It’s not all “good times” for John Amos’s estate as a bitter family feud erupts between his two children. In a recently filed lawsuit, Shannon Amos accused her brother, Kelly Christopher (K.C.) Amos, of elder abuse, fraud and their father’s wrongful death.
Conflict Origins
While the court case regarding their father is relatively recent, bad blood between the siblings dates back years. Tensions reportedly brewed over disagreements regarding the care of their late mother, who died in 2016. Shannon claimed that K.C. provided inadequate care for their mother, refusing to hire overnight attendants despite regularly leaving the home in the evenings. She also alleged that K.C. misappropriated their mother’s funds to finance low-budget films and property renovations.
Fast forward to the current allegations and lawsuit, in which Shannon claims that K.C. manipulated their father into signing various legal documents giving K.C. near complete control over the estate while also ignoring John’s medical needs, isolating and exploiting their father for financial gain, ultimately leading to his death. The complaint also names John’s former caretaker and apparent publicist, Belinda Foster, close associate Eugene Brummett and his production company, Step and One Half Productions, as defendants. Shannon is seeking a court order to freeze the estate’s assets.
The allegations regarding the care of their father and his finances stem back as far as 2019, when, according to The Hollywood Reporter, K.C. “started to keep his father from family and friends by shuffling him around various locations while monitoring his communications, at times impersonating him in text messages and emails.” It’s also been reported that the filing states that in August 2024, John was experiencing severe abdominal pain, but Belinda, who told doctors she was his daughter, didn’t take him to a hospital until it was too late.
Shannon has also previously claimed that she didn’t find out about her father’s death until 45 days later via social media, stirring up concern that foul play was involved. Belinda fired back, claiming that John’s final wish was to delay the announcement of his passing because he was afraid his daughter would “turn his death and interment into a circus,” among other reasons.
Proving Her Claims
Although John’s mental capacity was the subject of debate in his last few years, he reportedly refuted Shannon’s allegations of elder abuse and financial exploitation while still alive. Does this mean Shannon will face an uphill battle to prove her case?
“In some ways, it becomes easier to bring an elder abuse case once the elder has passed away, as the list of people who have standing to file an elder abuse action grows after the elder’s death. However, it obviously becomes more difficult to prove abuse that is no longer taking place, due to the elder’s death,” said Andrew G. Smith, shareholder/director at Weinstock Manion in Los Angeles. “Mr. Amos’s daughter can still use medical records, documentary evidence (including any reports made to Adult Protective Services), financial records, and witness testimony to prove the alleged abuse.”
Patrick D. Owens, shareholder in the Chicago office of Buchalter, adds that, “Unfortunately, in many cases, other than bringing a potential claim for elder abuse or seeking a conservatorship in the court system, there is no right to claim undue influence or to contest an estate while a person is living.”
As far as the burden of proof in these sorts of cases, Owens said that, generally, it’s on the party making the claim, in this case, the daughter; however, the burden of proof can shift in cases of a confidential or fiduciary relationship involving undue influence. “If the brother acted as the agent under a power of attorney for property or as a trustee or co-trustee with his father, this could shift the burden of proof to the brother,” he posits.
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