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In 2017, Gloria Single, 82, who had dementia, was sent to the hospital by her nursing home staff after she threw utensils at residents in the dining room. Later, the California facility where she’d lived with her husband for five years refused to allow her back — an action called “patient dumping.”
That triggered a yearslong legal battle, in which AARP Foundation lawyers fought to uphold state and federal laws that prohibit what happened to Single. In 2021, a California court ruled her rights were violated, confirming a legal precedent that protects more than a million nursing home residents.
For more than two decades, the AARP Foundation litigation team has taken up legal struggles like Single’s in courts around the country. Among the issues tackled in these battles have been age discrimination, workplace bias, nursing home abuses and pension fraud. Through these cases the team has not only helped many individuals, it has shaped aging policy in America.
“We always want our cases to have as broad a reach as possible, both directly and then through deterrence,” says William Alvarado Rivera, AARP Foundation senior vice president for litigation.
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Foundation lawyers also file briefs as “friends of the court” in cases involving important legal issues affecting people 50 and older. Recent examples include those filed in support of Medicare’s ability to negotiate prescription drug prices and in cases aimed at protecting older homeowners from getting their home equity confiscated when they are unable to pay their property taxes.
Over the past five years, the team has taken on a lead role in over 20 cases and filed over 50 amicus briefs.
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