Wendy Williams’ ex-rep questions if host’s dementia, aphasia diagnoses are ‘true’ after health ‘deteriorated’ under guardianship
Wendy Williams’ former attorney LaShawn Thomas is concerned about her ex-client, alleging the famed talk show host’s health has severely declined since she was placed in a guardianship.
The entertainment lawyer posted an old video on Instagram Saturday of Williams, 59, appearing healthy while sitting in a bed and saying she enjoys working out at the gym.
“You know, I do what I can,” the former “Wendy Williams Show” host said in the clip, featuring her son Kevin Hunter, Jr., as she flexed her muscles.
“You can clearly see the difference between Wendy’s well-being during her time here in Florida with her son caring for her and her lack thereof in New York under this ‘guardianship,'” Thomas wrote in the caption.
“These Wendys are not the same. How did her health deteriorate so quickly, and why isn’t her only child allowed to be by her side. She wasn’t like that when he cared for [her].”
The Miami Entertainment Law Group attorney alleged she took this video of Williams two weeks prior to her being ordered by the court to move back to New York to be placed under a guardianship.
Thomas, whom we’re told no longer works with Williams, then questioned the former radio DJ’s recent dementia and aphasia diagnoses, writing, “If Wendy’s diagnosis is true, now more than ever, her son should be allowed that same grace. He deserves it … and most importantly, Wendy deserves it.”
Williams’ current spokesperson declined Page Six’s request for comment and Wells Fargo, the bank that requested the guardianship, did not immediately respond to our request.
Williams’ family members have been open about the fact that they’ve had a hard time staying in touch with the TV star amid her ongoing health struggles.
“The people who love her cannot see her,” Williams’ sister, Wanda Finne, told People earlier this week. “How the hell did we get here?”
Wells Fargo claimed in 2022 that Williams was an “incapacitated person” and therefore needed help managing her finances.
“We are concerned about [Williams’] situation,” attorney David H. Pikus wrote on behalf of the bank at the time in a letter previously obtained by Page Six.
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“It is our hope that the Guardianship Part [of the court] will imminently appoint a temporary guardian or evaluator to review the situation and ensure that [Williams’] affairs are being properly handled.”
Williams had been very outspoken about the fact that she was not in favor of the guardianship.
Thomas also exclusively told Page Six in August 2022 that Wells Fargo allegedly left the media mogul to “die” when they took over her accounts.
The attorney advocated for Hunter, who is now 23, even then, telling us that he tried to help his mother “both mentally and physically with the assistance of a team of doctors.”
However, Williams’ guardianship case has been sealed, and since then, the “Wendy Williams Experience” alum has cried over her finances in an upcoming docuseries about her life, claiming she has “no money.”
Most recently, Williams spoke out to address her diagnoses, asking her supporters for “personal space” and “peace” amid the difficult situation.
“The messages shared with me have touched me, reminding me of the power of unity and the need for compassion,” she said in a statement to Page Six Friday.
“I hope that others with [frontotemporal dementia] may benefit from my story. I want to also thank the Association for Frontotemporal Degeneration for their kind words of support and their extraordinary efforts to raise awareness of FTD.”
Williams’ recent struggles are set to be revealed further on “Where Is Wendy Williams?,” which airs Saturday and Sunday at 8 p.m. ET on Lifetime.