CHAPTER 1 � INSURANCE FRAUD � INSIDE AND OUT
When advocacy groups such as the Coalition Against Insurance Fraud (CAIF) claim that instances of insurance fraud add up to roughly $80 billion each year, you might reply instinctively with the same dismissive line that a comedian once used in response to a government report that said a certain percentage of Americans do not fill out their census forms: �How do they know that?�
Fraud, after all, differs from crimes like theft, battery and assault in that those crimes are usually noticed by a victim. If someone breaks into your home, you will likely find damage to a door or a window, along with the empty spaces where your prized possessions once stood. You will probably file a police report, and an officer will give you the old �We�ll let you know if we hear anything� speech. Law enforcement officials might never even come close to snatching your burglar, but they will at least document the fact that a crime has been committed.
With fraud, there are no broken locks, shattered windows or empty spaces that make the misdeed obvious. Instead, at its core, there is a psychological trespass, an attempt by one person to take advantage of another�s trust. Sometimes our instincts and our detective skills allow us to uncover a lie. But our judgment is bound to fail us occasionally, and other people�s lies will be able to hide themselves within our trusting nature.
Whether by failing to cover their tracks or by leaking their plans to the wrong individual, every single person who has ever been exposed as part of a fraud was a sloppy liar, and because we can only base fraud statistics on the people who have been caught, those statistics can never accurately account for the good liars who go undetected as they bilk insurers out of big bucks.
That said, the inevitable softness of the $80 billion estimate should in no way give our society an excuse to brush off the need to lobby for increased fraud awareness.
For those readers who are inclined to ignore the prevalence of insurance schemes, we shall assume for a moment that the $80 billion figure from the CAIF is a great exaggeration. For argument�s sake, we will chop the estimate down by more than one-half to roughly $30 billion, a more conservative number that many other insurance experts have cited. To put that number in perspective, losses from Hurricane Andrew totaled somewhere between $15 billion and $26 billion, and insured losses from the September 11 terrorists attacks came to roughly $38 billion. As all insurance professionals who lived through those events know, the catastrophic level of destruction greatly affected the availability of affordable coverage in the damaged areas (not to mention other parts of the United States) for several years.
If anything good can be said about fraud, it is only that it is less physically dangerous than a hurricane or a terrorist attack. But even if we decide that the $30 billion price tag for fraud is the more accurate estimate, we are still acknowledging that, from a financial perspective, the insurance industry is suffering financial losses on par with an Andrew-like hurricane or a terrorist attack every year, all because of lies. And, of course, the asterisk that must follow the $80 billion could just as easily mean that fraud costs insurers even more than the CAIF suggests.
For emotional reasons, we might avoid thinking about the prevalence of fraud. If we allow ourselves to believe that our fellow human beings, the people we put our trust in every day, are capable of stealing $80 billion or more, we may risk having to deal with sad, cynical thoughts that conflict with our desire to feel safe and happy. We may become upset when, for example, we are forced to think about an innocent motorist who died when a driver from behind intentionally crashed into her so that he could pocket some cash through his no-fault auto policy.
But professional insurance producers should not relegate their sadness solely to those sorts of situations. Instead, they should realize the enormity of a societal problem and feel upset because most Americans admit to tolerating insurance fraud and because that tolerance is often directly linked to a poor opinion of the insurance industry.
The aforementioned CAIF conducted a phone survey in 1997, quizzing 602 respondents about their attitudes toward insurance and fraud. The results of this study seem to prove that people can have divisive attitudes about ethics even when a given issue has undeniably negative connotations attached to it.
Insurance companies, who have an obvious incentive to take strict stances against fraud, would probably like all of their clients to be what the study called �moralists.� These people believe there is absolutely no excuse for committing fraud and that anyone who engages in it deserves punishment.
Moralists made up the largest group in the survey, but that should not necessarily reassure insurers and make them think the average person sees eye-to-eye with the industry. In fact, the moralists were merely the victors of a tight four-group race, accounting for roughly 31 percent of respondents.
Twenty-two percent of people fit into a category called �realists.� These respondents generally agree with moralists that committing insurance fraud is wrong, but they do not believe in prosecuting fraud with an iron fist. They even recognize some situations in which fraud is acceptable.
About a quarter of the participants had a more passive take on insurance fraud. These people, termed �conformists,� reason that insurance fraud is so common that it is an acceptable crime, if not an encouraged one.
If insurers can view moralists as their allies in a war against fraudsters, people who the study called �critics� might be viewed as their enemies. Critics do not just tolerate fraud. They often justify it by accusing insurers of mistreating consumers and having excessively greedy agendas. Critics belonged to the smallest group in the CAIF study but still accounted for a significant 21 percent of respondents.
The big picture developed by this study is clear: Insurance fraud occurs on such a frequent basis because only one-third of our society refuses to tolerate it. If the industry wants to live to see a day when only amoral creatures engage in fraud, its prevention strategy must be aggressive and aim to change a lot of people�s minds.
Before you can convince someone to think differently about anything, you need to step away from your own situation, block out as many personal biases as possible and try to understand the other person�s opinion, as well as the reasoning that nurtures that opinion. You want to know not only what the person thinks but also why the person thinks that way.
If insurance professionals step far enough out of their work environments, they might learn, much to their surprise, that what is obviously fraud to them is something else to the average consumer. Many people who work for insurance companies have a broad definition of fraud that encompasses any embellishment or lie that affects a person�s insurance coverage. Many consumers, though, use a less inclusive definition. They agree with insurers that outright lying constitutes fraud, but they also believe that embellishing facts on an application or claim form is worthy of a lesser charge.
To illustrate the different definitions, let us use a medical example. Pretend you are given blood tests by your doctor that cost about $100 combined and are not covered by your health insurance. After your appointment, your physician prepares a bill for your insurance company and lists different tests. These tests are very similar to the ones he actually performed, but they cost $150 and are covered in full by your insurer.
If we use the first definition (the one more common among insurers), your doctor has committed insurance fraud by exaggerating his performed services to the insurance company and affecting your coverage. People who use the second definition might view the situation differently. You went to the doctor for blood tests, and he provided them to you. Though his billing of similar tests involved some deception, it was not as if he claimed to have performed a clearly unrelated procedure such as some form of cosmetic surgery. He knowingly stretched the truth. But did he really commit fraud?
In order to avoid overblown semantic arguments, we will use the first, broad definition from this point forward whenever referring to insurance fraud. Now that we have addressed the fact that many people put conditions on what can be considered fraud, we can move forward and examine why consumers allow themselves to set those conditions in the first place.
To insurance professionals whose self-concepts are grounded in their work, someone who commits insurance fraud is merely a thief who has no ethical principles. Sometimes the details of an exposed scam sadly support such a harsh judgment of fraudsters. At other times, however, people deceive and steal from insurers for what they believe to be matters of principle rather than greed.
In these cases, insurance professionals certainly need not excuse fraud, but they should note the criminal�s motives. If enough principled people justify insurance fraud in a given circumstance, it might be a sign that the public has a major problem with the industry and that one way to prevent fraud might be to provide better service at a more economical price.
Seemingly all of the justifications people give for either committing or tolerating fraud are linked to the insurance industry�s poor public image. To many consumers, an insurance company epitomizes all that is wrong with big business. When legitimate claims get stuck in limbo and issues cannot be resolved in a timely fashion, policyholders feel as though they have been unfairly caught in the impersonal and inefficient traps of bureaucracy. At the same time, the seemingly unsympathetic service provided by some companies and the steep asking prices for some policies can lead people to believe the insurance industry is nothing but a capitalistic monster whose only goal is to take other people�s money.
Because the industry has not been successful in altering this perception among many policyholders, insurance fraud is sometimes not viewed by the perpetrator as a crime but as a situation in which the victimized little people have evened the score against a big bully. Insurers (as well as many consumers) might deem this line of reasoning ridiculous, but it prevails whenever people get into car accidents and bill their insurers for preexisting damage because they feel like they have paid more than enough in premiums to justify the charge.
Insurers can play fair by keeping policy prices proportional to the amount of risks that the policies absorb. Those companies that overcharge for insurance are bound to further the �money-hungry monster� perception and are essentially begging their customers to do business with a competitor.
Insurance companies with good intentions already understand this and might only need an occasional reminder of it now and then when bottom-line business pressure starts to mount. And yet, industry veterans who have done their best to exemplify fairness throughout their careers probably realize that no matter how low they go in terms of policy pricing, there will always be customers who feel as though they pay way too much for insurance.
