What began as a bitter tug-of-war over a Montecito mansion has become a catalyst for something far larger than one headline-making lawsuit. The clash between Katy Perry and Carl Westcott exposed how vulnerable older Americans can be when navigating high-stakes real estate contracts while facing serious illness or cognitive decline. Even though a judge ultimately ruled in Perry’s favor, the haunting images of Westcott in hospice care and his family’s pleas for compassion shifted the public conversation from “Who’s right?” to “Is this fair?”
From that reckoning emerged the proposed PERRY Act, designed to build a pause into the pressure. By giving seniors over 75 a 72-hour cooling-off period to reconsider major home sales, advocates hope to protect dignity without stripping autonomy. Whether or not it passes, the case has already done something powerful: it forced the nation to see the human cost behind the signatures, and to ask how we want to treat people at the most fragile stage of their lives.