Tale from the Faulkner Files: Welfare Check

Faulkner

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Here's a recent story from the Faulkner Files:

With all of these so called mass shootings that have occurred across the country it seems to be that there are a couple of things in common with the perpetrators of these heinous crimes. In my observed opinion, the primary mitigating factor is the breakdown of a cohesive family. Sure, regular middle class American families have their share of domestic problems and issues, but as I observe a microcosmic view of the country, it seems 90% of the people issues I deal with as a LEO lack a family foundation for support.

A recent call triggered my pondering on this subject. I had just finished up having lunch with a friend who is also a local Justice of the Peace. When I got back in my patrol car I radioed dispatch;

"Unit 4 to S.O., I'm back in service."

"10-4 Unit 4, I have a welfare check that is not too far from your location."

"Unit 4 to S.O., go ahead and send me the information," I replied.

The dispatcher sent me a message with the pertinent information. I was being asked to go check on a Mr. Files who lived alone in a house in a subdivision in the unincorporated part of the county about a mile or so outside the city limits. Mr. Files' daughter, who lives in Michigan, had called the sheriff's office requesting that someone go check on Mr. Files and ask him to call his daughter. Reportedly, Mr. Files' daughter had been trying to call and text Mr. File for about 3 months and was not getting a reply. She said he had not been feeling well when she last spoke with him on the phone around Christmas.

"Unit 4 to S.O., I've received the info and I'll be 10-96 (in route), ETA about 15 minutes."

"10-4 Unit 4."

I noted above the address was in a subdivision in the unincorporated part of the county. Seems this is attractive to a lot of people because they get the advantages of city living in a rural setting without all the restrictions and taxes of city government. The downside is there are usually less services like animal control, if any, no city trash pickup, and no restrictions on things like holiday fireworks like there are in most municipalities. So basically, you get city living with no city rules, and without rules for guidance it seems people these days have a hard time exercising consideration for their neighbors.

I entered the relatively new subdivision of 2 to 3 year old middle class homes and turned down the street where Mr. Files address was located. I found the address and turned into the drive and noticed the yard had been freshly mowed and the yard was neatly kept.

"Unit 4 to S.O., I'm 10-97 (arrived on scene)," indicating to dispatch I was at the address.

I got out of the patrol car and looked around. Often times when a police car pulls into someone's driveway a lot of neighbor eyes focus in with natural curiosity. I noticed a fellow a few houses down who was mowing his yard had stopped and was looking in my direction. Across the street was a lady standing on the front porch with her arms crossed checking me out too.

I walked up to the front porch and rang the doorbell. After a long wait with no answer, I rang it again. After another wait I rapped on the front door, and a few moments later I rapped on the door again and said loudly, "SHERIFF'S OFFICE!" No reply, and I could not discern any movement in the house. I stepped over to the front window to take a peak but the shades were drawn and I could not see in. I stepped off the front porch and went over to the garage to see if I could see anything through the garage door windows. I wiped off a little surface dirt with my hand and noticed there were no vehicles in the garage, but I did see a wheelchair a folded walker leaning up against the wall.

I walked around the side of the house to see if anyone was in the backyard, but didn't see anything that particularly caught my attention, so I went back to the front porch and rapped on the door once again. Still no answer. I pulled out a black nitrile glove from my pocket and put it on my left hand, then reached over and tried the front door knob. The knob turned and the door cracked open. At this point I have zero probable cause to go any further, but with the door cracked open a couple of inches I called out "SHERIFF'S OFFICE!" No reply. I took a quick whiff to see if I could smell anything suspicious, but alas, no unsuspecting odors so I pulled the door closed.

I turned and stepped off the porch and took another look around the neighborhood. The guy mowing the yard a couple of houses down was still mowing so I started walking in his direction. When he noticed me coming he stopped and shut down the mower, pulled out a handkerchief and wiped his forehead as I approached.

"Good morning, I'm Deputy Faulkner with the sheriff's office, how you doing?" I asked

"Doing well," he replied. "Trying to get this yard mowed before it gets too hot. Who are you looking for?"

"I'm looking for Mr. Files, do you know him?"

The guy had a puzzled look on his face before he answered. "Well, yes sir, I knew him pretty well but he passed away about four months ago. He's buried up at Wade's Point Cemetery."

"I'm sorry to hear that, what happened to him," I asked.

"He had cancer. He was diagnosed around Thanksgiving and it advanced quickly. Hospice came in and took care of him the last month of so."

"Did he have any relatives close by?" I was fishing for info.