For whatever reason, it seems psychologically difficult for some people to believe they are paying a fair price for something that has not produced tangible benefits. Unless a person gets into a situation that calls for a major claim, that person might not realize how valuable insurance coverage truly is. So, to a degree, arguing with consumers about prices or trying to improve the industry�s image by dropping rates might not produce all the desirable results.
But just because a price reduction campaign might not prove effective in the long run does not mean insurers are completely incapable of shaping their public image and debunking the flawed notion that a fraudster is a modern-day Robin Hood who seizes money from the corporate world and puts it back into consumers� pockets. Insurance professionals can increase their chances of winning people over to their side in the fight against fraud by highlighting how a victory for the industry would also be a victory for law-abiding policyholders.
That, by itself, is not fresh advice. For years, insurance professionals have claimed fraud punches the public in the pocketbook and raises premiums, some say, by as much as 15 percent for each customer. They have also argued that every second an insurer spends dealing with a fraudulent claim is a second that could have gone toward processing legitimate claims.
The public, though, has not seen enough action behind insurers� words to fully buy into those arguments. A number of people are convinced that, even though fraud probably affects premium rates, insurers would just as soon keep prices the same if fraud decreased.
When confronted directly with this cynical assumption, insurers can cite examples of decreased fraud giving birth to cheaper policies. Greater fraud prevention supposedly had something to do with the reduced auto rates New Yorkers paid in 2005, and, according to the Wall Street Journal, insurers who had fled New Jersey started writing coverage in the state again in recent years, perhaps because of increasingly favorable fraud statistics.
Yet in some ways, insurers who care about decreasing fraud have shot themselves in the foot by either keeping rates steady despite lower documented cases of fraud or by under-publicizing those mentioned instances when less fraud has allowed them to improve services and lower prices. As any journalist is bound to contend, an event or development that gets lost in the news shuffle and does not reach a broad audience might as well have never occurred, at least as far as the general public is concerned. If insurance professionals want fraud to secure a prime spot on the public�s agenda, they must be more aggressive in promoting awareness of events, developments and statistics that prove insurance companies are not merely looking out for themselves and are not unwilling to share the benefits that could be created from a relatively fraud-free business environment.
Effective public relations campaigns require tremendous patience, resources and tact. Instead of embarking on that broad kind of endeavor, insurance professionals can personalize their efforts and change their public image one person at a time through improved customer service.
Though logic supports the hypothesis that less fraud will allow for quicker legitimate claim processing, some consumers have had such disheartening experiences with insurance companies that they question the industry�s commitment to paying legitimate claims in the first place. This image problem seems particularly prevalent among health insurance customers.
There are several reasons why some people hate going to doctors. You might know someone who has hesitated to seek out medical treatment because the person feared getting some bad news. Maybe, at some point in your life, you put off a doctor�s visit because you worried about losing a day�s pay or getting on your boss�s bad side. These sorts of problems, troubling as they may be, are beyond an insurance producer�s control. One would think that having medical insurance would at least calm down the nervous job-conscious individual when he gets sick or suffers an injury. It seems logical that, disregarding all other factors, medically insured people would not delay or avoid treatment.
Despite that logic, it is not uncommon for medically insured people in the United States to have serious misgivings about receiving treatment for serious ailments specifically because they dread having to deal with an insurance company. Many people have come down with a serious illness, suffered a significant injury or coped with a chronic condition and determined that dealing with their insurance company is harder than dealing with their health issues.
The typical story goes something like this: An insured patient visits a physician, believing that treatment is covered under the terms and conditions of a health insurance policy. A few weeks pass, and then the patient receives a billing statement in the mail, which says either that the insurance company has denied the claim in full or that the policy only covers a portion of the treatment.
At this point, the patient digs out a statement of benefits and tries to figure out why the claim was not paid. The material that the insured received from the insurance company when signing up for the coverage certainly makes it seem as though the policy covers the treatment. The patient dials up the insurer and talks to a customer service representative, who explains why the claim was not processed in the expected way. The patient is not satisfied by these explanations and spends several lunch breaks trying to speak with additional company representatives, insisting again and again that the insurer is responsible for reimbursing the physician.
Sometimes the patient gives up and accepts the amount initially proposed by the insurance company, and sometimes helpful case workers find a way to resolve the issue in the policyholder�s favor. But no matter the outcome, the patient notes all the resulting stress and lost time from the ordeal and perhaps feels more than a little uneasy from that day forward whenever an insurance statement arrives in the mail.
For chronically ill patients who frequently have to argue with their insurer about what a policy does and does not cover, the claims process can be emotionally taxing. The patients may discuss their insurance problems with their physicians. The physician, wanting quick reimbursement for treatment, might be sympathetic and willing to file mildly exaggerated claims that increase the chances of an insurer paying enough to cover the actual cost of treatment. Instead of feeling like a criminal, the patient has a self-image of a seriously wronged person who engages in fraud out of necessity because an insurance company refuses to make good on what he or she believes to be legitimate claims.
Not all medical insurance customers and health care providers have exaggerated on claim forms. Unfortunately, however, enough of them can probably empathize or sympathize with the hypothetical patient enough to give this sort of fraud a pass.
Just like the consumer complaints about premiums, claims disputes will never go away, no matter how much insurance professionals refine their business practices to more outwardly showcase their fairness and compassion. But as is the case with the premiums issue, the industry is not powerless when it comes to changing how the public generally perceives the claims process.
The agent or broker making personal sales can discuss specific gaps in coverage with consumers so that there are fewer surprises when a claim is denied. Insurance producers selling group policies, such as medical plans offered by businesses to employees, can distribute statements of benefits that are rich in detail and devoid of any language that a typical policyholder might deem vague, unclear or misleading. If insurance companies present their policies to consumers via overgeneralizations, half-truths and unnecessarily complex ideas, they will perpetuate the poor public perception of their business.
Even when nurturing mutually beneficial relationships between themselves and consumers, insurance companies are still handicapped in their anti-fraud pursuits by law enforcement priorities that conflict with greater fraud prevention. In this regard, insurance professionals are hampered not only by the people who make laws and police the people, but also by society as a whole.
According to National Underwriter, insurance fraud was the second most costly form of white-collar crime in the United States leading into the 21st century, outdone only by tax evasion. Insurers estimate that approximately 10 percent of claims are fraudulent, with some of those claims being completely bogus but with most featuring exaggerations. But as striking as those statistics may be, their impact on the public and law enforcement is dulled by the general population�s passive perception of white-collar crimes.
In a world where terrorism, war, gang violence, road rage and school shootings are common enough to dominate a nightly newscast, non-violent offenses such as insurance fraud can become nearly acceptable afterthoughts. Our hierarchy of needs places physical preservation over financial success, and we demand that people in power protect us from the blood and bullets before they start worrying about how to protect our dollars and cents.
Perhaps people who commit insurance fraud for purely selfish reasons recognize that law enforcement officials can only stretch themselves so far when investigating criminal acts and that fraud is a low-risk crime as long as physical threats to our survival force police and politicians to look the other way when they notice fiscal wrongdoing. Maybe they believe our often limited understanding of how white-collar crimes negatively affect the common person will lead us to excuse their actions with a slap on the wrist, as if the clean-cut business executive who steals money by manipulating data and telling lies is so much more respectable and worthy of our mercy than the unshaven, unemployed drifter who picks our pocket on the subway. Or maybe the white-collar criminal is unable to view the rest of us at a distance and has merely allowed himself to believe the popular myth about how sneaky financial crimes do not really hurt anybody.
The rise and fall of the energy company Enron did not directly relate to the insurance business; however this example of corporate greed probably attracted more wide-ranging attention than any other instance of white-collar crime in our history. This type of activity forces us to wonder if society�s attitudes about such crime have changed in recent years. Did the guilty parties in the Enron debacle actually believe that business crimes were not serious offenses? Do Americans, having learned about all the regular men and women who lost so much because of Enron, now have an adequate understanding of how white-collar crime can endanger their well-being? And will that understanding result in citizens putting more pressure on those in power to prosecute those sorts of criminals? Or was Enron just an oddity, a situation that we only reluctantly addressed because it became too much of an obvious problem for us to ignore any longer?
If the latter question is the one closest to the truth, insurance professionals might feel more than a little uncomfortable as they try to imagine just how out of control insurance fraud may have to be in order for the public, law enforcement and lawmakers to finally get together and do what is required to stop it.
