Andrew worked fast. We revoked Lucia’s joint access to all accounts. We created a new revocable trust that excluded her completely. We placed the house and my savings into an irrevocable trust for my grandchildren — with me as trustee and a neutral third party as successor.
But the biggest move came the morning of my “trip” to Dallas.
I deliberately told Lucia my flight was at 2:35 p.m.
At 1:00 p.m., while she thought I was at the airport, I was actually sitting in Andrew’s office with two detectives.
At 1:45 p.m., Lucia used her still-active old access code (which we hadn’t fully removed yet on purpose) to try transferring $187,000 from my main account to a new one she had opened in her name.
The bank flagged it immediately.
The detectives moved in.
When I walked into my own house at 3:00 p.m. — not in Dallas, but right there in Chicago — Lucia was in my study with her husband Marcus, frantically trying to log into my accounts.
They both froze when they saw me standing in the doorway with two police officers.
“Dad…?” Lucia’s face went pale. “What are you doing here? Your flight—”
“I never left,” I said quietly.
Marcus tried to bluff. “This is a misunderstanding—”
“No,” I cut him off. “This is felony fraud, wire fraud, and elder financial abuse.”
Lucia’s eyes filled with tears. “Dad, please… I was just trying to protect the money. You’re getting older. We were worried—”
“Worried?” I stepped closer. “You taught your seven-year-old son to lie to me. You tried to steal the life your mother and I spent forty years building. While I was still breathing.”
The officers placed her in handcuffs.
Marcus started crying, begging.
As they led my daughter out of the house she had tried to steal, she looked back at me with pure hatred.
“You’ll regret this.”
I looked her straight in the eyes and said the last words I would ever say to her:
“The only thing I regret is trusting you.”