Showing posts with label Insurance fraud. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Insurance fraud. Show all posts

Cases closed in California fraud sweep

Cases closed in California fraud sweep : In June 2010, the Orange County District Attorney's (OCDA) office rounded up 53 California repair shop owners and other employees in a sweeping anti-fraud sting. Nine months later, the bulk of those cases have been closed, with divergent outcomes for many of those who were busted for adding pre-existing damage to estimates that were destined for insurance companies.

The defendants were arrested as part of Operation Straight Body, a five-month undercover operation conducted by the OCDA's Automobile Insurance Fraud Unit. Among those arrested were 24 shop owners, including Richard Evans of Huntington Beach Bodyworks, who was featured on the Speed Channel program "Chop Cut Rebuild."

The OCDA conducted 152 undercover operations in Orange County from January to May 2010, targeting shops that had been identified by the California Bureau of Automotive Repair (BAR) as having consumer complaints filed against them in the last three years. Additional shops included those referred by the National Insurance Crime Bureau (NICB), along with independent auto repair facilities that were not registered with the BAR.

Of the 53 arrested, 36 accepted an offer from the OCDA to have their charges reduced to a misdemeanor in exchange for paying a $1,000 fine and attending a fraud prevention class held by the California BAR and the OCDA's office. Provided they complied with the terms of the deal, their cases have been dismissed. An additional two cases destined for jury trails were dismissed by the court.

But another dozen or so defendants held out and had their charges dismissed on the merits. Another shop owner took his case to a jury and won.

In the sting operation, an OCDA investigator would bring a vehicle (either a Ford Expedition or Mercedes Benz) to the shop asking for a written estimate to repair damage caused by a recent collision. During the inspection, the undercover investigator would note that the vehicle also had some existing damage (either a missing bumper or a damaged fender, depending on the case), and ask if those repairs could be added to the estimate. They would then ask that the estimate be sent to an out-of-state insurance company called Mendota.

While the bulk of the repairers targeted in the sting declined to provide such an estimate, the OCDA says that those charged had agreed to provide an estimate with the knowledge that it would be used to commit insurance fraud.

The repairers originally faced felony fraud charges that carried a maximum sentence of five years in state prison.

The repairers who declined to accept the OCDA's deal, though, claimed that these estimates could not have been used fraudulently.

"If you called an insurance company, they would never have paid on just that estimate. They would have sent out their own adjuster, because these had more than $2,500 worth of damage," says Dyke Huish, a criminal defense attorney who represented several of the exonerated repairers, including Evans.

According to Huish, the estimates did not constitute fraud because there was never any claim made to the insurance company.

"The critical element is that what they did was not really a crime," Huish says. "Because they just gave estimates. They were not submitting false reports to the insurance company. They were not submitting false claims, they weren't claiming work that wasn't done. They were just asked to give an estimate by a guy who showed up and said, 'you know what, I didn't have a bumper on it. Can you give me an estimate?'"

Not guilty

Only one case actually made it all the way through a jury trial: that of Mike Rocha, owner of Placentia Auto Body, a small family-owned shop in Placentia, Calif. He, too, was approached by the "owner" of the Ford Expedition.

"I told him, 'You don't need an estimate, you need to choose a shop and let the insurance company know,'" Rocha says. When the owner persisted that he just needed two estimates to fax to the insurance company, Rocha told him that "it doesn't matter if I write an estimate, they won't honor it. They have an independent writer that comes to the body shop."

After going back and forth several times, Rocha finally offered to write an estimate that included used parts, noting that the subframe of the vehicle would need replaced. He also told the owner that the vehicle was likely going to be totaled.

"So I wrote an estimate with those parts, and said, 'Well, here's the estimate, but this is not going to fly with the insurance company,'" Rocha says.

After his initial arrest and release, Rocha hired an attorney and showed him the original paperwork. "I showed him a copy of the estimate," Rocha says. "There was no policy number, no insurance number, no claim number. Just a plain estimate."

At this point, Rocha was offered the same deal as the other defendants: to pay a fine and attend the BAR class in exchange for a dismissal. Because his attorney felt he had a strong enough case, Rocha decided to plead not guilty and move forward to the trial. A jury ultimately found him not guilty.

