Nick Reiner's 2020 Conservatorship: Why California Law May Have Doomed His Parents
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A judge found Nick Reiner "gravely disabled" in 2020 and placed him under LPS conservatorship—the most powerful mental health intervention California law allows. Licensed fiduciary Steven Baer controlled his treatment decisions. Nick could be forced into a locked psychiatric facility against his will. One year later, the conservatorship was gone. Four years later, Rob and Michele Reiner are dead.
The legal mechanism that may have ended it is brutal: under California law, if a family provides food, clothing, and shelter for a mentally ill loved one, that person may no longer qualify as "gravely disabled." The conservatorship can expire not because the patient improved—but because loving parents refused to abandon their child. The system punishes families for caring.
We examine every piece of the timeline: 2019 police calls to the Brentwood home. Nick's reported schizophrenia diagnosis around 2020. The conservatorship that lasted just one year. The medication change approximately one month before the killings that sources say triggered a "complete break from reality." And we break down why former conservator Steven Baer will almost certainly be called as a witness—what he observed during that year of control, what his testimony could reveal about Nick's mental state, and how it shapes both prosecution and defense strategies.
Before 1967, families could petition courts to hospitalize psychotic, violent relatives. California's Lanterman-Petris-Short Act ended that power. The state went from housing 37,000 patients in psychiatric hospitals to fewer than 1,500 people on involuntary conservatorships today. Families cannot initiate conservatorships—only hospital staff can. The Reiners reportedly spent vast sums on treatment. More than a dozen facilities. The best doctors money could buy. The system isn't designed to let families intervene.
The conservatorship didn't fail because the Reiners failed. It may have failed because the law worked exactly as designed. And two people died.
#NickReiner #RobReiner #MicheleReiner #LPSConservatorship #StevenBaer #Deinstitutionalization #MentalHealthLaw #CaliforniaLaw #Schizophrenia #ReinerCase
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This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.