demise, you can let them know of her passing and make arrangements from her estate; no matter how small; for some kind of repayment consideration! Good luck!
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Can you have them forwarded to the Nursing Home - like a change of address for your sister? Let the Nursing Home deal with it since they have her income.

When I was bothered by a bank wanting to speak with my deceased Mother, I told them the Cemetery she was in and said "knock yourself out." That was the last call I received.
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I am not totally sure but I recall from working on this years ago for someone. I believe that if her funds are being taken by a nursing home based on medical necessity, the nursing home won't give up the funds, nor should they. As far as I see it, she has no funds. YOU are NOT liable for her bills. Only she is. I think you are safe. Contact the local Office on Aging in your county or your state if there is none in your county. They will help you - that is their function.
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When my mom went into a nh, I wisely immediately changed her address to a PO box. I didn't reveal that I was POA to do this (even though I am). I just filled out the form on the bill. The bills now go to the box and ince a month I go throw them away. Just by ignoring the bills we've gitten a payoff offer as low as 1 percent of the amount owed. Unfortunately, mom has end stage Alzheimer's and is on Medicaid. Her income goes to the nursing home and these bills will never be paid. They have no recourse and I won't spend any of my time on them. I saw to it that all her bills were paid on time before she went into a nursing home. Now the funds aren't there. They're going to have to write this one off. If you have already notified them that your sister is in a nursing home, on Medicaid, with no means to pay, I would keep only a recent copy of each original bill, and throw the rest away. Just make sure each original creditor is aware of the situation. You owe nothing to the bottom feeders who bought the debt. Since your sister is in a nursing home, disconnect her phone. If you shared a number, change it. They will try to scare uou, trick you, and bully you. They will threaten you and lie. But in reality there's not a d*mn thing they can do to get blood from a stone.
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Do not confirm the debt.
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I recall a financial program (Suze Orman) where she said credit card debt is "unsecured debt" and if the person is unable to pay,and no one else is on the account, then no one else responsible for payments. I had similar issue with one of my mom's credit cards. I tried for 2 months to contact the person in the collections dept. (where her case was sent) even leaving multiple messages for her to me call back, with no response. When someone finally called, I explained my mom was in a care home with Dementia and she had not made those charges. After explaining how I tried to reach the person who had her case and leaving many messages, with no response, he said to send copy of Doctors note confirming her diagnosis, and copy of medical POA. Once I did that, I never heard back from them.
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Just some info on insurance policies. First, if she is on Medicaid and the insurance has cash value it has to be cashed in if not held by employer. If held by an employer abd beneficary not a spouse, then all the money goes to the beneficiary. They do not have to pay any bills for the person who assigned them beneficiary. A woman I know had a 100,000 policy with her employer, her daughter was benefiary. The mother always felt her funeral would be paid out of the 100k and daughter would get the balance. Since the mother was remarried the daughter felt her husband should pay for the funeral so she Didn't. A lawyer told her it was her money to do with it what she wanted.
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Once a person is on Mredicaid for care, not even the 2k they allow can be used for bills unless they are medical. Yes, don't allow Collection agencies to bully you its against the the. The FTC has very strick rules collection agencies must follow. If they call, you tell them the situation. Ask if there is anything they need you to send. Then tell them you will do that and...not to call you again. If they do report them to the FTC. Send everything at least certified. I was a collector for manufacturing companies. I had more leyway by law then private collection agencies.
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Mark "No longer at this address" and return.
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When a friend died we sent all that type back to sender - we had those people supposedly from Singapore etc so we sent them back unopened with 'unsolisited mail return to sender' - it stopped soon because they had to pay the return postage - try it you'll like it
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Just to be sure, you should contact an elder estate attorney.
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You might want to talk to an attorney or legal advocacy group in your state. Look up "Drop Dead Letters;" which often work--in this letter people cite the Fair Debt Collection Services Act, which states they are not allowed to contact someone once that person has asked them not to.
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I would contact an attorney to see how to resolve this. In my opinion it's never good to just "ignore" bill collectors as interest and penalties can pile up. Also it depends what TYPE of "bill" this is as far as priorities go. Judgements and taxes for instance I believe have priority OVER the nursing home. Check it out.
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