Vindication in court cost him $5,000 and a lot of time away from his shop. "I think I did the right thing," Rocha says. "I beat them. My record stays clean."

"It was devastating for my family and for my kids," Rocha continues. "I coach youth soccer. I've been involved as a volunteer at my church, and for my family to see all this and to see that I was arrested for something that they know I couldn't do – it was a big blow for them."

According to Huish, a number of defendants wound up being fired in the aftermath of the operation, including several who had their charges dismissed. "I think in the end the saddest thing is that many [people] lost their jobs over this, only to see their cases dismissed," Huish says. "That's really tragic and not what we want our government to be doing. We don't want the government inventing new ways to turn people into criminals."

The OCDA's office maintains that it accomplished exactly what it set out to do.

"The primary goal of the OCDA's office in pursuing this case was to protect the community and protect consumers, and we feel that it's been successful based on the results in terms of the completion of these classes by the defendants, and also based on the fact that the BAR has reported a significant drop in consumer complaints involving body shops since Operation Straight Body," says Farrah Emami, spokesperson for the OCDA’s office.

Lesson learned

While Rocha admits that he should have taken a harder line with the undercover customer, he is upset with the approach that the OCDA took in conducting the sting. "When I was talking to the different people who got arrested, a lot of them rejected the [investigator] that came in for an estimate the first time, and he just kept pounding them for it.

"The economy is not very good, and on top of that for them come in and drain you like this, it just puts you out of business," Rocha says. "They ruin your reputation, they play with your feelings, your family's feelings. They step on you. They don't care."

If the OCDA had hoped to teach shop owners a lesson, however, Rocha says they certainly succeeded. He's put up a sign in his shop letting customers know that he will not provide a written estimate without a claim number, will not waive deductibles and that unrelated damage will not be included in any estimate.

"That's the way I'm protecting myself," Rocha says. "That's what I told the jury. As soon as I walk in the door at 8 a.m., I'm a big target. People come in and try to get you to do something wrong. I'm definitely going to be more careful."

Ontario task force to tackle auto insurance fraud

auto insurance fraud ~ Ontario task force to tackle auto insurance fraud : The Ontario government is setting up a task force to advise it on how to deal with auto insurance fraud.

The task force, announced in Tuesday’s provincial budget, will be charged with determining the scope of the problem and finding ways to bolster investigative and enforcement efforts.

A Globe and Mail investigation published in December looked at the issue of auto fraud and fake accidents, in which perpetrators stage car accidents to make phony insurance claims. It’s a problem that has existed for years, and one that the insurance industry and investigators say is becoming more serious. The Globe investigation showed governments and insurance companies weren't doing enough to combat the problem.

“The government is committed to fully investigating the problem of auto insurance fraud and will establish appropriate working groups of stakeholders to develop collaborative approaches and solutions,” the budget stated.

The government also said it is introducing new rules to ensure that treatments for injuries sustained in vehicular accidents are actually provided according to the invoices submitted for insurance claims. In addition, the government suggested that it will place more onus on insurance companies to ensure they are dealing with the issue but also treating legitimate accident victims fairly. It will require auto insurers to attest annually that they have established effective compliance controls to satisfy the rules that protect policy holders and accident victims.

Ontario’s nine million drivers pay about $9-billion worth of insurance premiums each year. But selling auto insurance in the province has been a money-losing proposition in recent years, a problem that insurers say relates to fraud and abuse of the system.

The government, which regulates auto insurance to ensure it’s affordable because it’s a mandatory product, made a large number of reforms to the rules effective Sept. 1, 2010. These included reducing the minimum amount of basic medical and rehabilitation benefits that all drivers must hold to $50,000 from $100,000 and capping minor injury benefits at $3,500. But those moves were not expected to reduce premiums.

Ontario also announced in the budget that it will carry out a “long overdue” renewal of other parts of the provincial Insurance Act, dealing with areas such as life insurance and accident and sickness insurance. It will be the first major review of those parts of the legislation since 1962.

“In addition, regulatory effectiveness will be enhanced by considering additional enforcement tools for the regulator, such as administrative monetary penalties,” the government said.

Ontario budget takes aim at auto insurance fraud

auto insurance fraud ~ Ontario budget takes aim at auto insurance fraud : The Ontario government announced its intention to target auto insurance fraud in its 2011 budget. 

