I'm so sorry. This is very depressing. He has no business telling you to go on medication, but you might have real depression because of HIM...maybe medication could help you manage, but it won't solve the problem of HIM...
I don't know what the jurisdiction laws are that you mention. I guess it means that you can't leave the state with your children? Under what conditions CAN you leave the state? Joint custody?
If I were you, I would separate your finances at this point and if there's anything left of your IRA, revoke his power of attorney. Surely the attorneys have given you a list of things to do before announcing your intention to leave him?
I think if I were in your shoes, I'd give him an ultimatum AFTER you have done your homework. Either he finds a job working for someone ELSE (not self-employed) that pays the bills, or you will divorce him. And do if he doesn't find a job OR if he continues this pie-in-the-sky endeavor to run a fund. Either way, he will keep you tied to him in debt forever. You will never be able to trust him - you already know that. He has betrayed you SO completely already...He will continue to use you and you'll be looked at as complicit in losing people's money if he starts another business and it fails too. It will be even worse if he eventually resorts to a Ponzi scheme or swindles his investors. And if he DOES, you will be a pariah. Just look at Bernie Madoff's wife. http://nypost.com/2017/05/14/the-sad-new-life-of-exiled-r... And you have never been in her very wealthy circumstances.
I knew a man who on a smaller scale than Madoff, swindled his investors. His whole business was a lie and his wife and kids did not know. They lived high on the hog, so to speak. When the Madoff scandel hit the news, people started to worry and asked him for their investments back. He knew the gig was up, and went to work and put a pistol in his mouth. He left it all for her to deal with. She lost EVERYTHING. And I mean everything...
That was a man who would not admit to his gambling weakness. That was a man who was in denial. That was a man who didn't care enough about his wife to work with the authorities to even TRY to take care of her so that she would have more than social security to live off of. At least Bernie Madoff did THAT for his wife...
What kind of man would YOUR husband be if he started the slippery slope of doctoring monthly statements and hiding market losses?
And even if you had a life insurance policy on him, his creditors would take it from you...
You might have a really hard time getting on your feet after leaving him, and it might be a hard row to hoe for a long time, but you wouldn't have to live with the shame of what he may heap on others, using you to unwittingly help him do to them...
I know this sounds awful, and you may think that he would never stoop THAT far. That's what we often think of gamblers. But read about a gambling addiction and what it can do. I knew someone who knew Bernie Madoff personally, and he was absolutely gobsmacked that Madoff could have done what he did. He said that Madoff was one of the most charming people he had met, and this came from a finance guy who worked with securities authorities to police the industry. It was a real blow to him because HE didn't see it coming, being in the job he was in. And he said very few things surprised him...but Madoff did... and that's really saying something.
I was shocked about the guy who killed himself and left his wife to pick up the terrible pieces. My point is that you can't just assume your husband wouldn't cross this line. Even if he didn't, but continued to drain you of your financial health and your physical health and spirit, can you live with wondering when the shoe will drop, AGAIN?
I wish you much luck.