KEY POINTS

  • The woman forged her husband's signature on pension checks, monetary settlements and other documents, police said
  • She told police she was able to cover her tracks by convincing her husband that he had Alzheimer's disease
  • She was arrested and charged with first-degree larceny and third-degree forgery

A Connecticut woman stole more than half a million dollars from her husband over the course of 20 years by convincing him he had Alzheimer's disease, authorities said.

Police in East Haven, Connecticut, said Donna Marino, 63, forged her husband's signature on legal documents, pension checks, monetary settlements and social security checks to steal $600,000 between 1999 and 2019, WFSB Channel 3 first reported.

Marino, who deposited the defrauded money to a secret bank account, was able to cover her tracks by convincing her now-73-year-old husband, John, that he had Alzheimer's, a report by The Washington Post said.

Marino told police she often used the stolen money to help other family members with rent, groceries and car payments without John's consent.

Marino turned herself in to police on Oct. 27 and now faces first-degree larceny and third-degree forgery charges. Her bond was set at $25,000, and she faced a judge in New Haven on Oct. 28.

The victim's daughter, Elena, said the disease runs in the family, so her father believed Marino's claims. "My great-grandmother used to rip up mail, so she has said to my grandfather he was ripping up mail, so she went and got a PO box. So that’s why he never saw a bill," said Elena.

Elena said she started to become suspicious of Marino in 2019 — around 10 years after the couple got married — after she found paperwork at her father's home for credit cards he knew nothing about and noticed that her father's credit score had dropped by a hundred points.

Police interviewed John, who told them that his wife controlled the household finances and that until his daughter's discovery, he had been unaware of the theft. Elena contacted police and said her father no longer wished to pursue charges against Marino.

But in March 2020, two months after John filed for divorce, Elena and her father got back in touch with authorities and said they wanted to reopen the case.

Detectives discovered that several of John's pension checks had been deposited into the bank account of Marino's mother, police records showed. Authorities found that 17 of John's pension checks — totaling more than $23,000 — had been deposited into the account between September 2017 and February 2019.

Marino admitted in a January interview that she had signed John's pension checks and deposited them into the bank account for 13 years without his knowledge, according to records. She stole approximately $216,000 in pension funds, investigators estimated.

The woman further said that she "mismanaged" a nearly $28,000 workers' compensation settlement that had been paid out to her husband in 2012 and that she pawned eight of his silver coins in 2017 without his knowledge, police reports said.

Additionally, Marino told police she forged documents to obtain power of attorney for her husband and had the forms notarized by a friend in February 2019. She claimed she used the power of attorney to file taxes for her husband.

Police in Connecticut were restricted to investigating the fraud allegations within the past five years due to the state's statute of limitations.

It was unclear how much of the estimated $600,000 stolen from John was taken within the past five years.

John relocated to Florida after filing for divorce, his daughter said. The manipulation he experienced for years, however, has left him in a vulnerable position.

"He just can't believe the trauma," Elena said of her father. "He suffers."

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Representation. Donna Marino, 63, turned herself in to police on Oct. 27 and has been charged with first-degree larceny and third-degree forgery. Pixabay