Zalma’s Insurance Fraud Letter – December 1, 2022

Zalma’s Insurance Fraud Letter – December 1, 2022

See the full video at https://rumble.com/v1xvyiu-zalmas-insurance-fraud-letter-december-1-2022.html and at https://youtu.be/Kt8eEl5e8Vs

The December 1, 2022 issue contains articles and reports of insurance fraud convictions for every insurance claims professional, SIU investigators and everyone interested in the efforts to defeat or deter insurance fraud. The December 1, 2022 issue includes:

It Doesn’t Pay to Try to Cheat Your Insurance Company

Sigismondi Foreign Car Specialists, Inc. appealed the U. S. District Court’s summary judgment in favor of State Auto Property and Casualty Insurance Company on State Auto’s declaratory judgment action and statutory insurance fraud claim.

In State Auto Property And Casualty Insurance Company v. Sigismondi Foreign Car Specialists, Inc., No. 21-2435, United States Court of Appeals, Third Circuit (November 18, 2022) the Third Circuit Court of Appeal dealt with the allegations of the insurer that Sigismondi attempted insurance fraud.

Read the full article at ZIFL-12-01-2022

New California Law Means New Obligations for Insurance Agents & Brokers

California Governor Gavin Newsom has signed into law Senate Bill 1242, written by the Senate Insurance Committee and aimed at protecting California consumers by imposing a variety of requirements upon producers.

The omnibus bill is essentially a kitchen sink of unrelated topics covered under a single piece of legislation. It takes effect on Jan. 1, 2023, and addresses, among other things, insurance fraud reporting and education mandates, fingerprinting and licensing disclosures.

Reporting Fraud

At the start of the year, agents and brokers will be required to report fraud to the California Department of Insurance (CDI). More specifically, SB 1242 amends the California Insurance Code to require producers who suspect or know a fraudulent application for insurance is being made to submit to the DOI Fraud Division via the electronic Consumer Fraud Reporting Portal information regarding the factual circumstances of a dubious application and the alleged misrepresentations it contains.

Read the full article at ZIFL-12-01-2022

Crime Doesn’t Pay – It Leads to Bankruptcy

North Carolina’s Wake County Superior Court judge ordered the liquidation of two life insurance companies in rehabilitation operated under billionaire insurance and finance executive Greg Lindberg. The judge approved the order to liquidate Colorado Bankers Life Insurance Co. and Bankers Life Insurance Co., which have been in rehabilitation since 2019. The companies were put into rehabilitation after questions arose about Lindberg’s alleged use of reserve funds to support other businesses he operated.

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Read the full article at ZIFL-12-01-2022

Good News From the Coalition Against Insurance Fraud

A pain doc stuck patients with unneeded injections for knees and other body parts in a $240M scheme in San Antonio, Tex. Area. Dr. Jorge Zamora-Quezada falsely diagnosed patients with degenerative diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis. He gave them batteries of injections, invasive chemo and other toxic treatments they didn’t need. He earned a trip to the Coalition’s Insurance Fraud Hall of Shame in 2020 — and finally is scheduled for federal sentencing May 18. Zamora-Quezada kicked patients out of his office if they questioned his treatments and hid their records from docs the patients next saw. He also laundered the insurance money. And he bought a private jet, owned luxury properties in Aspen and other jet-set locales and bought a fleet of luxury cars. And Zamora-Quezada gave patients knee-buckling doses of chemo and other toxic treatments they didn’t need, all to keep insurance money flowing. Many patients — one aged just 13 — suffered serious physical and emotional damage from the chemo injections and sometimes hours-long intravenous infusions. Zamora-Quezada falsely diagnosed one man with rheumatoid arthritis. The patient later developed burns on his skin, lost both finger and toenails, and later began losing his skin from the toxic medications. His health problems continued until his death.