"As far as I know he didn't have any relatives at all, at least, he never mentioned any and I came by and visited with him just about every day."

Curious, but it's looking like he and his daughter weren't close. "What happened to his estate then? Do you know?"

"Oh yes," he answered, "Mr. Files was very meticulous about that. Had a lawyer come in and draw up a trust and will and all that. He had a real estate agent lined up to sell off the house and personal belongings and I think everything went to charity. Wasn't much, but I believe he said he didn't owe anyone anything either. The house sold about a month after Mr. Files passed and a couple from Little Rock bought it and moved in."

"Thanks for the info," I pulled out my notepad. "Can I get your name and contact info in case I need to follow up?" He showed me is driver's license and I copied down the data and thanked him for his help.

I walked across the street to the where I saw the lady standing on the front porch earlier. I knocked on the door and she answered and after introductions we had a conversation that collaborated the yard mowing neighbor. I acquired her contact information for my report, thanked her, and walked back over to my patrol car and radioed dispatch.

"Unit 4 to S.O."

"Go ahead Unit 4."

"Unit 4 to S.O., I'm finished up at this location but I need to come back to the office to do some research and complete the report. Do you have any further calls for me?"

"Negative Unit 4. You are clear. Do you need us to contact the caller on the welfare check?"

"Negative S.O., I'll take care of that when I get to the office. Show me back in service and 10-96 (in route) to the S.O."

On my drive back to the sheriff's office I called the county clerk at the courthouse and gave her a short overview of the situation with Mr. Files and asked her if she would do some confirmation research for me to officially confirm the information the neighbors had shared with me. The county clerk said she'd be glad to look into it for me and send me an email with her findings. When I got to my office and checked my email the county clerk was as good as her word and I even had a contact at the funeral home with a link to Mr. Files' obituary, the attorney who took care of the estate, and the real estate agent. After about 45 minutes on the phone with these contacts I had a pretty good picture of Mr. Files' final months. Interestingly, no one mentioned a daughter or any other relatives other than that Mrs. Files had passed away some ten years earlier and Mr. Files was laid to rest next to her at Wade's Point Cemetery.

I walked down the hall to the dispatch center and got the name and call back information on the daughter who requested the welfare check. I had to go back and spend another 30 minutes on the terminal doing some research but was able to confirm that Mr. Files had a daughter named Cynthia. The original caller's name for the welfare check was Cindy.

So, after I had a good grasp of the facts regarding Mr. Files, I called the number for his daughter, Cindy, back in Michigan.

"Hello?"

"Is this Cindy?" I asked

"Yes, who is this?" she replied.

"Cindy, this is Deputy Faulkner with the sheriff's office in Arkansas that you called to perform a welfare check on your father, Mr. Files."

"Yes, did you find him?"

"Yes ma'am, I did. Unfortunately, Mr. Files passed away four months ago," I told her.

"FOUR MONTHS AGO!"

"Yes ma'am," I answered.

"And you're just now finding him dead after four months!"

"No ma'am. He knew he was ill and he made prior arrangements. He was buried next to your mother at Wade's Point Cemetery," I told her

There was a pause for a few moments then she said, "Is that in Arkansas? I wasn't able to go to my mother's funeral and I've never been to her grave."

"Yes ma'am."

There were a few more silent moments but I just let go until she asked, "do you know anything about any details?"

"What details are you specifically asking about?" I replied.

"Well, about the estate. What happened to the estate?"

I figured we'd get to that. "Well ma'am, I can provide you with the name of the attorney and real estate agent who dealt with that. They may or may not share information with you depending on the instructions Mr. Files provided them. I do understand that he was quite detailed in his instructions to them."

Another pregnant pause . . . "No, I don't suppose I need their information. If he's been dead for four months they'd have reached out to me by now if the old man had left me anything."

I had numerous questions that I wanted to ask just to satisfy my own curiosity, but, it was really none of my business and I had performed the task at hand.

"Are there any other questions I can answer for you?" I asked.

"I guess not," she answered. "Thanks for calling me back."

"You bet . . . " and I heard the click as she hung up.
 
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As I finished the story I'm thinking there was no shoot out, no bank robbery, no high speed chase, no bare knuckles tussle with a doped up suspect, and no running into a building after a crazed active shooter.

I bet this routine activity is how law enforcement is in most of middle America.
 
