>>13185024
Thanks for reminding us, Anon. I imagine that there may be ops going on to find the things that may have been planted as insurance policies around the USA.
I find itNOTcoincidental that Attorney Tom Girardi, who owned the building in which the Guatemalan House of Culture raid was conducted on Wilshire Boulevard in Los Angeles (back in 2019) is undergoing an implosion of his entire these days.
Ten hours ago the Los Angeles Times posted a story stating that the SOB has been diagnosed with Alzheimers.
SAUCE - https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2021-03-10/tom-girardi-has-alzheimers-disease-psychiatrist-tells-l-a-court
ARCHIVE - https://archive.is/LS4ET
Tom Girardi has Alzheimer’s disease, psychiatrist tells L.A. court
By MATT HAMILTON, HARRIET RYAN
MARCH 10, 2021 2:27 PM PT
Troubled Los Angeles trial attorney Tom Girardi suffers from Alzheimer’s disease and cannot understand or participate in court proceedings, according to a psychiatrist who examined him last month.
The physician’s assessment was revealed Wednesday in a Superior Court filing by an attorney for Girardi’s younger brother, who has temporary conservatorship of the famed 81-year-old lawyer.
Dr. Nathan Lavid, a Long Beach forensic and clinical psychiatrist, met with Girardi on Feb. 26 as part of the conservatorship case initiated in January by his brother Robert. Lavid found “major impairment” in Girardi’s short-term memory, logical reasoning and recognition of familiar objects and people, according to a sworn declaration. The psychiatrist indicated that Girardi was experiencing delusions and “severely disorganized thinking.”
Girardi has dominated civil law in California for decades, winning billions in judgments for plaintiffs in product liability, personal injury and toxic pollution cases. He is best known for his role in the case depicted in “Erin Brockovich” and his marriage to singer Erika Jayne, a star of “Real Housewives of Beverly Hills.”
His venerable firm, Girardi Keese, collapsed in December amid emerging evidence that Girardi had stolen or otherwise misappropriated more than $13 million in settlements from a burn victim and the survivors of victims of an Indonesian plane crash. Creditors subsequently forced him into bankruptcy, and a federal judge referred him for criminal investigation.
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