Even among their peers, insurance producers have noted somewhat soft approaches to fighting fraud. Unhappy with the prevalence of fraud but resigned to its existence, some insurance professionals believe their individual actions cannot single-handedly stop the offenders who cheat insurers out of money. They often reason that paying questionable claims or agreeing to quick settlements in claim disputes is cheaper than fighting it out with a policyholder in a courtroom.
On a case by case basis, such reasoning often makes sense. But when insurers agree to pay a potentially fraudulent claim or settle with a policyholder without much of a fight, they are not merely making a single financial compromise that settles an individual claim. Instead, with each compromise, they add to a pile of money that slowly but surely grows and becomes a significant portion of the $80 billion or so that insurers say they lose each year to fraud.
If they wish, insurance professionals who care about fraud can focus on improving the industry�s image or changing society�s views on white-collar crime. We know that changes in public opinion tend to occur gradually. Waiting for such changes, assuming they will occur at all, is unlikely to reduce the serious insurance fraud problem today or tomorrow.
With this in mind, the most immediate progress in the fight against fraud can only be made by people in the insurance business. Until consumers, law enforcement officials and lawmakers offer greater anti-fraud support to the industry, insurance professionals must join together to help themselves.
If the insurance community is to ever truly unite to combat fraud, it must do away with the notion that fraud is something to detect after a policyholder files a claim. Besides unnecessarily burdening claims departments with nearly all of the physical tasks related to fraud detection, this notion ignores the ethical responsibilities all agents and brokers have to insurance companies. Whether they are employed by an insurer or hired by a policyholder, ethical insurance professionals must bring consumers and insurers together only in good faith and should not transfer high risks to an insurer without informing the carrier of the risks. This obligation applies to health insurance agents who work with chronically ill clients, auto insurance agents who work with inexperienced drivers and, yes, all agents and brokers who work with any consumer who seems likely to have fraud-related motives.
Through this course material, agents and brokers will learn about fraud that occurs in various lines of insurance and how to spot it. Insurance producers will also be alerted to situations in which people within their industry have hurt the anti-fraud cause through their own fraudulent activity. It is hoped that continuing education students can absorb this information and use it to make the insurance community a safer place for buyers and sellers to conduct honest business.
While the individual agent or broker is not expected to take on the role of a police inspector, he or she is expected to keep an eye out for red flags of fraud, document any of those flags as they pertain to a particular consumer and share the documented concerns with those in his or her organization. Although many insurance companies hire professional investigators to observe, interview and analyze prospective and current policyholders who seem intent on committing fraud, any informed agent or broker with analytical thinking skills can contribute greatly to fraud prevention.
Fraud schemes differ from one line of insurance to the next, but some general red flags seem to apply to all types of insurance at the application stage. Some possible signs of fraud are concretely visible on an application, while others become noticeable only once insurance producers look more closely and observe how an applicant acts and how the pieces of information provided by the applicant fit together to form a bigger picture of the person�s credibility.
Still, in keeping with this �bigger picture� idea, it is important to note, throughout a policy�s life cycle, that the existence of a single red flag or even several red flags does not necessarily prove a consumer has committed insurance fraud or is even considering it. Insurance professionals must analyze each customer�s circumstances within a reasonable framework and not put every consumer in a needlessly defensive position. Ideally, by sharing suspicions of fraud with other professionals and analyzing these situations collectively, insurance producers can increase their chances of exposing fraud and minimize the number of false accusations that penalize innocent consumers.
As you read the following hypothetical example, which incorporates several red flags suggesting fraud, you will probably realize that some of the presented red flags could be explained innocently on their own terms and would not necessarily justify a fraud investigation. But, just as you would in a real-life situation, you will notice how accumulating facts and analyzing those facts can help you form a clearer picture of a prospective insured at the application stage.
Louise works as an insurance agent and has been in the business for a long time. Most of her new clients come to her through referrals, either by co-workers who are planning their retirement or by her own longtime customers who know she will treat their friends and family members honestly and fairly.
James became one of Louise�s potential clients merely by chance. He had cold-called Louise�s company in search of a policy, and she just happened to be the agent who picked up the phone. When James visited Louise�s office to apply for a policy, Louise noticed almost immediately how restless he seemed, leaning forward on the edge of his chair. She also noted some odd entries on James� application. Apparently James had lived in three different cities in the previous two years and now had his mail sent to a P.O. Box in a small town. Louise had taken the long drive down to the same town once or twice to visit a relative and thought to herself that this guy had come a long way just to apply for insurance.
Louise became more uncomfortable when she got to the spot on the application for a home phone number, and she asked James why he had left this portion blank. James said he did not have a permanent phone at the moment but that he could be reached at his mother�s number for the time being.
Louise next asked for a photo I.D. and noticed James had crossed the line that separates restlessness from genuine annoyance. He sighed in frustration and said he had left his wallet in his car, which was parked several blocks away, and asked Louise if she really needed an I.D. in order to process his application that day. Louise held firm, and James left the office, returning a minute later with a driver�s license that had been issued five days earlier.
Louise then steered the conversation toward policy specifics. To her, James seemed to want an unusually large amount of coverage. He said over and over again that he wanted to err on the side of caution and claimed to not care how much he had to pay in monthly premiums for comprehensive insurance.
Near the end of their appointment, Louise explained how the company would go about processing James� application and how, if approved, he could pay premiums via checks payable to the insurance company. James said he would prefer to pay in cash and was prepared to make a payment or two on the spot if doing so would mean quicker approval. Louise declined his offer and promised to contact him at his mother�s house once his application had been fully processed.
After James left, Louise documented her many suspicions, mentioning that, in her opinion, this applicant appeared likely to commit insurance fraud. An underwriter at her company read her report, performed a credit check on James and discovered that he owed thousands of dollars to various lenders and thousands more to his ex-wife for child support. A few days later, Louise sent a letter to James� P.O. Box and used the phone number James had given her to leave a message on an anonymous answering machine. The insurance company had denied his application.
Granted, our example is absurd because James did absolutely nothing to make himself seem like an honest person. You, the reader, probably stopped giving him the benefit of the doubt long before you reached the part about Louise�s company denying the application. But that, of course, is the point. A reasonably intelligent insurance producer who gathers facts and analyzes them can indeed aid insurers by spotting red flags of potential fraud and certainly has the ability to detect possible fraud in situations that are not nearly as blatant and ridiculous as this example.
For a long time, insurance fraud was thought of as something an individual committed alone or with a few close confidants. But today, it almost seems as though those were the innocent good old days, back when individuals committed fraud but thought it best not to get too many strangers directly involved in their scams. Modern auto insurance fraud is often an example of organized crime and involves many participants.
Auto insurance fraud rings can be extremely complex. In some instances, these operations have included drivers, passengers, witnesses, doctors, lawyers and police officers in their schemes. Each of these participants takes a cut of the billions of dollars it is believed vehicle insurers lose each year because of phony claims.
Organized auto insurance fraud is more than just a serious problem for insurance companies who want to keep their money out of crooks� hands. Perhaps more than any other kind of insurance fraud committed on the consumer's end, auto insurance fraud deserves the attention of all people; those with insurance and those without, those who drive and those who ride in the passenger�s seat. Rather than a seemingly victimless crime, this range of deceptions often hurts the innocents among us. To better understand why, let�s look at an example of how an auto insurance fraud ring functions.
Organized Crime and Staged Accidents
Rob is part of an auto insurance fraud ring and is one of two passengers, plus a driver, in an inexpensive car. As they ride down some of the quieter roads in an area where reasonably high speed limits are permitted, Rob and the other passenger are watching for certain kinds of drivers. The less witnesses, the better, so they ideally want to find someone who is traveling alone.
A nice car would be preferable, too, the kind of model that people could probably only afford if they had decent jobs and the kind that the owner might insure heavily to compensate for even a single scratch on the beautiful machine. They look at license plates as well, hoping to spot a tourist who would not want to waste time and money to challenge an insurance matter in a faraway state court. After what seems like an hour, they finally settle on a car they can all agree on, a car driven by a man who has no idea he is about to become a victim of a fraud.
Rob�s driver follows the man and is eventually able to move in front of the other vehicle. Keeping an eye on the distance between the two cars and adjusting his speed for a preferable amount of impact, Rob�s driver slams on the breaks, and Rob holds his breath for a split second to brace himself for the forceful push that occurs when the two cars meet.
