Pinellas County Abuser Arrested FINALLY

Gutierrez Arrested in Pinellas

AAAPG is proud to announce that a predatory guardian has been arrested for just two of his many crimes against the defenseless elderly in Pinellas County.

AAAPG described the scam that was being used against elderly nursing home residents to become their personal representative and proceed to bleed them of every penny of their meager monthly payments from the state or Social Security while leaving them to rot in misery.The Pinellas Scam

The arrestee, Fernando Gutierrez famously was brazen enough to debate with Dr. Sam Sugar in Clearwater Florida in 2016. See Sugar-Gutierrez Debate Video

His actions were brought to the attention of authorities by AAAPG last year and arrested then
Guardian Arrested

This arrest is for only 2 of the hundreds of victims he has abused. Let’s hope he is duly sentenced for the crimes he has perpetrated.


Pinellas County Man Arrested for Exploiting Two Elderly and Disabled Victims

TALLAHASSEE, Fla.—Attorney General Pam Bondi’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit, the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office and the Clearwater Police Department today arrested a Pinellas County resident for exploiting two elderly and disabled individuals. In two separate occasions, Fernando Gutierrez, 58, allegedly gained access to victims’ personal papers and funds to illegally transfer money into personal accounts.

In one incident, Gutierrez allegedly established himself as power of attorney for an elderly victim without proper consent to the arrangement. Gutierrez then allegedly transferred the victim’s funds to an account with the defendant as the trustee. When Gutierrez lost power of attorney, he continued to use the victim’s funds.

In the second incident, Gutierrez went to an assisted living facility and presented himself as a health care proxy or guardian for an incapacitated elderly victim that suffered from a fall. As guardian, Gutierrez allegedly gained access to the victim’s personal papers and used the information to assume control of the victim’s bank account. The investigation revealed that Gutierrez redirected the assets in the victim’s personal account to a shared account between the defendant and victim. Gutierrez then allegedly transferred money in the shared account to personal accounts.

Gutierrez faces two counts of exploitation of an elderly person or disabled adult, each a first-degree felony. If convicted, Gutierrez faces up to 60 years in prison and $20,000 in fines. The State Attorney’s Office for the Sixth Judicial Circuit will prosecute this case.