She Won’t Bail Her Sister Out Of Jail Because Her Sister Manipulated Their Mother’s Will And Took The Lion’s Share Of The Estate

A few days ago, this 50-year-old woman received a phone call from a bail bonds agency. And since she did not think that had anything to do with her, she decided to ignore it.
Well, shortly afterward, she realized that the agency had left her a voicemail. So, she listened to it and found out some pretty shocking news.
For context, both she and her sister, who is 42, are pretty much “no contact.” This happened after her sister reportedly failed to perform her duties as executor of their mother’s estate.
In other words, her sister apparently concealed assets and burned through about $200,000 while telling her that in order to get her share, some stocks needed to be “shuffled around.”
Her sister’s scheming also stemmed back to before their mother’s death. At that time, she claims that her sister manipulated the situation in order to get a “durable power of attorney.”
“And somehow, [my sister] convinced a then non-verbal woman with a rapidly growing brain tumor to change her will,” she revealed.
So, her sister ultimately got the lion’s share of her mother’s assets, as well as her mother’s house. But the drama did not stop there.
Following her mother’s death, her sister reportedly never filed probate, lost the will, and moved into her mother’s home with their elderly aunt. Then, her sister “helped” trash the house while failing to pay the mortgage.
This essentially meant that over two years after their mother’s death, the first time her sister tried to contact her was via email regarding the probate.

shurkin_son – stock.adobe.com – illustrative purposes only, not the actual person
Apparently, her sister asked her to sign some paperwork from a probate attorney. That way, her sister would be able to sell the house before it reached foreclosure.
“But after finding out that she no longer had the will and had never filed probate, [the probate attorney] advised me not to sign, so the money for the sale of the house would go to probate and then be divided evenly between us,” she explained.
However, it turns out that her sister recently got arrested, and the call she received was regarding her sister’s bail– which is over twenty thousand dollars.
Now, she claims that the arrest was for a pretty serious charge which she believes that her sister could have just avoided. So, she admitted to laughing at the poor woman who called her from the bail bond agency.
Then, the woman reportedly explained how bail worked and told her that she only needed to bond 10 percent.
Still, though, she laughed again and told the woman that she just did not have that kind of spare cash lying around.
So, at that point, the bail bonds employee asked her if anyone else would be willing to help out her sister. And honestly, she was forced to tell the woman no.
“My sister has burned SO many bridges. I don’t trust that any of her friends will help,” she admitted.
“The last time I asked them, two friends told me they refused to help her and exactly why. And their stories were terrible enough that I accepted they had a valid reason not to want contact with my sister.”
In turn, she was forced to tell the bail bonds employee that no, no one else would help. She told the woman that their parents were deceased, and they had few other family members. Finally, she was simply honest and said that she was unwilling to help out her sister.
So, all of this essentially means that she left her sister in jail to deal with the consequences of her actions. And she cannot stop thinking about it.
On the one hand, they are sisters. But on the other hand, she recognizes that her sister had “twisted” and “manipulated” so many situations since their mother got sick.
So now, she has been left feeling torn and is wondering if refusing to help bail her sister out of jail was the right decision to make or not.
Can you imagine if your sibling ever did something like that to you while your parent was dying? Is it understandable that she wants nothing to do with her sister anymore? Does her sister deserve to deal with the consequences of her own actions? If you were in her shoes, how would you handle this situation?
You can read the original post on Reddit here.
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