Read the full article about multiple insurance fraud convictions at ZIFL-12-01-2022

The Examination Under Oath Is Not a Replacement for the Insurance Claims Professional

An attorney is not an insurance adjuster. The attorney representing an insurer at an EUO is not a “super adjuster.” The attorney is a lawyer who was retained to provide legal advice and counsel after assisting the insurer in gathering facts at an EUO.

Competent outside adjustment services can be obtained for a great deal less per hour than any attorney. The EUO should complement, and be part of, the thorough investigation of the Insurance Claims Professional.

See also  A Warning to Hurricane Ian Policyholders About Loss Mitigation Versus Loss Prevention—A Sue and Labor Clause Analysis Can an insured recover costs to prevent a loss under a property insurance policy? If a loss occurs, can an insured recover the costs to reduce or mitigate damage from further damage? The answer is to read the full policy terms to make this determination. Generally, property insurance policies have terms which follow maritime and inland marine forms which require the policyholder to take steps to reduce or mitigate a previous loss and usually pay costs to do so. It is much less likely that a policy will reimburse fully for the costs to prevent a loss from occurring—but read the policy carefully. This issue involving a sue and labor provision was discussed by the Florida Supreme Court. Following prior case precedent interpreting the sue and labor clause, the court explained that: “An insured has the duty to exercise the care of a prudent, uninsured owner to protect insured property so as to minimize or prevent the loss for which the insurer would be liable. The purpose of the sue and labor clause is to reimburse the insured for those expenditures which are made primarily for the benefit of the insurer to reduce or eliminate a covered loss.” Did the sue and labor also pay for costs to prevent a loss? Not in that policy: “…Zurich correctly contends that the Sue and Labor clause in the Swire-Zurich policy is specifically applicable only after an actual loss has occurred or is occurring. Because Swire was acting to prevent a potential collapse of the building, and no actual loss had occurred, the $ 4.5 million expended by Swire is not recoverable under the policy’s Sue and Labor clause. …the policy’s Sue and Labor clause applies only in the case of an actual, covered loss. Any other conclusion would result in the Sue and Labor clause becoming the primary coverage provision of this contract without regard to the content of the contract or the coverage it was designed to provide. The reasoning suggested by Swire is certainly logical, to the effect that the preventive measures may have conferred a benefit upon the insurance company. If the Sue and Labor clause had been worded differently or if it had included language concerning the prevention of loss, the conclusion may have been different.” Hurricane Ian victims should be aware of property insurance provisions which require a policyholder to repair and take action to prevent further loss or damage. With soon to be Hurricane Nicole about to strike Florida, these provisions are important duties. Policies may also provide benefits to take these emergency and temporary repairs before the winds and rains of Hurricane Nicole cause further damage. Thought For The Day “You can never protect yourself 100%. What you do is protect yourself as much as possible and mitigate risk to an acceptable degree. You can never remove all risk.” Kevin Mitnick

It should provide the information that the Insurance claims professional is unable to obtain because of the recalcitrance of the Insured, because of the lack of records, or because complex legal and factual issues have made resolution of the claim on an adjusting level impossible.

Read the full article at ZIFL-12-01-2022

Health Insurance Fraud Convictions

Florida Birth-Related Neurological Injury Compensation Plan and Association to Pay $51 Million to Resolve False Claims Act Allegations

The Florida Birth-Related Neurological Injury Compensation Plan and its administrator, the Florida Birth-Related Neurological Injury Compensation Association (collectively, “NICA”), have agreed to pay $51 million to resolve allegations that they violated the False Claims Act by causing NICA participants to submit their healthcare claims to Medicaid rather than NICA, in violation of Medicaid’s status as the payer of last resort under federal law.

The civil settlement resolves a lawsuit filed and pursued by Veronica N. Arven and the estate of Theodore Arven III against NICA under the qui tam or whistleblower provisions of the False Claims Act, which permit a private party (known as a relator) to file a lawsuit on behalf of the United States and receive a portion of any recovery. Although the United States did not intervene in this case, it continued to investigate the whistleblowers’ allegations, provided substantial assistance to the whistleblowers in defending against a motion to dismiss, and negotiated the settlement announced today. The Arvens will receive $12,750,000 as their share of the recovery in this case.

