The Freeland Martz firm successfully contested a document purporting to be a will signed by a person who had long suffered from Alzheimer’s disease. After the client retired from the Navy, she returned to Mississippi and bought a home near her family. Her youngest brother had long counted on her providing for him and for her assets to become his estate plan. As she became more confused, suffering from Alzheimer’s disease, he became aggressive, taking her to his attorney and getting her to sign over her home, getting her to buy his vehicle, threatening her if she failed to cooperate. Ultimately, she began to fear him and her other family members became more involved and sought the protections of a court-supervised guardianship, which their sister knew she needed. Through the guardianship, her sisters oversaw her accounts and got her home back in her name. After a few years, when their sister died, the brother presented what he claimed to be her will, which he had lied about and concealed for years. Other family members challenged it in a will contest. The court found that the will would have been revoked by his sister or his guardians had it not been concealed; moreover, the document he claimed to be the decedent’s will was not presented at trial and authenticated by a witness who saw her sign it. The Court found that the sister died intestate without a will and that all of her siblings would share her estate, even the selfish brother who tried everything he could to get it all.