Both Insurance Bureau of Canada (IBC) and Insurance Brokers Association of Ontario (IBAO) applaud the announcement.

In the budget, Ontario Finance Minister Dwight Duncan said the government intends to augment the set of reforms implemented on Sept 1, 2010 with the following initiatives:

  • working with the industry to use the newly established Health Claims for Auto Insurance (HCAI) database to detect potentially fraudulent activity;
  • introducing new rules to ensure treatments are provided as invoiced;
  • establishing an auto insurance anti-fraud task force to determine the scope of auto insurance fraud in Ontario and make recommendations regarding detection, investigation, enforcement and consumer education. The government said it is committed to investigating the problem of auto insurance fraud fully and will establish appropriate working groups of stakeholders to develop collaborative approaches; and 
  • requiring auto insurers to annually attest that their companies have established effective compliance controls to satisfy and protect the rights of policyholders and accident victims. 

The government also plans to introduce an amendment to the Ontario Insurance Act to help municipal transit systems control fraudulent claims. 

"Insurance fraud is a problem that affects all Ontarians who are concerned about crime, public safety and increased auto insurance premiums," said Ralph Polumbo, IBC's vice president of Ontario. "We appreciate the efforts of the government for taking these first steps to combat this escalating problem and hope more will be done in the future." 

IBAO CEO Randy Carroll echoed this sentiment in a separate statement. 

"We commend Premier McGuinty and Minister Duncan on today's budget," Carroll said. "Today's budget announcement only reminds the insurance industry of the need for us to all work together to protect Ontario consumer interests."

Glendale attorney charged with new counts in auto insurance fraud case

auto insurance fraud ~ Glendale attorney charged with new counts in auto insurance fraud case : LOS ANGELES - Nine new criminal charges were filed today against a Glendale attorney who was among a group of lawyers and chiropractors charged in October 2009 in a case accusing them of taking part in an auto insurance fraud ring that staged auto accidents.

John Akopian -- who is awaiting a May 4 hearing to determine if there is sufficient evidence to require him to stand trial on 38 counts -- was charged with an additional nine counts of insurance fraud, according to Deputy District Attorney Greg Alker.

The 39-year-old attorney is believed, along with others, to have been an associate of Alexander Igor Gutman, 49, of Sherman Oaks, according to the District Attorney's Office.

Gutman pleaded guilty to 15 counts of insurance fraud and is scheduled to be sentenced Sept. 15.

The new charges coincide with the arrests of 10 people in Glendale, Los Angeles, Compton, Long Beach and Hollywood who are accused of conspiring with Akopian to defraud an insurance company of more than $74,000 through staged accidents, according to the District Attorney's Office.

Natick man accused of lying about vehicle damage to scam insurers

Natick man accused of lying about vehicle damage to scam insurers

 

Auto Insurance Quotes : Natick man accused of lying about vehicle damage to scam insurers

A Natick man lied about how much damage several vehicles sustained so he could claim more money from the insurance companies, the Massachusetts State Police said.

Michael Block, 38, of Natick, was arrested Friday by state police troopers assigned to the Governor's Auto Theft Strike Force.

Police say Block, who owns Motor Sports Inc., on Columbia Street in Somerville, was arrested at his business after an eight-month long investigation.

So far Block is charged with enhancing damage to five vehicles to inflate the insurance claims, but the state police, along with the Cambridge, Somerville and Lynn Police, say he may have intentionally damaged more than 80 vehicles, and more charges are expected.

Block is charged with several counts of insurance fraud, malicious destruction of property, forgery, uttering and larceny. He was arraigned in Somerville District Court on Monday and was released on $1,000 bail. He is due back in court on April 12 for a pretrial conference.

For more information, read Wednesday’s print edition of The MetroWest Daily News. To subscribe, call 888-MY-PAPER. You can also buy an electronic version of the paper by clicking on the E-edition button found at the top right of this site.

Owner of Motor Sports in Somerville arrested for insurance fraud

Owner of Motor Sports in Somerville arrested for insurance fraud

 

Auto Insurance Quotes : Owner of Motor Sports in Somerville arrested for insurance fraud

An auto repair shop in Somerville’s Boynton Yards neighborhood was allegedly causing damage to cars brought in for service to extract more money from insurance companies.

