Blind Side's Michael Oher had a conservatorship? What?

I don’t know. I have a different opinion.

They are an incredibly wealthy family who were big boosters for Ole Miss. They became conservators to help Michael play football there. Is it possible they cared more about helping their team than him? Sure. But everyone was on board with it when it happened.

He went on to have a successful NFL career, and I’ve never seen any reporting that the Tuohy’s received any money from any of his NFL earnings.

And only now, almost 20 years later, is there an issue. And his only issue seems to be about the proceeds from the movie - which was in 2007 and didn’t seem to pay them very much.

So I don’t know what to make of it. My thoughts would be different if they were paid from his NFL time or there is something I’m missing regarding money, but this looks to me more like he blew through all of his career earnings and is now trying to find some money somewhere.

Regardless, it’s sad to see this story ending this way.
 
I hear that, I think it is what we all hoped but why would it be an intact conservatorship for so long and he need to petition the courts to end it instead of them just giving it up once he was a viable adult? These components remove the notion of good will for me. Decent parents just let go eventually.
 
But why would it be an intact conservatorship for so long and he need to petition the courts to end it instead of them just giving it up once he was a viable adult? These components remove the notion of good will for me. Decent parents just let go eventually.

I think the conservatorship was just kind of left in place....but not really doing anything. The Tuohy family apparently hasn't had any significant contact with Oher for some time. It seems to me like if anything, the Tuohys enjoyed a level of fame within their Ole' Miss donor circle for convincing this young man to go to their alma mater. Then a much larger level of fame when they sold their story. It's definitely a "white savior" story, and it would seem from what Oher said...that some of it was embellished and also that he's an intelligent guy and didn't like being painted as something other than that. I think there are hard feelings because he feels he was exploited, which he very well may have been for clout.

What I'm not sure about is that the Tuohys benefitted in any great way financially. They were incredibly wealthy by most standards when they met Oher. The author of The Blind Side, Michael Lewis, has said that whatever the Ohers got for movie was the same as what he got. Lewis said that he and the Tuohys made 350K after everyone like agents and management got their cut. He didn't specify if that was 350K each, or together. This was chump change to the Tuohys who reported have a net worth north of 100 million. Lewis said that the Tuohys shared that money with Oher, and even put royalties into an account for him when he stopped accepting them.
 
According to his own book, published in 2011, he specifically talked about the legal relationship he had with the family.

“It kind of felt like a formality, as I’d been a part of the family for more than a year at that point. Since I was already over the age of eighteen and considered an adult by the state of Tennessee, Sean and Leigh Anne would be named as my ‘legal conservators.”

“They explained to me that it means pretty much the exact same thing as ‘adoptive parents,’ but that the laws were just written in a way that took my age into account. Honestly, I didn’t care what it was called. I was just happy that no one could argue that we weren’t legally what we already knew was real: We were a family.”
 
According to his own book, published in 2011, he specifically talked about the legal relationship he had with the family.

“It kind of felt like a formality, as I’d been a part of the family for more than a year at that point. Since I was already over the age of eighteen and considered an adult by the state of Tennessee, Sean and Leigh Anne would be named as my ‘legal conservators.”

“They explained to me that it means pretty much the exact same thing as ‘adoptive parents,’ but that the laws were just written in a way that took my age into account. Honestly, I didn’t care what it was called. I was just happy that no one could argue that we weren’t legally what we already knew was real: We were a family.”
But is conservator "pretty much the exact same thing as 'adoptive parents'"? I didn't think so, but don't really know. If not, then it does appear that he may have been deceived (i.e. he knew the the name of what it was, but not what it really meant). Whether this was done for money (if he was, in fact, deceived) or for clout or because they honestly thought it was in his best interest, I have no idea.
 
