The Wendy Williams Guardian’s lawyer says the media is wrong Wendy has a free, meticulous, capable guardian
March 11, 2025 at 6:48pm PDT | March 11, 2025 at 7:26pm PDT
TMZ has just received a letter from an attorney representing Wendy Williams’ guardian, Sabrina Morrissey, who claims that the lawyers are part of the media coverage of guardianship, and that their clients are “untrue, inaccurate, incomplete, or misleading.”
The lawyer pointed out that Morrissey had no guardianship… the judge did. He goes on to say that the judge declared that he was legally neutralised in August last year.
The lawyer says Wendy is not protected by his family and says he can call and watch at any time. Wendy says he has not been allowed to visitors since entering the Assist Living facility in New York with only a few exceptions.
The Guardian notes Wendy has traveled twice to Florida to visit his family. Wendy allegedly claimed that the judge actually turned down his final visit due to his father’s birthday, and that he overturned the decision after TMZ’s documentary “Saving Wendy” fell on Tubi.
The lawyer says Wendy receives “excellent medical care” with “spa, training room, excellent food, dining room and an outside terrace.” Wendy says that access to May for these perks is often denied because they can only leave memory units on the fifth floor with permission.
Play video content TMZ.com
The lawyer says Wendy’s lawyer tried to end guardianship last year, but the judge denied it. Morrissey’s lawyer says she’s free to try again, and Wendy does just that.
That’s interesting… The letter acknowledges that frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is a degenerative condition that causes “progressive decline in cognition and behavior.” There is no mention of the various conversations Wendy had on the camera and the phone that sounded like her old self.
The letter also states that symptoms of FTD include memory loss. As we reported, an independent psychiatrist investigated Wendy on Monday and gave her the cognitive test she attacked.
The lawyer said that Morrissey “received one payment of less than $30,000 for the rendered service. Since 2022, the parent has been working unpaid. Only the court will decide whether Morrissey will be paid for her services and when it will be paid.”
Play video content TMZ.com
Finally, the lawyer warns that “it will hurt Williams and her interests about her condition and protection, and will undermine the protections created by the court for her health and welfare.”
Wendy, her nie, her independent caregivers, and others have very different views on the situation.