Motor Sports Inc. is located in a one-story cinderblock building on Columbia Street, in a neighborhood filled with junk yards and used auto part dealers.

According to the State Police, the shop’s owner, Michael Block, had caused extra damage to more than 80 vehicles that had been brought into his shop. The 38-year-old Natick man apparently spent the weekend in jail, as he was arrested on Friday and released on $1,000 bail after his arraignment on Monday.

Block was charged with several counts of insurance fraud, malicious destruction of property, forgery, uttering a false document and larceny, according to a State Police press release. According to his filing with the state, Block had been in business since 2007.

Block rented space within a garage and kept a disheveled desk with a photo of the 2008 New England Patriots Cheerleaders hanging above it, and a photograph taken from the movie, “The Godfather.” The auto-body shop owner who rented him space in the garage agreed to allow a reporter to see the space on the condition that his legitimate business was not mentioned in an article about the fraud.

It is unclear whether the car owners participated in the alleged scheme and investigation is ongoing, said State Police spokesman David Procopio.

Generally speaking the way the scheme would work is cars would be damaged in accidents, and then they would be busted up even more so that the damager would exceed the deductible threshold or make the insurance company declare the car “totaled,” Procopio said. Both of those outcomes would mean more money for the car owner. Block would presumably be paid more for the extra repairs, as well.

The investigation began eight months ago with information obtained from the Cambridge police, who then cooperated with Somerville and Lynn police, as well as the National Insurance Crime Bureau, MetLife Auto and Home insurance company and the Governor’s Auto Theft Task Force, the press release said.


Woman pleads not guilty in alleged fraud against R.I. nuns

Woman pleads not guilty in alleged fraud against R.I. nuns

 

Auto Insurance Quotes : Woman pleads not guilty in alleged fraud against R.I. nuns

The Sisters of the Religious of Jesus and Mary wanted to buy a house for fellow nuns who work with poor women in California.

Linda Rose Gagnon, who had attended a boarding school run by the order, was visiting the sisters at a convent in Rhode Island in 2008 when she heard they were looking to buy property they had their eye on in San Diego.

Gagnon told the sisters she worked in real estate, and persuaded the order to wire $285,000 from its retirement account to her business.

But instead of purchasing the property, Gagnon spent the money on personal items such as lingerie, pet sitting, car payments, mortgage payments and visits to retail stores, according to a federal indictment filed last week in the U.S. Court of the Central District of California.

On Monday, Gagnon pleaded not guilty to three counts of wire fraud at a court in Santa Ana. Her lawyer, Michael Khouri, says Gagnon is innocent. According to the Associated Press, he says she intended to help the nuns, didn’t know the money had arrived, or how it was spent and suspects a company employee was involved.

If convicted, Gagnon could face a maximum sentence of 60 years in federal prison.

The Religious of Jesus and Mary, RJM, is an international apostolic congregation of 1,550 sisters. They serve in educational institutions, retreat houses, catechetical and social-service centers and pastoral ministries. According to the order’s website, there are three convents and a nursing home in Rhode Island — Dina Mission Center in Woonsocket; St. Timothy Mission Center in Warwick; Kateri Tekakwitha Catholic Mission in Exeter; and St. Antoine Residence in North Smithfield.

Gagnon told the sisters she was the founder and chief executive officer of Rose Enterprise Inc., a company with an office in Tustin, Calif., that helped clients with delinquent mortgages and other real estate transactions. But, according to the indictment, neither Gagnon nor Rose Enterprise ever held a California real estate license.

Gagnon said she was an expert in real estate transactions and foreclosure sales, according to the indictment, and offered to help the order buy the property. Around Nov. 21, 2008, she sent the nuns a letter of authorization she wanted the order to sign so she could act on their behalf. The letter, says the indictment, was printed on a fake letterhead that purported to be that of a licensed California lawyer.

On Dec. 1, 2008, Gagnon told the order that the property was going to be auctioned a week later, but that she had arranged to buy it directly from the bank, according to the indictment. She told the order to wire $285,000 from its retirement fund to Rose Enterprise’s account so she could purchase the property.

But Gagnon didn’t use the money to purchase the property, the indictment says. Instead, from Dec. 5, 2008, through February 2009, Gagnon used the money to make personal purchases.