But is conservator "pretty much the exact same thing as 'adoptive parents'"? I didn't think so, but don't really know. If not, then it does appear that he may have been deceived (i.e. he knew the the name of what it was, but not what it really meant). Whether this was done for money (if he was, in fact, deceived) or for clout or because they honestly thought it was in his best interest, I have no idea.
I don’t know either. But if he’s just now coming to realize that it isn’t “pretty much the same thing as adoptive parents” then it doesn’t sound like the Touhey family was taking advantage of it, right? Otherwise wouldn’t he have said earlier, hey why are you controlling my finances or other such thing…

To me it sounds like he’s run out of his NFL money (which sadly happens to a lot of former athletes) and he’s trying to find more.

Do I think the Touhey’s are completely innocent and did everything out of the goodness of their heart? Eh, probably not. Although I don’t know how they could have known that they had a future NFL player in their midst when they first started helping him out. Do I think Oher would have ever made it without their assistance? Unfortunately, not without some serious luck. They did for him what money does for all, bent the luck his way.
 
i dunno, this just feels like one of those situations where someone 'gets in the ear' of someone else. i don't know what oher's current financial situation is but it seems like a misguided money grab. ALL the parties involved with the movie say that there was very little financial compensation to the family (including oher) b/c they did not write the source material. i have not seen anything that shows any of oher's other earnings/profits from his nfl and other pursuits were handled through the conservatorship. it seems like it was the mechanism through which he was able to attend his chosen college and largely left stagnant after that purpose was served.

Wouldn't they be required to maintain financial records for the conservatorship? I'd hope that would show whether irregularities exist. Seems like a strange situation all around though.
i seem to recall that their attorneys have said from day one that they have the accounting and have offered it up for oher or whomever he designates. i can't speak for conservatorships in the state they reside in but i'm a guardian for my adult child and in my state the mandates for accounting and reporting to the courts on a yearly basis are extensive and VERY detailed. it's not just a rubber stamp on the part of the court when docs are submitted each year-it entails a full judicial review BEFORE an application to continue in this capacity for another year can be made and considered.
 
I think the conservatorship was done appropriately for the time. A young man, playing highly competitive SEC football which had risk of injury and needed adult oversight and the formalities. And I think the conservatorship was simply forgotten about and was not an active instrument in any of their lives.

Unfortunately, I think Michael in recent years has been struggling to come to terms with his upbringing and past and for whatever reasons became estranged from the Tuoheys.

Until the last year, it seems the relationships were not an issue. He got married in this year and I wonder how that relationship interplays in recent events.

Based on many of the same views and thoughts as above, I don't sense any ill will by the Touheys.

I do hope they can come to some amicable solution for all and mend relationships.
 
I think the situation is sad. No one is perfect. But it seems like the Oher and the Touhey's once had a very loving relationship and that has somehow fizzled. Although I read the Touhey's said their door is always open. :(

I don't believe this is a Britney Spears type of conservatorship by any means. They did it to protect him back in college, not to make out with his earnings. (they already had their own)

Like PP'ers, I do feel he ran out of his NFL money and is looking for a payday from the movie (which was peanuts in profit to the family) and he is scraping to see if there was more. :confused3

When I first heard this story I thought oh no another case of using a kid. But upon reading the details and not just the sensational headline, my stance changed. Sadly, Oher is broke and looking for money.
 
I was basically a surrogate parent for one of my kids friends and the thought never crossed my mind to create a conservatorship. This isn't a normal thing to do by anyone's standards so I don't really get brushing it off like it is an everyday behavior. I do not know a single person in this sort of relationship. It it perfectly legal to adopt an adult so why not? As for Oher, people will do lots of things in exchange for love and at only 18 when he signed the forms, with lawyer speak and likely none of his own representation I can absolutely see a young person on their own believing that conservatorship is the same as adoption for an adult. Even if they didn't sign stuff anyone talking to them could bypass Oher because they were the same as Oher and could, say, reject deals which could be just as damaging, or negotiate on his behalf.