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Sadly, that situation is not that unusual these days. I was involved in more than one fatal crash death notification where we had to search for the next of kin, only to find them in the same general area, but they hadn't talked to the decedent in in years.
Unfortunately I also fall into the same boat, but not by choice. About March of this year, I was contacted by a known individual advising me that my brother had passed away near the end of last October from Covid complications. I hadn't seen or talked to my brother in almost 25 years. This non-contact was not my choice as I had reached out to him each year by sending him birthday cards and Christmas cards updating him on my status & location and asking him to please contact me when he was ready. To this day, I still don't know what happened to cause the division between us.
 
I had a tenant that lived in the same unit for 22 years. The mail man told me that the tenant hadn't picked up his mail for a week and ask me to check on him. He normally got his mail while the mailman was at the next door!

I knocked on his door very loudly and called out, but no response. So I went in carefully calling out, and still no response. I walked down the hall and saw the bathroom door mostly closed and the light and fan on. I looked in the cracked door opening and saw him on the floor. I touched nothing and called 911 requesting the police and the coroner saying no need for an ambulance, judging by the smell.

Well the Ambulance arrived first, but I refused them entrance! An Officer I knew was next and I explained the situation to him, He supervised the paramedic! The cops have to call for the coroner!

We had contact info, that was 32 years old (He live in a different unit for 10 years then transferred.) Our secretary reached someone, and family started coming out of the woodwork! None of them had talked to him since before the privious Thanksgiving or Christmas at 8 months ago! He was a loner and very religious, which divided him from his family.

Most of the relatives lived within 2 miles and one sister lived 4 blocks away, but the "Crazy Uncle" that was 72 wasn't on the check-in on list! Then they all wanted to know "How Close" to him I was? Apparently, closer than them!

As a side note: He lived in that unit 22 years. I could have re rented it as is, it was so clean! It had one finger smudge by a light switch! That's it. He laid on the flood for 7 days and didn't really smell! The medics said that indicated two things, 1) good health and 2) very cleanly living style!

Sad tale.

Ivan
 
I will disinherit some "natural heirs"

Here's a recent story from the Faulkner Files:

"As far as I know he didn't have any relatives at all, at least, he never mentioned any and I came by and visited with him just about every day."

Curious, but it's looking like he and his daughter weren't close. "What happened to his estate then? Do you know?"

"Oh yes," he answered, "Mr. Files was very meticulous about that. Had a lawyer come in and draw up a trust and will and all that. He had a real estate agent lined up to sell off the house and personal belongings and I think everything went to charity. Wasn't much, but I believe he said he didn't owe anyone anything either. The house sold about a month after Mr. Files passed and a couple from Little Rock bought it and moved in."

I am glad the Mr. Files did such a good job of preplanning.

I will disinherit some of my "natural heirs".
They are specifically mentioned, by name and relationship, in my will,
with notation that failure to provide for them is intentional.

Bekeart
 
I was involved with a case were an elderly lady had a cab driver she used frequently. Apparently tgey had an agreement where she would call him directly and paid cash.

He brought her to the hospital registered her listed himself as next of kin. Then moved into her house and started emptying her bank accounts and selling her stuff. Cashed her retirement checks and everything
 
Without knowing about the family dynamics, we should withhold judgement. I have known a lot of people for whom the early death of a parent-a father or stepfather especially-was no tragedy.
 
If you read the death notices in the Orlando Sentinel around 1/4 are folks who died with "no one concerned." They say "Anyone with information of the whereabouts of family/relatives are asked to contact...." It's very sad that our society is so completely fragmented that whole swaths of "souls" are adrift in this sea of life and when they go nobody cares. Joe
 
If you read the death notices in the Orlando Sentinel around 1/4 are folks who died with "no one concerned." They say "Anyone with information of the whereabouts of family/relatives are asked to contact...." It's very sad that our society is so completely fragmented that whole swaths of "souls" are adrift in this sea of life and when they go nobody cares. Joe

You would think with our society infused with so many forms of communications that it would be rare, but it's not.
 
Well done deputy.

Over the course of my locksmith career, I've been called several times by local LEO to assist with welfare checks.

Sadly on two of those calls the elderly person was deceased. When I knelt down at the front door to pick the lock, you could not mistake the smell.

I found myself sad and wondering how and why they died alone. Or maybe if foul play was involved.

On another call a lady said that she had fallen off the toilet and couldn't get back up. She was paralyzed from the waste down. She had called paramedics but they couldn't get into the house.

I arrived and the paramedics weren't around. So I called the lady and told her that I was going to pick the lock and come in. She agreed and told me exactly where she was.