She spent $2,450 on pet-sitting services, $217 in salon/nail services, $448 for lingerie, $1,523 in car payments and $32,575 in mortgage payments, says the indictment. She made $39,865 in cash withdrawals or cash equivalents and used tens of thousands of dollars to pay employees at Rose Enterprise. She made purchases at Nordstrom, Costco, the Orange County Pet Clinic and grocery stores. She used the money to pay credit cards, pharmaceuticals, life-insurance premiums and rehabilitative services.

The order began to ask for the money back as early as Dec. 18, 2008. Gagnon held the order at bay, says the indictment, and in March 2009 she tried to get another $285,000 by telling the order that she was trying to close the deal, but that the funds were not available because they were tied up in “ ‘double’ and ‘triple’ escrow.” 

Fighting Insurance Fraud Still Gumshoe Work

Fighting Insurance Fraud Still Gumshoe Work


Auto Insurance Quotes : Fighting Insurance Fraud Still Gumshoe Work Despite all the advances in technology making the information highway a speed ramp of data, fighting insurance fraud still takes the hard work of gumshoe investigators to get the job done.

An example are the recent arrests on March 2 of 25 individuals in Miami accused of staging car accidents and scamming insurers under the Personal Injury Protection policies out of nearly $100,000 in fraudulent billings. The accused include doctors, clinic owners, staged-accident recruiters and others yet to be arrested, said Jeff Atwater, chief financial officer for the state of Florida.

The participants allegedly staged accidents, faked injuries and billed insurance companies for treatments they never received.

“This is just one example of the hundreds of similar fraud schemes run daily by accident clinics operating throughout Florida,” Mr. Atwater said in a statement.

The 25 arrested individuals face more than 142 various charges including staging an accident, insurance fraud, grand theft, racketeering and organized scheme to defraud. Collectively, they face up to 1,115 years in prison if convicted on all charges.

For all the advances made in technology, however, it was old-fashioned detective work that uncovered the fraud ring and developed the case, said Steve Smith, captain of the South Region (Broward, Dade and Monroe Counties) Division of Insurance Fraud, a law enforcement division within the Department of Financial Services.

Despite the size of the operation, the ring’s modus operandi was very much the same as other auto-accident fraud rings. The rings are usually comprised of a single ethnic group because organizers want to keep people they know and are comfortable with around them, Capt. Smith said.

What was different about this group was that instead of staging real accidents, they allegedly staged paper accidents where no auto accidents took place but papers were filed saying there was an accident involving injuries.

While a lot of the evidence is still under wraps, according to Capt. Smith, he did reveal that the enforcement office learned about the ring from a cooperating witness who helped an undercover officer infiltrate the ring.

“As time goes on, more details will be released and it will open your eyes to how blatant the activity is,” he said.

When it comes to unearthing insurance fraud, technology can only go so far, explained Frank Scafidi, spokesman for the National Insurance Crime Bureau. The organization has access to claims from the Insurance Services Office and what member insurers refer to the organization, but ultimately it comes down to investigators at the NICB working with local police to spot trends and do the field work.

Investigators within insurance companies, NICB investigators and police all look for trends, whether its medical providers or attorneys names or something else that will point them in the direction of fraud. But ultimately it is the investigator putting two-and-two together that uncovers the fraudsters.

Mr. Scafidi noted that data-mining tools are often employed to sift through data, but not all insurers are as attentive to uncovering fraud in their midst.

“Companies themselves will turn evidence over,” he said. “Some are very good at it and others are not so good. Some are tech savvy; others are more traditional.”

Mr. Scafidi said that, ultimately, it is the investigator’s suspicions that will bring notice to a pattern of activity.

“It’s pretty subjective,” he said. “There are things that you can’t measure from one company to the next. Every company is very different on how they do it.”

The Insurance Information Institute Fact Book for 2010 estimated that fraud accounts for 10 percent of the property and casualty insurance industry’s incurred losses and loss adjustment expenses, or about $30 billion annually in recent years.

“We have to keep the pressure on constantly,” observed Capt. Smith.

