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It has been well over a year and I would think there is a specific time frame they have to conduct an investigation.

A year isn't really all that long, especially if the case being investigated has to do with finances going back a long way.

It could also be that the investigation is complete, and they just haven't informed you of the results.

Especially if the investigation showed possible criminal activity that could lead to charges, the investigator is NOT going to reach out to anyone close to the case and inform them of this; they don't want the chance of the people being investigated to get a "heads up" and start to manipulate or destroy evidence.

Investigations can be long and tricky, and, counter to what some people seem to think, you might not have the "right to know" what's going on with it.
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Reply to notgoodenough
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I agree with Geaton777 but everyone that does an investigation, inspection of any kind has a Supervisor. You can always call and ask to talk to a Supervisor. There is a possibility that the person that was originally assigned may have left the position and your case may have been reassigned or "fallen through the cracks" it does happen unfortunately. And there are some people that do investigations that don't really do what they are supposed to do and falsify reports. So I think I would call and ask to talk to a Supervisor. If you have already done this then for sure take it to an attorney
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Reply to Grandma1954
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You should probably contact social services and ask this question, or an elder law attorney.

"Too long" is only your opinion, but I agree it feels like a long time to wait. Arizona is one of Heaven's Waiting Rooms (FL is the other one) so LOTS of seniors and not enough people to supply the services.
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Reply to Geaton777
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What do they say when you contact them?
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Reply to AlvaDeer
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