I went to the master bedroom and found her on the bathroom floor naked from the waste down. She wasn't shy. She asked me to pick her up and put her in her wheel chair which I did.

She covered herself with a towel and then broke out her checkbook. I told her no charge. We hugged and I left hoping that it never happened again.
 
I have a very sad probate case right now. Back in March, a neighbor noticed his 9 year old neighbor on her front porch crying. He went over to check on her and she said "Mommy's sick". The girl is special needs and had been home schooled. He went inside and found the mother. Coroner estimated she'd been dead minimum 3 weeks. The father had died a couple of years before in an ag accident. Maternal grandfather lived in town and his first move was to go in and take anything of value. Refused custody of the girl. Thankfully, an uncle from Wisconsin is stepping up to help.
 
A major "wedge" issue, a cause of family estrangement, is the refusal of parents to help pay for higher education, the attitude that their obligations end the day the kids turn 18. Then there is the matter of adult children refusing to have an aging and ailing parent live with them, citing no help with college or other expenses, laziness, selfishness, self-centeredness, inconsiderateness, immaturity, etc.
 
There was an article on the internet about an obit in the paper from North Fl . The way it was written it seemed like a son or daughter wrote it . Seems like the guy was not a father figure at all . He was an alcoholic and it stated while he went to AA he never practiced the steps and did not go to his family for amends . This guy must have been a piece of work , it said it would have cost someone like $167 to put it in the paper . It also said something about evil does die .

I was hoping this was going to be another Daisy story . But alas , it was another story about a LEO Officer about having one h*** of an experience , one that opened his and our eyes to families that really aren't families .
 
If you read the death notices in the Orlando Sentinel around 1/4 are folks who died with "no one concerned." They say "Anyone with information of the whereabouts of family/relatives are asked to contact...." It's very sad that our society is so completely fragmented that whole swaths of "souls" are adrift in this sea of life and when they go nobody cares. Joe

Very well said, Joe.
 
I have an aunt and uncle who live about 4 blocks from me. One of the reasons I made the choice to live here as opposed to another area was because they were here. The day I retired, my uncle said that we should call or text each other every morning. And there have been a couple mornings where my uncle thought I was a little late in contacting him and he sent a text message to see that I was awake and OK.

My aunt is now disabled so now our daily contacts have become a more mutual checking on each other. It's good to know on a daily basis that someone is watching out for you.
 
Cynthia sounds like a few of my brothers in law. I remember mourning in front of my father's casket and my sister's husband walked up (drooling in my memory) and asked how much my sister was getting. My father's body was not more than three feet away. I remember thinking this guy cannot be real. Thankfully that sister is now divorced.
 
Faulkner I've been to a number of unattended deaths before I retired. I worked in a beach area of south eastern North Carolina with a lot of retirees who moved there from other areas. More than once I've been to homes with mummies or decomposing bodies. The family often times was not the reason we'd gotten called- it was the neighbors who couldn't stand the smell!
 
In this or similar situations we'll never know the backstory .

The father could have been uncaring/ abusive/ alcoholic / etc , and once the kids could escape they moved on and tried to put it behind them . Or the parents could have been caring and living , but the offsp2 just went to the bad regardless . Or Both .
 
I worked my way through college in the security business. One day I got a call from an attorney who wanted a guard for the reading of a will. While I was digging for the rates for a quote, he added that he wanted a large guard, and then amended it further with a large armed guard.

I got curious and made some remark about splitting up the gold & jewels and was told no. He wanted the guard there to make sure he got out of the room after he read the will. Don't know if the deceased or the family was the problem.
 
I worked my way through college in the security business. One day I got a call from an attorney who wanted a guard for the reading of a will. While I was digging for the rates for a quote, he added that he wanted a large guard, and then amended it further with a large armed guard.

I got curious and made some remark about splitting up the gold & jewels and was told no. He wanted the guard there to make sure he got out of the room after he read the will. Don't know if the deceased or the family was the problem.

When I was much younger and much more stupid I took a job as a bouncer in a Northern California nightclub. A regular approached me one night asking if I would be his bodyguard at a fund raiser he was hosting. I declined be cause I knew nothing about body guards. Then he told me how much he was willing to pay.

I then inquired about why he needed a bodyguard and how many people would attend. He said about a hundred people and his ex wife would probably try to crash the party.

At least I was smart enough to insist in having another "bodyguard ". Because guess who showed up? With her boyfriend.

It got interesting very quickly. Last time I ever did that. :rolleyes:
 
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