For his part, Mr. Atwater has proposed fighting the PIP fraud problem in his state by:

  • Strengthening billing practices so only appropriate services rendered are covered.
  • Create civil penalties for those convicted of auto insurance fraud and allow the proceeds to fund additional anti-fraud efforts.
  • Require police to list all passengers in accident reports so those who weren’t there can’t later claim they were injured.
  • Tighten requirements for clinic ownership.


source: Auto insurance quotes, Get auto insurance quotes, Compare auto insurance, Auto insurance comparisons, Auto insurance quote, Instant auto insurance, Affordable auto insurance, Auto insurance companies, Auto insurance rates, Auto insurance discounts, Auto car insurance, Student auto insurance, Auto insurance brokers, General auto insurance, American auto insurance, Auto insurance UK, Auto insurance claims, Fake auto insurance, Auto insurance complaints

What Auto Insurance Fraud Really Costs

What Auto Insurance Fraud Really Costs

 

You might not realize it, but you need to be concerned about auto insurance fraud. When you become a victim of this kind of crime, you can find yourself owing thousands or even tens of thousands of dollars, and have no way to pay it. Even if you’re not a victim of auto insurance fraud, the fact remains that rampant insurance crimes like this add a significant amount of money to your annual insurance bill. It’s estimated that most people pay between $200 and $300 extra per year on their car insurance premiums because of this kind of fraud.

In addition, auto insurance fraud causes businesses to have to pay more for their coverage, as well. This means that they have to charge more money for the goods and services that they offer, further exacerbating the problem.
To really get a handle on what auto insurance fraud does to you and what it really costs, it can be helpful to understand some of the types of Insurance fraud. There are, essentially, two categories of fraud, and each has its own characteristics.

Hard auto insurance fraud
The first kind of auto insurance fraud to consider is what’s known as “hard” fraud. This involves creating an event that would be covered by your insurance. This might include things like:
  • Staged or intentional accidents. This would include things like intentional rear-endings, as well as things like people who intentionally set their car on fire.
  • False injury claims, both for people who were actually involved in the accident as well as others who were not even in the vehicle at the time the accident occurred.
  • One-car accidents in which the driver claims that the accident was actually caused by a hit-and-run driver.
Soft auto insurance fraud
The other kind of insurance fraud is “soft” insurance fraud. These types of cases usually involve someone who has a legitimate claim, but who may actually pad the claim so as to get more money out of the insurance company. Examples of this include:
  • Adding previous damage to the vehicle on the auto insurance claim
  • Conspiring with the auto repair shop or an insurance claims adjuster to increase or “pad” the repair estimate
  • Conspiring with medical personnel to receive and/or bill for medical procedures or treatments that aren’t necessary.
Insurance fraud can involve anyone from average folks to mechanics to claims adjustors. Be vigilant about avoiding insurance fraud, and consider talking to an attorney if you believe fraud has taken place.

Avoiding Insurance Fraud after a Crash

Avoiding Insurance Fraud after a Crash

 

Being in an auto accident can be scary and frustrating, and the last thing you should have to worry about is auto insurance fraud during this difficult time. Unfortunately, there are many people who will seek to take advantage of the situation. Whether it’s because they don’t want to have to face higher auto insurance rates, because they’ve been drinking and don’t want to get caught with a DUI, or whether it’s because they don’t want the accident on their record, some people will try to talk you into just forgetting the whole thing ever happened.
There are other ways in which you can become the victim of fraud or a scam after a crash, as well. However, there are some important steps you can take if you’re in an accident to protect yourself and to keep yourself from becoming a victim of auto insurance fraud:
  • Collect as much information as you can. This includes exchanging information with the other driver. You’ll want to get their driver’s license number and their auto insurance card. You should get the names of all of the people involved in the accident, and you should try to take some pictures of the damage to each of the vehicles. You’ll also want to get a name, address and phone number for all of the people in the other car.
  • Document the consequences of the accident. Get detailed pictures of the damage to each vehicle. You want to avoid a situation where the other party damages the vehicle after the fact and tries to blame it on your accident.
  • Call the cops. Whenever there’s an accident, the best thing you can do is to make sure it’s documented by the local authorities. Get a police report from the officer on the scene, or follow whatever procedure your state or locality has for getting a copy. Make sure you get the officer’s name, preferably on a business card or other official piece of paperwork.
  • Watch out for ambulance chasers. If there are people who suddenly appear to try to point you toward a doctor, attorney, tow truck or mechanic, be careful. You might be the victim of a setup.
  • Keep all of your receipts and paperwork. Ask for detailed bills for any services you get, including repair bills or medical services bills.
  • Don’t ever sign a blank insurance claim form. This can be used against you when the time comes to try to collect damages or insurance payments.