Rob�s fellow passenger is all set with his fake vomit, ready to moan, groan and rub his stomach at the very second when the innocent driver approaches. Meanwhile, Rob tries to focus on what to say about his back, not wanting to overdo it. (That might call for x-rays and other unbiased medical tests that could expose the fraud.) But Rob wants the innocent driver to believe he is dealing with enough soreness and pain to warrant a few grimaces and mumbles, especially when turning his neck a certain way.
The innocent driver would normally be cursing at Rob and his friends, but his heart softens as Rob says he feels a little dizzy. Rob and the other members of the ring apologize to the innocent driver all at the same time, competing with one another so much that all he can really make out is something about an animal jumping in front of the car and the word �sorry� again and again.
After swapping driver information, one of the co-conspirators tells the victim they have been on the phone with the police to report the accident. Sometimes when doing these jobs, that is indeed what is happening, but on other occasions it has been found that the companion is phoning an off-duty police officer who is in on the scheme.
After the accident is squared away, Rob and his gang visit a personal injury attorney who will fight for assorted reimbursements from any applicable insurance companies and who gets all of them an appointment with the same doctor. The doctor�s office is as basic as they come, with no modern equipment in sight or any other visibly sick patients waiting for their own appointments. The doctor�s practice, Rob knows, is only a front for these insurance scams and, come to think of it, so is the body shop that estimated the allegedly major damage on Rob�s already beat-up jalopy.
If those mechanics knew how little they were making from these scams compared to the big cuts that the lawyer and doctor take home each time, they would probably threaten to expose the whole operation. But there is no need to hold a grudge against the doctor. After all, she�s the one who testifies to insurance companies and courts about Rob�s phony back problems, headaches and other nagging soft-tissue ailments that are difficult to disprove. She and the lawyer are the ones with enough power and prestige to get the insurance companies to pay the claims.
The innocent driver will get his car fixed, and he will walk away without a scratch on his body. In this regard, this accident is different from the one in which a scam artist hit and killed a 71-year-old grandmother named Alice Ross and the one in which a driver who was supposed to hit another vehicle accidentally hit a telephone pole and killed 64-year-old Altagracia Arias, who was supposed to witness the staged crash.
Rob might think about these two cases of organized auto insurance fraud gone wrong and feel sad for a moment or two, but this feeling quickly goes away when he is reminded of the insurance checks that will soon be coming his way. From Rob�s point of view, there�s no need to feel guilty, no need to be sad. Nobody died from what took place � not today anyway.
Organized Crime and Real Accidents
Sometimes, an accident is not staged in any way, but doctors, lawyers and their associates work with victims to build a fraudulent case after the fact. Many small, local newspapers summarize accident reports in each issue, and any persistent reporter can usually obtain a copy of a police report or at least get a glance at one for note-taking purposes. For a fee, people called �ringers� or �steerers� might impersonate someone from the press or take advantage of a source at a police station or an insurance company and gather the names of people involved in recent car accidents.
This person might then contact accident victims and, if they have not yet contacted their insurance company, the ringer will suggest they hold off until a particular doctor examines them. If the ringer has reason to believe that an insurer already knows about the accident, he or she might tell victims that their insurer insists they see a specific doctor.
At that point, the ringer moves out of the picture, having not committed any claims fraud, and allows the lawyers and doctors to handle the rest of the situation. Maybe these scams work because the doctor and lawyer actually convince the patient that he or she suffers from certain after-effects from the accident. Maybe there are legal, physical or financial threats involved. Or maybe the accident victims recognize an insurance scam when they see one and are perfectly willing to become players in the master plan if doing so might net them a few bucks.
Organized Fraud�s Effect on Premiums
Organized auto insurance fraud has attracted so many people and gone undetected for so long that, in many states, particularly those with no-fault auto insurance laws, responsible drivers have struggled to obtain affordable, high-quality coverage. As mentioned earlier in this text, fraud prevention allegedly helped drop auto rates in the no-fault state of New York in 2005, but in the not too distant past, an increased number of drivers had no choice but to accept the comparatively expensive coverage offered by the government, as traditional insurers became weary and more selective when selling policies to new customers. Perhaps deciding that enough was enough, Allstate Insurance Co. filed a $107 million lawsuit in 1998 against 45 individuals, including lawyers and doctors, who allegedly participated in auto insurance fraud rings.
Unorganized Auto Insurance Fraud
As much as this material emphasizes organized auto insurance fraud, it is not meant to imply that less organized, less complex auto fraud committed by a single person or a select few no longer deserves any attention. Insurance professionals must still fight against some policyholders who engage in more traditional schemes, such as reporting a car as stolen when the owner can no longer make payments on the vehicle. Insurers who base auto rates on geography, a somewhat unpopular practice among many urban consumers, need to look out for people who use fake addresses to lower their premiums. More recently, according to National Underwriter, the rise in e-commerce has allowed some fraudsters to insure their beat-up old cars online and then claim the car was damaged in an accident.
Some insurers have also been seriously bothered by teenage daredevils with passions for drag racing. In contrast to the classic game of chicken, in which the winner�s rewards consist of bragging rights and the continued use of all four limbs, today�s victorious street racers often take home a customized part of losers� cars as their trophies. For the hotshot driver who treats each one of his car�s bells and whistles as if they were his children, the loss of a race and, therefore, a prized accessory can seem unbearable. In order to compensate for these losses, some racers tell police officers and insurance companies that their vehicles and accessories were stolen, vandalized or damaged in a legitimate accident rather than gambled away or wrecked in a contest.
Red Flags and Auto Insurance Fraud
Of course, if an insurance producer only had to memorize a few red flags in order to put a stop to fraudulent claims, insurance fraud would not be much of an important subject for continuing education. In terms of auto fraud, as well as fraud in connection with other coverage, the developers of this course do not naively believe that the general tips found in this text can end fraud. Yet for nearly every section of the industry, there are a handful of common-sense red flags that can at least help professionals minimize such crime.
Before you even begin scrutinizing a particular claim for hints of fraud, you should realize that many successful perpetrators do not just become involved with a single scam. Many of them have committed fraud before.
For this reason, you might find it helpful to view information about a potential fraud as if it were only one piece of a puzzle. Something might appear innocent within the context of a single claim but might not when viewed with the other claims the person has filed. One claim might lead you to investigate another, which might then make you want to review the person�s application. Little discrepancies might convince you that digging for more facts to unearth the truth is worth the effort.
To guard against fraud rings, insurance professionals should take note of doctors and lawyers who seem to be involved in an unusually large number of accident cases. Does one doctor typically diagnose patients only with those soft-tissue ailments mentioned earlier, such as back pain and headaches that are difficult to disprove? Do many of the doctor�s referrals come to him via a lawyer?
Similar advice applies to the people directly involved in auto accidents. Members of a fraud ring often switch roles from one accident to the next. A driver in one crash could be a passenger in another crash. If someone has been listed as a driver or passenger in several accidents, insurance professionals might want to examine the circumstances of each event in order to discover any suspicious similarities. Looking into claims involving people with similar names is also helpful and, as we will discuss later, simpler than ever before thanks to search engine technology and shared claims information among insurance companies.
There are many signs of unorganized auto insurance fraud. An insurance investigator should become somewhat suspicious when a claim for a totaled vehicle comes from a policyholder who suffered no injuries, and the same can be said of claims filed for extensive medical procedures by people who showed no sign of discomfort when they reported a fender-bender to the police. If a policyholder calls to say his car was stolen, an insurance company might want to investigate any recent reports of accidents that might have involved the lost vehicle.
Sometimes criminals are easier to spot from the start, and the investigator needs to do less digging to find the truth. Alarm bells should automatically go off when a person claims to have lost control of a car in the rain when there have been no recent reports of rain in the area. If an unemployed teenager with several speeding tickets to his name claims someone stole his $30,000 sound system and ran a key across his customized paint job, your instincts should tell you something.
Again, odd circumstances do not prove fraud. Maybe it did rain in the driver�s neighborhood but not near yours. Maybe the teenager has parents who spoil him rotten. But such odd circumstances should absolutely force all employees who are working on questionable claims to use their heads and be alert to the possibility of fraud.
The majority of this course focuses on insurance fraud committed by policyholders. Agents and brokers who provide health coverage could certainly create a decent-sized list of this kind of activity as it pertains to their business. That list might include instances of patients abusing prescription drug plans by forging doctors� signatures and placing orders for medicines at multiple pharmacies. Perhaps that list would also include policyholders who mark former spouses and grown children down on their health plans as dependents, a deception that insurers can remedy relatively easily by checking public records.
