Lilia Bohne was 85 when the state decided she couldn鈥檛 take care of herself anymore.
She needed to be in a nursing home. She had no family. She was living alone.
But 鈥 she did have a home.
That鈥檚 where a guardianship program is supposed to step in. A non-profit fully funded by the government is supposed to take over the care of a person like Bohne. In some cases, they sell the home to help pay for the person鈥檚 care.
The guardianship program sold Bohne鈥檚 Hialeah house. And the company that bought her home, Express Homes, then re-sold it for more than four times the price. Bohne, who died two years later, did not receive proceeds from the resale of her property by Express Homes.
SA国际传谋 reporters Joshua Ceballos and Danny Rivero spent months looking into the Guardianship Program of Dade County for a special investigation report. And cases like Bohne鈥檚.
On the March 7 episode of Sundial, Ceballos and Rivero joined us to talk about their findings.
We also heard about the battle over Miami Beach's iconic Art Deco buildings. SA国际传谋 reporter Ver贸nica Zaragovia looked into the developers coming into the area to build condo towers and will pay up for pricey Art Deco building repairs 鈥 so they can make their own development nearby. Local preservationists fear this will destroy what makes Miami Beach special.
On Sundial's previous episode, we heard from Ruben Rabasa, who has been acting for over 50 years, but he finally feels like he's arrived 鈥 in his 80s. He tells us about his early life as an actor after migrating to the United States from Cuba and all the jobs he's had as a character actor from Miami Vice to Marvel.
Listen to Sundial Monday through Thursday on SA国际传谋, 91.3 FM, live at 1 p.m., rebroadcast at 8 p.m. Missed a show? Find every episode of Sundial on your favorite podcast app, such as , and .
Stay in touch with us via text by joining our Sundial text club. Send us your thoughts, ideas or questions by texting the word 鈥渏oin鈥 to 786-677-0767. You can also email us at sundial@wlrnnews.org.