Imzadi
♥ Saved by an angel in a trench coat!
- Joined
- Oct 29, 2004
- Messages
- 40,209
WOW! This is so interesting!!! I am here at the house now with my brother and letting him know all of this.
Oh, some clarification when I say the police will do nothing other than having a talk with your sister(s). S/He will tell you and them it's a "civil matter," meaning it's for the court and the estate attorneys too hammer out the details and put it all in writing.
When the police intervene it's for criminal actions. Meaning your sister is taking things out of the house and robbing. You and your brother think, it's criminal what she's doing!
This is when it gets frustrating. The problem is: right now, you have no written proof of what belongs to whom, so the police can't ACT on anything being true. Right now, it's a "She said, she said," situation for them. They don't act on that.
By the way, you need to get a copy of the death certificate for your mom. (Pick up one for your dad too, should you ever need it.) You may need to prove to the police she actually is dead and that she's not on some two month vacation in Europe and all the siblings are trying to rob her blind, and then having a dispute about who gets what and one of you called the cops.

Still call the police if you need to, even if you don't have a death certificate yet. You can show her obituary or the funeral home page, if she has one. The officer will know right away by the date of her death, that in no way could things have legally been settled already. Probate takes TIME. You won't be their first call such as this.
While everything is up in the air, until there is written proof of a) who owns the house, b) who owns the possessions in question, the police stay out of such matters. Yet, as I said, they will likely talk to your sisters and warn/advise them they should wait until things are legally settled. For instance, what if your mom willed all the stuff to her favorite charity instead of any of you. All that stuff needs to stay in place for that entity.
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