Into her eighth decade, Colleen Grey remained a glamorous figure, reminiscent of Zsa Zsa Gabor. "If there was an outfit, there were shoes that matched and earrings that matched," said her eldest granddaughter, Brenda Shafer-Pellinen of Carlton, Minn. "Nobody ever saw her without her makeup on."
A voracious reader and arts enthusiast, Grey cared for her husband, who had Alzheimer's, in their Bloomington home. To blow off steam, Grey would visit the local casino, where she was befriended by a gambler two decades her junior, named Michael Mann.
When Grey's husband's died in 2002, she was emotionally distraught. The next time she bumped into Mann, he initiated what her family suspected was a parasitic relationship in the guise of a romance.
It took a decade for the evidence to pile up. After moving in, Mann isolated Grey from her family and stole more than $100,000 of her money. He pawned her wedding ring and sold the tires off her Buick, Shafer-Pellinen said. When the family finally got into Grey's home, which she eventually lost due to years of unpaid taxes, it was missing appliances, infested with vermin and mold. "It looked like somebody had picked the place over for parts," Shafer-Pellinen said.
The family learned that Grey had leukemia, among other medical conditions that had gone untreated during her time with Mann. That lack of health care hastened Grey's death, about a year after she reunited with her family.
Prior to meeting Mann, Grey wasn't someone you'd consider vulnerable; she lived independently and maintained strong ties with many relatives nearby. "If this can happen to a family like that, this can happen to anyone," Shafer-Pellinen said.
The Minnesota Department of Human Services receives more than 50,000 reports of suspected abuse, neglect or financial exploitation of vulnerable adults each year. Among incidents of theft, so-called "sweetheart scams" are especially damaging. Mann's sowing mistrust into Grey's established relationships destroyed her family, Shafer-Pellinen said. "There was so much other wreckage beside those bank accounts."