But according to a study reported by the Journal of the American Society of CLU & ChFC (a financial industries trade publication), health care providers are more likely to commit insurance fraud than patients. On one hand, this makes sense, given the managed care systems in the United States, where many policyholders pay a small fee when visiting a physician and let the provider deal with the necessary claims forms. Because the contact between physician and insurer drastically exceeds the contact between patient and insurer, there is a larger window open for the physician to commit fraud as opposed to the patient. Even if patients receive regular statements from their insurance company about approved benefits and rendered services, they are unlikely to examine their records for billing errors made by a physician unless they have a problem with how much they, themselves, must pay to the provider.
Still, the many documented cases of fraud committed by health care providers may be difficult for insurers to stomach considering the mutually beneficial relationship that ought to exist between the insurance and medical professions. If people did not put a premium on health care for themselves and their loved ones, consumers would have little reason to buy health insurance, and if insurance companies did not exist, physicians would struggle to secure payment for their services and would almost certainly need to more actively market themselves in order to attract a desired number of patients.
Deep down, health care providers and insurers probably understand that they need each other to survive. However, the relationship between the two professional groups has always been a seemingly begrudging one at best. From some doctors� perspectives, insurance companies have been stubbornly tight with money and dangerously intrusive when it comes to treatment issues. Good doctors want to be compensated fairly for their services and wish they had the freedom to serve patients without an insurer telling them that a patient does not need a particular medicine or surgical procedure. Meanwhile, a good insurer wants to be certain that physicians are not violating the trust that the company has given them by demanding payment for services not rendered.
More so than any other topic discussed in this course, medical insurance fraud refuses to allow us to stereotype perpetrators as unethical under all circumstances. Sometimes, as in the opening discussion involving the frustrations consumers encounter when dealing with their insurance companies, this kind of fraud seems to operate in a stubborn cycle. In order to provide patients with the best care possible and to ensure that they receive payment for providing this care, physicians might deem it necessary to adjust a claim. At the same time, insurers realize physicians are adjusting claims, thereby cheating the system, and the insurance companies react by getting tougher on health care providers and patients and being even more strict about what their policies will and will not cover.
With each side adjusting to the other�s new positions, questions must be addressed by compassionate and fair insurers, as well as compassionate and fair doctors. Professional insurers must ask themselves if they have reached a point where their anti-fraud efforts, which take power away from physicians and reduce the number of affordable treatment options for patients, are actually encouraging health care providers to commit more fraud. Do some insurers enforce such strict rules when managing health care that sometimes the only option for a doctor with a sick patient is to break those rules?
Meanwhile, medical professionals must ask themselves how they can justify fraud for the good of a patient today if their actions will almost certainly force insurance companies to become even more involved in treatment issues tomorrow. They must understand that insurers have justified reasons to protect themselves from fraud and that even though there are many good and fair doctors in the system, there are also some bad and selfish practitioners whose frauds have nothing to do with what is best for patients. All insurers and physicians may be caught in a vicious cycle, but there is reason to believe that those unethical and selfish practitioners played a major role in initially setting the cycle in motion. Those practitioners should not be allowed to cheat insurance companies. If insurance companies do not stand up to these unethical doctors by tightening their overall hold on health management, all insureds might suffer the consequences.
Examples of Medical Insurance Fraud
The most indefensible forms of medical insurance fraud are those that cheat patients as well as insurers. Suppose Mary injures her back and goes to a clinic that she assumes employs specialists who can help her condition. This is a very busy clinic, but with one look inside, Mary senses something is different about it. As she observes others and goes through her own appointment, she thinks that this is the fast-food, assembly-line version of health care. The employees engage no one in conversation and have an unstated yet still obvious agenda that involves getting patients in and out the door as quickly as possible so that they do not crowd the lobby.
A woman who looks like a nurse runs through some standard procedures, taking Mary�s temperature and checking her weight. Mary tries to go into detail about exactly where and when her back hurts, but the nurse seems focused on something else, looking at the clipboard filled with Mary�s insurance information and not looking up or taking notes as Mary describes her symptoms. The nurse rushes Mary into a back room filled with bubbling hot tubs like those Mary has seen in spa brochures. She tells Mary to get in, leaves her there for 15 minutes and returns to get her out of the tub and to schedule a follow-up appointment.
Two weeks later, Mary receives a statement from her insurance company in regard to her trip to the clinic. She expects trouble, believing there is no way on earth her insurer is going to cover a quarter-hour soak in a whirlpool. But to her surprise, she owes nothing. However, the insurer has paid for some tests Mary does not remember having done and is also paying the clinic a few hundred dollars for some muscle therapy she has never heard of. Mary tosses the statement in a drawer, winces again as she rubs her back and decides to contact a certified medical doctor who might be better equipped to help her manage her pain.
The details in that example were contrived for simplicity and clarity�s sake, but the story�s general outline is based on numerous examples of seedy medical operations that have successfully bilked millions of dollars out of insurance companies by charging them for procedures that were never performed or for unsophisticated services made to sound like comprehensive, specialized treatment. As reported by the Wall Street Journal and other news outlets, the state of Florida recognized the serious problems caused by these insurance schemes and took it upon itself to expose the people behind them. Inspectors discovered rudimentary setups, some under the supervision of a licensed physician and others operating thanks to a stolen doctor�s billing number. In many cases, the lax attention these clinics received from regulators, as well as the pressure on insurers to pay claims quickly, allowed these crooks to reap large profits. By the time investigators received a tip about a suspicious clinic, there was already a good chance that the operation had packed up and reopened elsewhere, and the money for the phony treatments had already been doled out by the insurance companies.
Other medical insurance scams involve purely selfish motives of patients as well as physicians. In a scheme known as �Rent-a-Patient,� doctors appeal to policyholders� desperation or greed by rewarding them for undergoing pointless medical procedures. A patient might receive the nose job he or she always wanted with the understanding that the surgeon will bill the insurer for necessary surgery as opposed to a cosmetic operation. Sometimes patients are paid in cash for acting as guinea pigs. In an absurd travel promotion, as reported by Knight Ridder Tribune Business News, some 1,800 Utah residents were involved in a scam in which policyholders received an all-expenses-paid trip to California in return for undergoing such procedures as colonoscopies. Insurers in Utah said total claims from the venture amounted to $27 million.
Among more legitimate health care providers, some hospitals have been accused of billing Medicare for procedures performed by resident employees as opposed to the faculty physicians listed on claim forms. Individual physicians have been accused of �upcoding,� billing insurers for more expensive procedures that are only somewhat related to those actually performed on a patient. Other physicians �unbundle� their services by charging insurers for each individual service provided to a patient when those services should be grouped together and billed at a lesser rate. Some doctors get caught billing an insurance company twice for one procedure. In a striking example that seems to incorporate unbundling and double-billing, investigators at Pennsylvania Blue Shield recalled a health care provider who administered chemotherapy in split doses so that he could double his profits.
Detecting Medical Insurance Fraud
Claims departments and investigative teams can sometimes spot medical insurance fraud merely by looking at a situation and applying some common sense to it. One doctor obviously could have benefited from a crash course in mathematics and personal stamina when he claimed to treat 200 patients a day.
To catch potential fraud that is not so obvious, many medical insurance companies have utilized software that scrutinizes doctors� billing practices and alters questionable bills automatically. You will read more about this software when we later turn our attention to anti-fraud tools.
Workers compensation fraud, which National Underwriter once estimated at costing insurers $5 billion each year, is yet another complex crime that professional insurers ought to examine from various angles.
Stereotypically, this type of fraud brings lazy employees to mind who either stage accidents or fake injuries in order to avoid going to work. But stopping there and only noting that aspect of the issue would be detrimental to the insurance community and unfair to the many hardworking people who deserve financial assistance when their jobs take dangerous turns.
From an insurance perspective, workers compensation fraud is as much an employer problem as it is an employee problem, with many companies actively deceiving insurers to obtain coverage and discouraging injured laborers from claiming the benefits rightfully owed to them.
Before we examine some of the more complex sides of these crimes, let us start comfortably by exploring the stereotypical employee fraud that most people associate with workers compensation and highlight some red flags that might help employers and insurance professionals detect it.
If a workers compensation claim doesn�t seem to make sense, it is more than likely that some kind of investigative team will be called in to handle the situation. Sometimes insurance companies employ their own teams, and sometimes employers or insurance companies outsource the work to private investigators.