Read the full article about multiple insurance fraud convictions at ZIFL-12-01-2022

Post Loss Underwriting is Rare

When an insurer decides to rescind a policy of insurance it is often accused of “Post Loss Underwriting.” Although considered in some states, post loss underwriting is an oxymoron. Underwriting is the decision, based on information provided by a proposed insured, to accept the risk of certain losses needed by the proposed insured. Underwriting, by definition, must be conducted before a policy comes into existence except in the event when a policy is bound subject to a physical inspection of the property. If the inspection shows the risk to be other than that promised by the insured, the policy will be cancelled. Rescission, on the other hand, happens when an insurer learns, after a policy is written, that it was deceived by a material misrepresentation or a concealment of a material fact or by fraud.

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Read the full article at ZIFL-12-01-2022

Other Insurance Fraud Convictions

Workers’ Compensation Fraud Convicted

Frances Davis pleaded guilty to one count of attempting to commit workers’ compensation fraud, a fifth-degree felony, and agreed to pay $17,144.79 in restitution, according to the Ohio Bureau of Workers’ Compensation. The BWC Special Investigations Department discovered that Davis potentially earned wages while collecting disability benefits from the BWC.

Davis, a Franklin County, Ohio woman was ordered to pay $17,000 in restitution she defrauded from the Ohio Bureau of Workers’ Compensation.

It was confirmed that while Davis was collecting benefits, she worked for seven different employers over the course of two years and held positions such as manager, assistant manager, packer, and machine operator.

A Franklin County judge found Davis guilty and sentenced her to five years of community control to pay the restitution as well.

Read the full article about multiple insurance fraud convictions at ZIFL-12-01-2022

It’s Time to Subscribe to Locals or Substack

For Subscribers Only I Have Published Special Insurance Videos

I published today on Locals.com Video Number 23 of the Excellence in Claims Handling program on Specific, Blanket and reporting coverages. I also published on Substack.com Video Number 9 of the Excellence in Claims Handling Program available only to Subscribers. The subscribes have access to all the videos and a webinar on “The Examination Under Oath A Tool Available to Insurers to Thoroughly Investigate Claims and Work to Defeat Fraud.”

The videos start with the history of insurance and work their way through various types of insurance and how to obtain and deal with insurance claims.

Subscribe and receive videos limited to subscribers of Excellence in Claims Handling at locals.com https://zalmaoninsurance.locals.com/subscribe.

Subscribe to my publications at substack at substack.com/refer/barryzalma

Go to substack at substack.com/refer/barryzalma

Read the full article at ZIFL-12-01-2022

(c) 2022 Barry Zalma & ClaimSchool, Inc.

Subscribe and receive videos limited to subscribers of Excellence in Claims Handling at locals.com https://zalmaoninsurance.locals.com/subscribe.

Go to substack at substack.com/refer/barryzalma Consider subscribing to my publications at substack at substack.com/refer/barryzalma

Barry Zalma, Esq., CFE, now limits his practice to service as an insurance consultant specializing in insurance coverage, insurance claims handling, insurance bad faith and insurance fraud almost equally for insurers and policyholders. He practiced law in California for more than 44 years as an insurance coverage and claims handling lawyer and more than 54 years in the insurance business. He is available at http://www.zalma.com and zalma@zalma.com

Write to Mr. Zalma at zalma@zalma.com; http://www.zalma.com; http://zalma.com/blog; daily articles are published at https://zalma.substack.com. Go to the podcast Zalma On Insurance at https://anchor.fm/barry-zalma; Follow Mr. Zalma on Twitter at https://twitter.com/bzalma; Go to Barry Zalma videos at Rumble.com at https://rumble.com/c/c-262921; Go to Barry Zalma on YouTube- https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCysiZklEtxZsSF9DfC0Expg; Go to the Insurance Claims Library – https://zalma.com/blog/insurance-claims-library

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