The benefit is to have control over his portion of the money to distribute as they see fit, or claim as theirs as collateral for loans, or to direct as an investment with whom and how they see fit. Yes, they were rich but in my experience most rich people do enjoy more and seldom pass on more. Also just because they have assets doesn't mean they were liquid. A person with a 10 million dollar house and 5 million in debt with 1 million in the bank is more broke than a kid at McDonalds with a new paycheck for $100 and no debt. Lots of smoke and mirrors with big money and big lifestyles.

If it was all about love they could have just adopted him.
 
I was basically a surrogate parent for one of my kids friends and the thought never crossed my mind to create a conservatorship. This isn't a normal thing to do by anyone's standards so I don't really get brushing it off like it is an everyday behavior. I do not know a single person in this sort of relationship. It it perfectly legal to adopt an adult so why not? As for Oher, people will do lots of things in exchange for love and at only 18 when he signed the forms, with lawyer speak and likely none of his own representation I can absolutely see a young person on their own believing that conservatorship is the same as adoption for an adult. Even if they didn't sign stuff anyone talking to them could bypass Oher because they were the same as Oher and could, say, reject deals which could be just as damaging, or negotiate on his behalf.

The benefit is to have control over his portion of the money to distribute as they see fit, or claim as theirs as collateral for loans, or to direct as an investment with whom and how they see fit. Yes, they were rich but in my experience most rich people do enjoy more and seldom pass on more. Also just because they have assets doesn't mean they were liquid. A person with a 10 million dollar house and 5 million in debt with 1 million in the bank is more broke than a kid at McDonalds with a new paycheck for $100 and no debt. Lots of smoke and mirrors with big money and big lifestyles.

If it was all about love they could have just adopted him.
I am not a lawyer.

But I had read that the Touhey’s chose conservatorship as the fastest alternative to comply with the NCAAs ruling to allow him to attend Ole Miss.
 
I am not a lawyer.

But I had read that the Touhey’s chose conservatorship as the fastest alternative to comply with the NCAAs ruling to allow him to attend Ole Miss.

I am not either but how is this faster than adoption? It just seems off
 
But I had read that the Touhey’s chose conservatorship as the fastest alternative to comply with the NCAAs ruling to allow him to attend Ole Miss.

that's what i've read as well. it's also been reported that oher had approached the family and threatened to go public about the conservatorship if they did'nt pay him several millions of dollars (of their own personal wealth). he had already 'gone public' when he wrote about it in his own book several years ago so they refused what they saw as a cash grab, continued to send him the very meager royalty checks from the film but he refused them so they've been deposited into a separate trust fund for oher's son.

what i find really interesting about this and (for me) supports that this was set up ONLY for the NCAA situation is that oher over the course of his adult life has signed his own contracts, purchased homes, cars... managed his own finances in a variety of realms. in a true conservatorship his conservator's could have ripped that power away from him in a heartbeat and invalidated any contracts. oher is ONLY contesting the one HE supposedly signed-a separate contract in 2007 that gave away his life rights to 20th Century Fox “without any payment whatsoever,” but oher says he does not remember signing that contract and, if he did, no one warned him of its implications.
 
I wonder if having a conservatorship instead of an adoption protected the Touheys’ pre-existing wealth? I haven’t read everything but from this side of the world it seems more like Michael may be trying to access more funds and is looking for legal means which as we all know tends to backfire as the lawyers are the only ones who win.
 