No matter who ultimately takes control of an investigation, fellow employees and supervisors must be thorough when gathering facts about an alleged accident and when sharing that information with those people responsible for further investigation. All witnesses to an accident should be interviewed as soon as possible so that their recollections can either confirm or contradict the injured person�s story. If an employer can only provide vague reports of an incident, the investigator�s job becomes tougher, and an accusation of fraud could unfortunately boil down to nothing more than one person�s word against another�s.
An employee�s status with a company can hint at the truth surrounding an accident. If an organization has announced layoffs, a person who believes he or she will soon be one of those laid off might panic and turn to workers compensation fraud.
Coworkers are important sources of information in these situations because they might have been the audience for an injured person�s thoughts. Or, in a more optimistic outcome, they might be able to assure doubters that the person was a dedicated employee who would probably not engage in serious deceit. Temporary employees and new hires who make workers compensation claims often arouse some suspicion because their coworkers have not known them long enough to vouch for their character.
Accidents involving no witnesses are obvious causes for concerns. This is especially the case when they allegedly occur on Monday mornings, since some workers might try to make their employer responsible for injuries they actually suffered on weekends. These employees will seem even less credible if they have reputations around the office as athletes, physical risk-takers or avid outdoorsmen.
Once the worker is out of the office, investigative teams can observe the person from afar. If the employee has a second job, a team might visit the second workplace to see if the injured person shows up for duty. Sometimes teams catch an allegedly disabled person moving heavy furniture, playing an aggressive game of softball or taking part in other strenuous activities that seem to contradict an injury claim.
When these significant discoveries are made, they may lead to a claim being denied, thereby saving the insurer and employer money. In some cases, however, these seemingly defenseless exhibitions of physical strength are not clean-cut examples of people getting caught in a lie. Some injured parties have successfully argued that an investigator merely observed them on one of their better days or did not take note of the many hours or days they spent recovering from the heavy lifting or the softball game. As weak as those lines of defense may seem, most professional fraud investigators attempt to strengthen their cases against supposed insurance cheaters by documenting an extensive pattern of suspicious activity before challenging a claim.
Red flags also fly when people injure themselves at work despite having a reasonably safe job. Though freak accidents do occur, an employer or an insurer might wonder, for example, why a receptionist or clerical employee has filed for workers compensation benefits twice in the past five years.
In more perilous lines of work, however, fraud detection can seem insurmountably difficult. Consider, if you will, the construction industry. Here is a field that is packed with physical risks and is destined to produce a relatively high amount of legitimate disability claims. Construction workers undoubtedly realize this, and some of the dishonest ones might try to commit fraud, expecting their false injury claims to sneak past insurers� discerning eyes.
Like medical insurers, those professionals who offer workers compensation policies to high-risk businesses can sometimes feel ethically torn. They are smart enough to know that some people are engaging in fraud, yet greater scrutiny of claims could inadvertently clog the flow of benefits to deserving recipients and make insurers seem guilty of unethical, if not illegal, conduct.
Logic suggests that because people who own construction companies will likely pay a large premium for workers compensation coverage, these employers should be just as serious about fraud prevention as insurers. Undoubtedly, many business owners subscribe to this ethical attitude. But too many others focus on the price of workers compensation coverage (which most businesses are required by law to purchase) and perpetrate their own brand of fraud, believing that cheating insurers and employees out of money and benefits is the best way to keep premiums down.
Though individual insurers may differ in how they underwrite workers compensation, they generally base their decisions about these policies on the number, salaries and job duties of the employees who will be covered by a policy. High-risk business owners have been known to misrepresent all of those factors when applying for coverage. Rather than listing their entire workforce on a payroll, a construction company might pay some laborers either partially or entirely under the table. Instead of listing employees properly as roofers, a company might put them in a comparatively safer category, such as general carpentry. These examples nearly mirror a real development, covered by the San Diego Business Journal, in which six construction companies were charged with defrauding several area insurers out of $5.5 million.
Life insurance fraud has probably been around as long as insurance itself. History tells us, for example, that two women were hanged in 1884 by authorities in Liverpool, England for allegedly poisoning men in order to collect beneficiary payments. Yet despite its extensive history, this brand of fraud is still an understandably delicate issue. Imagine, for a moment, that your spouse or someone else close to you has just died and someone from an insurance company insinuates that you may be guilty of faking the death or even murdering your loved companion for an insurance check. Most insurers don�t want to be seen as heartless and are willing to accept a minimal amount of fraud to avoid this kind of perception from the public.
This type of fraud intrigues us, maybe because many of the related scams seem like storylines from crime novels. These frauds make us furious for reasons that have nothing to do with stealing from insurance companies and everything to do with using other people as pawns in selfish games of life and death.
Before discussing specific examples, we will first examine life insurance fraud at its lightest level; light only in the sense that even though money might be stolen from an insurance company, the perpetrator�s selfishness does not extend to the physical endangerment of innocent people.
If someone wanted to commit life insurance fraud 20 years ago, he or she would have bought a policy and waited roughly two years before putting the scheme into full operation. Back then, two years seemed like a safe enough holding period to avoid much suspicion from insurance companies. Today, with more and more fraud cases mirroring one another, some insurance professionals now say they are tempted to search for signs of fraud as far back as five years.
The more intricate life insurance fraud schemes in the United States tend to involve relatively small policies from several companies. Utilizing small policies for these deceptions serves two purposes. First, it allows the criminals to maximize coverage without seeming suspicious to any one insurer. Secondly, because smaller policies are less likely to require physical examinations from policyholders, it gives perpetrators the occasional option of taking out policies on unsuspecting individuals.
Once the policy has been in effect for a reasonable amount of time, the thief tries to secure a falsified death certificate in the insured�s name. In one of the more elaborate frauds to attract media attention, this step in the scheme process was completed by a ring-leading funeral director who shared in the insurance payouts. In another case, a woman merely photocopied her deceased first husband�s certificate and doctored it so that her living husband was listed.
Arguably the most darkly amusing examples of attempted life insurance fraud are those in which one spouse runs a scam, while the other spouse remains completely oblivious to it. The clueless husbands and wives get up every morning, kiss their partners goodbye, go to work and come back home to their companions, all the while not realizing that, at least as far as an insurance company is concerned, they are supposed to be dead. Investigators arriving at homes of alleged widows to discuss beneficiary issues have been greeted at the door by some understandably confused yet very much alive husbands. One woman, profiled in Forbes magazine, could not understand why her allegedly deceased husband got so upset at her for faking his death without even telling him first.
�He�s such a jerk,� she said in prison. �If it weren�t for him, I wouldn�t be in here.�
People intent on faking someone�s death in order to collect life insurance benefits have had greater success when they have used foreign settings in their stories. A husband might claim, for example, that his wife traveled to Central America and died there.
Cultural and political factors are keys to making these scams work. In Mexico, for instance, autopsies are not as common as they are in the United States. This would prevent insurers from routinely verifying deaths by matching a body�s fingerprints to those of the policyholder. Deaths are even tougher to prove when they occur in Third World countries where recordkeeping systems are basic at best and, therefore, more easily corruptible. Political strife also hinders fraud prevention, particularly when civil wars claim so many casualties that authorities cannot accurately document all deaths. A combination of all these elements might explain why 80 percent of the insurer-investigated deaths in Haiti reportedly turn out to be fakes.
It is also worth noting that foreign countries have their own problems with insurance fraud. In South Africa, where the AIDS virus has spread at alarming rates over the years, it appears as though it is an open secret that some doctors knowingly provide infected patients with clean bills of health so the sick can obtain life insurance.
Some insurance producers encounter situations that seem to point toward murder. Suppose a woman claims her husband died in a fall while rock climbing, yet word gets out that the man suffered from a nearly incapacitating fear of heights. Or maybe the insurer is investigating an accidental drowning of a man�s wife, and the producer finds out that the woman could not swim and did not bring a change of clothes along with her for what was supposed to be a week-long boat trip. Perhaps a policyholder has lost his wife and children in a fire and the producer discovers that his first wife died in similar circumstances and that the man was once investigated for mail fraud. Is it the ethical responsibility of the producer to make the insurer aware of his concerns?