Police chief cleared of insurance fraud

Police chief cleared of insurance fraud

 

Former West Berkshire police chief Jim Trotman has been acquitted of torching his own car in an insurance scam.

Chief Supt Trotman, 45, of Abingdon, was today cleared of arson, insurance fraud and perverting the course of justice following a two-week trial at Swindon Crown Court.

Deputy Chief Constable Francis Habgood said: “Chief Supt Trotman will remain suspended from duty until the outcome of an internal disciplinary hearing on conduct matters unconnected with the criminal case. As this is ongoing, Thames Valley Police is unable to comment further.”

source: Auto insurance quotes, Get auto insurance quotes, Compare auto insurance, Auto insurance comparisons, Auto insurance quote, Instant auto insurance, Affordable auto insurance, Auto insurance companies, Auto insurance rates, Auto insurance discounts, Auto car insurance, Student auto insurance, Auto insurance brokers, General auto insurance, American auto insurance, Auto insurance UK, Auto insurance claims, Fake auto insurance, Auto insurance complaints

Man pleads guilty to insurance fraud

Man pleads guilty to insurance fraud 

 

A 36-year-old Prior Lake man pleaded guilty to insurance fraud last week in Scott County District Court.

Mateo Ansono Rossini reported his motorcycle was stolen last fall from the parking lot of the Cherrywood Center on County Road 42 in Savage. That report initiated a four-month long investigation by Savage Police that turned up evidence that Rossini worked with a friend to conceal his custom chopper in a storage garage in Wisconsin.

Rossini pleaded guilty Jan. 25 to one count of insurance fraud and one count of falsely reporting a crime. Judge William E. Macklin accepted his “Alford Plea,” which means Rossini does not admit to the criminal act, but he does admit that prosecutors could likely prove the charges during a trial. Rossini will be sentenced by Macklin on April 4.

Rossini’s partner in the alleged fraud, Brian Hansen, was sentenced by Judge Rex D. Stacey to one year in jail; but will serve 70 days, after he pleaded guilty to theft Oct. 8 in Scott County District Court.
Advertisement. Article continues below.

If convicted, Rossini faces a maximum of 10 years in prison and/or a $20,000 fine for the insurance fraud charge. He also faces a maximum of 90 days in jail and/or $1,000 fine for the falsely reporting a crime charge.
source: Auto insurance quotes, Get auto insurance quotes, Compare auto insurance, Auto insurance comparisons, Auto insurance quote, Instant auto insurance, Affordable auto insurance, Auto insurance companies, Auto insurance rates, Auto insurance discounts, Auto car insurance, Student auto insurance, Auto insurance brokers, General auto insurance, American auto insurance, Auto insurance UK, Auto insurance claims, Fake auto insurance, Auto insurance complaints

Woman behind bars for fraud admits guilt to new insurance fraud allegation

Woman behind bars for fraud admits guilt to new insurance fraud allegation

 


MAYS LANDING - An Atlantic County woman currently behind bars for insurance fraud pleaded guilty Friday to automobile insurance fraud.

Dalynn White (also known as Da'lynn White), of Mays Landing, 32, who is currently incarcerated in the Edna Mahon Correctional Facility in Clinton, pleaded guilty to insurance fraud before Superior Court Judge Michael A. Donio.

Under the plea agreement, the state will recommend that White be sentenced to seven years in state prison and pay $8,241 in restitution. The state will recommend that the sentence run concurrent to the sentence White is already serving. Donio scheduled sentencing for April 4.

In pleading guilty, White admitted that between Dec. 24, 2008 and July 19, 2009, she knowingly submitted false information in applications for automobile insurance to customer service representatives of the Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. White provided false financial information to obtain 13 separate automobile insurance policies, and subsequently collected $8,241 in insurance premium refunds to which she was not entitled.

White is currently serving a five-year prison sentence following a guilty plea on Aug. 17, 2009 to insurance fraud. That charge was contained in a May 13, 2009 Atlantic County grand jury indictment obtained by the Office of the Insurance Fraud Prosecutor. White also pleaded guilty to two counts of identity theft filed by the Atlantic County Prosecutor's Office.