The article referenced above from August 2023


Yahoo Sports

‘Blind Side’ controversy: Why the Tuohys sought a conservatorship over adoption for Michael Oher​

Jeff Eisenberg
Jeff Eisenberg
August 21, 2023, 9:14 am
FILE - Baltimore Ravens offensive tackle Michael Oher sits on the beach during the first half of an NFL football game against the Buffalo Bills in Baltimore, Sunday, Oct. 24, 2010. Michael Oher, the former NFL tackle known for the movie “The Blind Side,” filed a petition Monday in a Tennessee probate court accusing Sean and Leigh Anne Tuohy of lying to him by having him sign papers making them his conservators rather than his adoptive parents nearly two decades ago.(AP Photo/Nick Wass, File)

Michael Oher, the former NFL tackle known for the movie “The Blind Side,” filed a petition on Aug. 14 in a Tennessee probate court accusing Sean and Leigh Anne Tuohy of lying to him by having him sign papers making them his conservators rather than his adoptive parents nearly two decades ago.(AP Photo/Nick Wass, File)
In the summer of 2004, the family who inspired the hit movie “The Blind Side” became concerned they were at risk of running afoul of NCAA rules.
Sean and Leigh Anne Tuohy feared that taking in Michael Oher might be construed as an act of bribery — rather than parental love — if he chose to play for their alma mater.

By NCAA rules, the Tuohys would have been regarded as Ole Miss boosters because of their significant donations to their alma mater. Sean, a former all-SEC point guard, and Leigh Anne, a former Ole Miss cheerleader, have their family name on the university’s basketball practice facility in recognition of their “continuous support.”
That booster classification became a potential headache for the Tuohys when they opened their doors to Oher and the once-homeless teen blossomed into a prized offensive line prospect while living under their roof. The NCAA forbids boosters from even contacting prospects, let alone providing food, clothes, shelter and the groundwork for a new life.
Oher could have rendered this issue moot had he spurned interest from Ole Miss and accepted a scholarship from LSU, Tennessee or one of numerous other major-conference programs that offered. Instead, the 6-foot-4, 344-pound behemoth kept listing Ole Miss among his top choices even as he began to narrow his options.

An attorney for the Tuohys told Yahoo Sports that Sean and Leigh Anne didn’t pressure Oher to sign with Ole Miss but they wanted to keep the option available for him. Steve Farese Sr. said it’s his understanding that the Tuohys proposed legal guardianship to Oher, then 18, as “a way to circumvent the NCAA problem.”
On August 9, 2004, the Tuohys joined Oher and Oher’s birth mother in petitioning a Tennessee court to appoint Sean and Leigh Anne as Oher’s co-conservators. The court approved the conservatorship the following December, clearing a path for Oher to verbally commit to Ole Miss on January 18, 2005, and put that in ink on signing day 15 days later.

Whether that conservatorship was ever appropriate is under newfound scrutiny now that Oher has alleged that the Tuohys misled him into signing it as a rising high school senior.
In a petition filed to a Tennessee court on Aug. 14, Oher said he was “falsely advised” by the Tuohys that, because he was already 18, “the legal action to adopt him would have to be called a conservatorship, but it was, for all intents and purposes, an adoption.” Oher claims that he didn’t discover until February that the conservatorship required him to surrender to the Tuohys the legal authority to negotiate business deals in his name.
Oher is asking the court to end the conservatorship, to bar the Tuohys from using his name and likeness and to award him his share of the money from the best-selling book and Oscar-winning film based on his life. The Tuohys responded Tuesday in a statement by describing the lawsuit as just another “shakedown” by Oher to extract money from the family.
“Sean and Leigh Anne have made an extraordinary amount of money in the restaurant business,” the statement continued. “The notion that a couple worth hundreds of millions of dollars would connive to withhold a few thousand dollars in profit participation payments from anyone — let alone from someone they loved as a son — defies belief."
The back and forth between attorneys drains much of the charm from what once was hailed as an uplifting, feel-good story.
Oher was born to a crack-addicted mother and an absentee father. For much of his childhood, he had no permanent home and inadequate education. It was after moving in with the Tuohys at age 16 that Oher found his footing in the classroom and began to unlock his NFL potential on the football field.
In this Friday, Feb. 1, 2013 photo, Sean and Leigh Anne Tuohy, adoptive parents of Baltimore Ravens starting offensive lineman Michael Oher, stand on a street in New Orleans. They were depicted in the move