As human beings, we would probably like to come to the comforting conclusion that these situations add up to nothing but coincidences and that the people who we shake hands with and do business with would never do the terrible things that these various clues suggest. Yet that faith is shaken whenever we read or hear news reports about people who committed fraud through means that would not factor into even our worst nightmares. Consider these three examples compiled from court documents and news reports:
In 1990, former Prudential Insurance Co. agent Joseph Earl Meling bought life insurance for his wife Jennifer worth $700,000. The day after coverage went into effect, in February 1991, Meling complained to his wife about her snoring and convinced her to take a dose of the 12-hour decongestant Sudafed.
Jennifer Meling went into a coma, and her husband called 911 in hysterics. The operator wondered if Meling�s display of panic was an act, and so did medical professionals who tried to treat his wife but could not figure out what had caused her symptoms. When offered permission to see his spouse at the hospital, Meling declined but did suggest to the doctors that she might have been suffering from cyanide poisoning.
Sure enough, the Sudafed tablet Jennifer had taken that night was laced with poison, and the medical team was able to save her life. Later, in front of family and police, Meling said he knew he would probably be suspected of the poisoning, especially since he was due to collect so much money through Jennifer�s life insurance. But he assured everyone that her coverage exempted poisoning.
Two other area residents were not as lucky as Jennifer Meling. Kathleen Danicker and Stan McWhorter, both in their 40s, died from ingesting cyanide-laced Sudafed later that month. The deaths forced the drug�s manufacturer to order a recall, which determined that someone had tampered with five packages of the medicine.
It turned out Meling had not only lied about the poison exemption on his wife�s policy. He had specifically asked if the insurance covered that peril. Handwriting experts determined he had signed for a pound of sodium cyanide at a chemical plant prior to the poisoning, and authorities accused him of tampering with multiple packs of Sudafed in order to cause a massive recall and draw attention away from his motive to kill his wife. Meling was found guilty of murder and other charges and sentenced to life in prison. The United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit affirmed a district court�s rulings in 1995.
�The only detail missing from Meling�s calculus was the identity of the people he would kill. That he was unaware of the victims� identities does not make his conduct any less culpable,� U.S. Circuit Judge Alex Kozinski wrote. �Nor does the victims� anonymity make his crime any less gruesome. If anything, the randomness of the act only renders it more cruel.�
In another case, Paul Valdos and Kenneth McDavid had died six years apart, in 1999 and 2005 respectively, but the differences between them in death pretty much ended there. Both men had been found in Los Angeles alleys with fatal upper-body wounds and tire marks on their bodies, apparent victims in murders that involved no witnesses. Coming forward to identify both bodies were Helen Golay and Olga Rutterschmidt, grandmotherly types who apparently befriended them when the men were homeless and who had subsequently put them up in apartments with paid utilities for about two years before the accidents. Supposedly, the relationships between the men and these seemingly good Samaritans was so strong that Valdos and McDavid listed them as beneficiaries for several small life insurance policies. Even though Valdos had children who survived him, it was Golay and Rutterschmidt who were allowed to claim his body and bury it in an unmarked grave.
Realizing these connections, authorities probed deeper into both cases. A review of the numerous insurance policies revealed that Golay and Rutterschmidt assumed various identities in relation to the men. Sometimes they claimed to be their business partners, other times their aunts, cousins or even fianc�es. Some insurers suspected fraud when it came time to pay the death benefits, but they said the women knew how to fight the system and that there were legal issues that prevented the companies from revoking the policies.
According to the Associated Press, undercover agents began tracking the women and observed a blind man, Josif Gabor, accepting a ride from Rutterschmidt and writing on a series of forms en route to a bank. Sorting through trash that the woman discarded at the branch, officials found ripped envelopes with an insurance company�s name on them, as well as bank documents featuring Gabor�s name. Investigators also found rubber stamps designed to form several men�s signatures among the women�s possessions.
In federal fraud charges brought against the women in May 2006, officials alleged Golay and Rutterschmidt had scammed insurance companies out of more than $2 million in claims related to the Valdos and McDavid deaths. The women pleaded not guilty.
Meanwhile, investigators had been building a murder case around a 1999 Mercury Sable station wagon. Records showed that an hour before anyone found McDavid�s body, Golay had ordered a car towed a few blocks away from the crime scene. The same kind of vehicle, with damage to its front, was later abandoned near Rutterschmidt�s apartment. Though the car was never registered in either woman�s name, police discovered a note in Golay�s daily planner that listed a matching license plate number. Checking the car for evidence, police found DNA on the underside that they said matched McDavid�s. In 2008, Golay and Rutterschmidt were sentenced to life in prison for first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit murder for financial gain.
In another real-life example, Dina Abdelhaq�s daughter Lena died before the child reached three weeks of age, an apparent casualty to Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS), a rare condition that usually only strikes babies who are put to sleep on their bellies and whose mothers have substance abuse problems. Yet Dina Abdelhaq had no known drug problems at the time and was a veteran mother who, family members said, knew how to take proper care of her children. When Lena died, the family said Abdelhaq went into a deep depression and got hooked on gambling at casinos, an unshakable habit that put her deep in debt by the time she gave birth to another daughter, Tara, roughly 15 months later.
When Tara was born, family and friends gave Abdelhaq $380 and, according to taped conversations reported in the Chicago Tribune, the mother said she bought a life insurance policy for the child �to be like a savings plan.� She later said an Allstate Insurance Co. agent pressured her into purchasing a $200,000 policy for the baby girl, though the insurance employee said it was Abdelhaq who pursued the policy and that the purchase seemed suspicious because the mother was in debt and did not have life insurance for herself or her other children.
Ten days after the policy went into effect, Abdelhaq phoned her husband and told him Tara was sick. Despite her husband�s orders to take her to the emergency room, the mother decided to wait and see if the child improved. The next day, Abdelhaq screamed in front of the baby�s crib. Tara, with blood near her nose, was dead at the age of seven weeks.
Telling people she had lost another child to SIDS, Abdelhaq tried to collect on Tara�s insurance policy. Allstate employees suspected fraud and reported the situation to police. Authorities brought fraud charges against Abdelhaq in 1998, accusing her of killing her daughter to pocket insurance money.
Besides building a circumstantial case around the woman�s past, which involved gambling problems, bad checks and other frauds, prosecutors said the odds of two daughters dying from SIDS were highly unlikely. Though the condition was once thought to run in families, scientists now say there is conclusive evidence to show it is not a genetic disorder. An expert witness, who had studied thousands of SIDS cases, said he had never encountered a child in his research who died with blood near the nose, and he suggested the bleeding resulted from pressure put on Tara�s blood vessels, possibly during suffocation. A jury convicted Abdelhaq in February 1999, and she was sentenced to 21 years in prison.
You might have noticed that of the three examples, the Abdelhaq case most specifically mentions an insurance agent, and, indeed, this case deserves to be viewed as more than just a chilling instance of a consumer trying to defraud an insurance company by any means necessary. Tara Abdelhaq�s death should make insurance professionals stop for a moment and realize that their sales practices can play a role in immensely serious outcomes.
Insurance professionals know that something is only insurable if it has financial value to the applicant. Adults, for example, buy life insurance policies so that their spouses and children are compensated for the income that they will no longer have access to after a death. With this in mind, it is true that a life insurance policy for a child could pay for death-related expenses. But does a child�s death typically leave the parents with one less source of income?
Even if we agree that life insurance for children can serve a valid purpose, we can also agree that a $200,000 policy is unusual and probably without purpose for a newborn or for any child who is not keeping his or her family fed by singing, dancing or acting in big-time show business. Yes, it was the insurance company that reported Abdelhaq to authorities, and the agent who handled her application apparently did suspect something was wrong. But if this case teaches us anything, it is that recognizing an ethical issue without addressing it is perhaps even worse than not recognizing it at all. Though no insurance company should be judged based on one agent�s action or inactions, the insurer may have reinforced the negative stereotype of the insurance industry by only acting when it came time to pay up on Abdelhaq�s policy.
Poor public perception acts as a huge barrier to fraud prevention. This situation and others like it force consumers to confront the following question: Do insurance companies really care about preventing fraud for the good of society, or are they willing to tolerate a potential crime as long as someone is paying premiums and has not yet filed a claim?
Property insurance fraud often involves expensive items such as jewelry and paintings. Many companies who insure these items can link fraud cases to the appraisal process. An applicant might purchase a phony gemstone, purposely submit fraudulent valuations to the insurer and buy coverage for thousands of dollars above the item�s actual worth. Eventually, the client will call the insurance company and report the stone stolen or severely damaged.
The trade publication Best�s Review has reported on a different kind of fraud that has particularly applied to jewelry appraisals. In this case, applicants defraud insurers because they, too, were duped by an inaccurate appraisal.