In the charges brought by the Office of the Insurance Fraud Prosecutor, White admitted that between March 15 and June 19, 2005, she fraudulently collected $4,357 from the New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development by submitting false disability claim forms. White gave the false impression that she and a co-worker were disabled and under the care of two doctors. An investigation determined that White forged the two doctors' names on the claim forms in support of the false disability claims. White admitted that she reported to the labor department that she was pregnant when, in fact, she was not. White also admitted that she falsely claimed her co-worker was injured in an accident on his way to work.

In pleading guilty to the charges brought by the Atlantic County Prosecutor's Office, White admitted that she unlawfully obtained bank information of at least seven victims, and used the information to fraudulently obtain duplicate ATM and other bank cards. White admitted that she used the fraudulent cards to obtain cash and other items from various retail stores within Atlantic County.

source: Auto insurance quotes, Get auto insurance quotes, Compare auto insurance, Auto insurance comparisons, Auto insurance quote, Instant auto insurance, Affordable auto insurance, Auto insurance companies, Auto insurance rates, Auto insurance discounts, Auto car insurance, Student auto insurance, Auto insurance brokers, General auto insurance, American auto insurance, Auto insurance UK, Auto insurance claims, Fake auto insurance, Auto insurance complaints

Thomas Gallo of Bayville must repay employer $16K for fraudulent disability payments

Thomas Gallo of Bayville must repay employer $16K for fraudulent disability payments 

 

 

Sentenced in Toms River to 3 years probation

An Ocean County man was sentenced to three years of probation Friday for fraudulently obtaining more than $16,000 in disability insurance benefits.

Thomas Gallo, 55, of Bayville, was sentenced by state Superior Court Judge Wendel E. Daniels in Tom River, according to state Acting Insurance Fraud Prosecutor Riza Dagli,

Gallo was also ordered to pay full restitution to Freehold Cartage Inc., his former employer.

New Jersey law provides that there is a presumption against any sentence of incarceration for a person convicted of a third-degree crime who has not previously been convicted of an indictable offense. The sentence was based on Gallo's Dec. 7 guilty plea to an accusation which charged him with third-degree theft by deception.

In pleading guilty, Gallo, a truck driver for Freehold Cartage, admitted that between Feb. 5 and Oct. 6, 2008, following an injury at work, he obtained $16,821.84 in fraudulent disability insurance claims from the company, even though he was working for another company and was not entitled to receive temporary benefits.

East Brunswick man admits insurance fraud

East Brunswick man admits insurance fraud

 

EAST BRUNSWICK — A retired Veterans Administration worker from East Brunswick has been sentenced to 23 months in federal prison for submitting false claims for medical services he said were performed in Egypt.

Fawzi Saleh, 70, also must pay $253,727 in restitution as well as a $10,000 fine imposed by U.S. District Judge Faith Hochberg.

Saleh previously pleaded guilty to a count of defrauding a health-care benefits program.

Saleh worked at the Veterans Adminstration Medical Center in East Orange from 1995 to 2008, retiring as a financial accounts technician.

Saleh admitted that he submitted the false claims for himself and his wife from June 2001 through June 2009, saying that they received medical care at a hospital in Cairo that does not exist.

Saleh claimed he paid for the treatments in cash. Authorities said Blue Cross Blue Shield reimbursed him tens of thousands of dollars.

In insurance fraud case another arrest made


Collier deputies have arrested a 13th suspect in the case of an alleged insurance fraud ring in the county. Claudia M. Sanchez, 31, of the 3500 block of Winifred Row Lane in Golden Gate, turned herself in on Friday, the agency reported. She was wanted on a charge of scheme to defraud.

Sanchez is the 13th of 14 suspects arrested in the case, which extends from a year-long investigation targeting alleged fraudulant billing practices at four Collier chiropractic offices. Miguel Alberto Rodriguez, 43, of Golden Gate Estates is still being sought on charges of scheme to defraud and patient brokering. Deputies arrested 11 suspects on Wednesday.

Detectives say the suspects worked with the clinics to stage minor auto accidents and then receive reimbursement for treatments neither needed nor provided.