Sean and Leigh Anne Tuohy maintain they had nothing but good intentions in signing Michael Oher to a conservatorship. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)
By his senior year of high school, Oher had become one of the nation’s top offensive line prospects — a long-armed, nimble-footed giant who looked like he was engineered in a lab to play left tackle in the NFL. A parade of college football coaches dropped by Oher’s tiny Memphis-area private school to deliver recruiting pitches.
In his 2011 autobiography, Oher describes committing to Ole Miss over Tennessee and LSU as a weight off his shoulders.
“I prayed about my choice a lot because there didn't seem to be a clear-cut sense of one being a good school and another being a bad school,” he wrote. “I felt like wherever I chose to go would be a good decision.”
As for naming the Tuohys his legal conservators, Oher wrote in 2011 that “it kind of felt like a formality” since he’d been “part of the family for more than a year at that point.” At that time, he displayed little understanding of the legal differences between a conservatorship and adoption.
“[The Tuoys] explained to me that it means pretty much the exact same thing as ‘adoptive parents,’ ” Oher wrote, “but that the laws were just written in a way that took my age into account.”
Asked last week why the family chose to seek a conservatorship rather than an adoption, Sean Tuohy told The Daily Memphian that he and Leigh Anne based their decision on the legal advice they received. Sean said, “We contacted lawyers who had told us that we couldn’t adopt over the age of 18; the only thing we could do was to have a conservatorship.”
Multiple family attorneys in Tennessee told Yahoo Sports that the advice Sean says he received was incorrect and the Tuohys could have adopted Oher at 18 as long as they had his consent. As Nashville-based attorney Lisa Collins put it, “Adult adoption is allowed in Tennessee. It’s been the same law since I started practicing 30 years ago.”
It’s Farese’s understanding that efficiency was a key reason the Tuohys chose conservatorship over adoption. Farese, who was not the Tuohys attorney back in 2004, told Yahoo Sports that the Tuohys had a “short window of time” before national signing day and that they were under the impression the adoption process could drag on too long.
While the adoption of a minor in Tennessee requires extensive background checks, the consent of the birth parents and a formal home study by a licensed child-placing agency, attorney Jeff Stern of Sevierville, Tennessee, said, “It’s a much easier process with an adult.”
“If the adult wants to be adopted,” Stern said, “then the court’s going to let them be adopted.”
Stern said that, in his experience, families typically resort to conservatorships for loved ones who are unable to take care of themselves. Oher’s petition states that he had “no diagnosed physical or psychological disabilities” when the conservatorship began and that he remains “capable of handling his own affairs.”
The way one source with knowledge of the NCAA enforcement process sees it, the Tuohys may not have needed to legally formalize their relationship with Oher for him to be eligible to play for Ole Miss. The source believes NCAA investigators would have taken into account Oher’s “horrible situation” and the fact that the Tuohys formed a relationship with him and opened their home to him before he became an elite prospect.
“That’s got to be part of the calculus of figuring out whether that family relationship overrides their status as a booster,” the source said. “In this case, because they essentially became a parental force in his life, that would seem to override any accusation that they’re somehow steering him.”
Even so, the NCAA enforcement source concedes that a conservatorship or legal adoption would have removed all doubt.
“If someone is going to go through a legal proceeding to take on legal responsibility for another individual, the NCAA has to respect that,” the source said.
Nearly two decades after the Tuohys chose to seek that conservatorship, it’s at the center of a legal proceeding, along with all the money that the Tuohys and Oher have pocketed from the success of the movie.
Oher’s petition casts the Tuohys as villains who lied about adopting him to “enrich themselves” at his expense. The attorney for the Tuohys counters that a paper trail will show that “no money has been hidden” and that “everything was distributed properly.”
“The truth of the matter is that there's this conservatorship out there that everyone had just forgotten about,” Farese said. “This piece of paper has had no effect on Michael to execute his own professional contract or choose his own agent. It has not prevented him from doing anything.”
 
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