Suppose Lindsey spots a diamond for sale by a jeweler for $5,000. She pays the price gladly, and why not? The jeweler has appraised the stone at an even $6,500, and Lindsey figures she can eventually make a nice profit from her purchase. The jeweler gives her receipts and other necessary forms documenting the diamond�s value, and she is able to insure her find for the full $6,500.
Lindsey has a friend who knows a thing or two about valuable jewelry, and she cannot resist showing her the diamond, expecting her friend to congratulate her for spotting such a fine specimen. But instead of patting her on the back, the friend tells Lindsey that the diamond is worth a couple hundred dollars at most and points out the clues that led her to that conclusion.
For obvious reasons, this news upsets Lindsey greatly. She becomes instantly mad at the jeweler for conning her and mad at herself for believing a deal that was too good to be true. Lindsey could sue the jeweler for blatantly lying to her and giving her false documentation of the jewel�s worth, but after thinking it over she realizes, with all the time and money she would probably spend on a lawyer and a potential court proceeding, she would be lucky if she got half of her money back from the crook. On the other hand, she still has the insurance policy for $6,500. Maybe if she tells a few lies or stages a burglary, she can file a claim and be done with the embarrassing mess.
Even in less extreme situations, buyers and insurers ought to know that some sellers will fudge on appraisals. After all, the seller wants customers to believe he or she has gotten a great deal and that the item sold is worth much more to the consumer than what he or she has paid for it. For this reason, even when an applicant appears to be requesting coverage in good faith, it is often wise for an insurance company to obtain an appraisal from an unbiased third party. Along with serving the insurer�s best interests, this practice can also help the consumer by either confirming an item�s value or alerting the buyer to potential fraud that would have otherwise gone undetected.
Property insurance fraud might also involve arson. Fraud in connection with arson seems to be one of the most difficult insurance crimes to prevent, but industry professionals can still rely on some of the general red flags discussed earlier in this text. Does the applicant seem overwhelmed with debt? Does the applicant appear anxious to buy excessive coverage for a building without considering the cost? Does the applicant have any history of fraud?
In recent years, insurers have had to deal with more catastrophes than they might have ever imagined. To its credit, the insurance industry paid most claims related to 9/11, even though it could have challenged them based on traditional insurance responses to acts of war. The industry compensated policyholders even more for damage done by Hurricane Katrina, a storm that overtook 9/11 as the most costly catastrophe in our nation�s history.
Yet even before the first claims came in from the hurricane, some insurance professionals knew from past experiences that a few policyholders would dare to use widespread tragedy as a springboard for fraudulent schemes. After 9/11, for example, one man claimed his wife went out on a job interview at the World Trade Center and never came home again. Nearly $300,000 into the scam, an insurance worker called a local sheriff�s department and talked to someone who had just received an invitation to Thanksgiving from the allegedly dead woman. Such scams are known to us obviously because the people behind them were caught. Insurance companies and law enforcement believe many more cases go undiscovered.
Rather than become discouraged or cynical based on these kinds of cases, insurance professionals can take pride in the many claims they honored following catastrophes and be proud that they helped many people without putting them through extensive scrutiny. These frauds should not necessarily fill the insurance community with shame, as long as an overwhelming majority of processed claims provide financial assistance to people who are beginning the long task of rebuilding their lives.
Though insurance producers should not allow themselves to become so swept up by the wonders of anti-fraud technology that they ignore what their experiences and instincts tell them, today�s insurers have a great friend in the Insurance Services Office, Inc., (ISO) or at least in the fraud database that the company oversees. Before the ISO set up its current service, criminals had a decent chance of committing frauds in multiple lines of insurance without having their frauds linked together by investigators. Despite multiple databases, insurers did not share enough information with one another about their customers for fraud prevention purposes. A questionable claim might have been found in one database but not another.
The ISO�s more centralized fraud database has helped investigators connect crimes more easily than they could in the past, but the technology itself has been just as beneficial. Search engine capabilities now allow insurers to perform a wide variety of exploratory investigations of potential fraud. In addition to searching for multiple claims with the same name, address or Social Security number, fraud-conscious professionals can view records featuring different variations on names, addresses and Social Security numbers that the perpetrator might change from one crime to the next.
On the human side, many insurers personally employ or enlist the services of a Special Investigative Unit (SIU). This team, made up of members with insurance, law enforcement and detective skills, delve into all available data about a suspicious claim, interview witnesses to accidents (including the claimant) and may engage in surveillance work.
For some insurers, having a permanent SIU is a luxury they cannot afford. People who have stuck with an SIU for a long period of time, however, typically cite their unit�s cost efficiency. SIU proponents have been known to say that for every dollar spent on a unit, an insurer saves $10 thanks to the team�s effective anti-fraud work.
If an insurance producer suspects a claimant of fraud, he or she should alert the SIU, assuming the company employs one, and let the specialists do a more thorough investigation. The use of an SIU however, does not exempt other insurance professionals from any further ethical responsibilities. If you call in an SIU, you ought to understand what the unit will and will not do in order to determine a claim�s validity. An insurance company should consider ethical issues, such as personal privacy and deception, and determine if its SIU�s tactics are likely to produce results without breaking any laws or any ethical standards that the company wants to uphold.
Insurance companies specializing in certain lines of coverage have sometimes utilized fraud detection tools that cater more to their specific needs. Medical insurers, for example, began using software programs in the 1990s that automatically reduce reimbursements for health care providers whose claims suggest errors or fraud. These tools can spot irregularities, such as claims filed on behalf of male patients for gynecological treatments and multiple bills for the same service.
Cigna Corp., which has used a program called ClaimCheck, reported that the bill-cutting software saved the company about $60 million during its first four months of use, but doctors have expressed concern with these supposed anti-fraud tools. In their mission to stop fraud, doctors say, these software programs sometimes unilaterally void many legitimate claims. Physicians have reported instances when they have examined a patient during an office visit, performed a biopsy or analyzed a urine test to diagnose the patient and only been reimbursed for the tests. In more extreme cases, doctors say they have performed multiple surgeries on a patient, yet the software only reimbursed them for the first procedure, as if the additional surgery should have been done for free.
The bill-cutting software might catch the occasional thief, but it also presents negative possibilities for patients. Because some insurers have not adequately explained to doctors how their software analyzes claims, physicians have suggested they may have to compensate for the software�s sometimes unfavorable determinations by charging patients more for treatment up front. Some have even wondered if a few health care providers will avoid performing various precautionary tests and exploratory procedures if they think an insurer�s software will prevent them from being paid for the services.
The prevalence of bill-cutting at major medical insurance companies was responsible, in part, for multiple class-action lawsuits filed on behalf of health care providers near the turn of the century. Demanding payment for services dating as far back as 1996, providers settled with many insurers, including Cigna, for hundreds of millions of dollars. In addition to the financial compensation, Cigna agreed to improve its communication with physicians and institute a system whereby providers could re-file disputed claims.
Most of this chapter has focused on fraud committed by people from outside the insurance community. It would be wrong, however, to suggest that this is a completely consumer-driven problem that insurance professionals will never detect among their supervisors, peers or competitors. Some corporate executives, agents and brokers give ethical insurance producers a bad name by committing or becoming involved in fraud. While fraud awareness is necessary when working with clients, agents and brokers must also address fraud within their own ranks by reporting known misdeeds to authorities and setting high ethical standards for themselves and their coworkers.
Recent examples of alleged insurance fraud from the inside include the following:
� Lloyd�s of London was accused of concealing its exposure to asbestos risks in order to attract investors. The asbestos situation allegedly jeopardized the solvency of some Lloyd�s syndicates, cost people their investments and devastated some investors to the point of suicide.
� A financier allegedly transferred $200 million from five insurers� reserve accounts to a brokerage firm and then used the money for himself.
� Authorities claimed the CEO of Near North Insurance Brokerage Inc. used millions of dollars that should have gone to insurers and policyholders to finance his personal projects and company operations.
� Summit National Life went insolvent, allegedly because an executive had transferred money to his other companies, purchased phony reinsurance and spent millions of the organization�s dollars on his house.
� One of only two insurers to go bust from September 11, airline insurer Fortress Re allegedly fooled its parent company, a Japanese insurer, by buying cheap reinsurance that acted more like a loan than traditional coverage.
� A life insurer for Cicero, Illinois invested money into failed business ventures instead of paying claims and put the town in debt.
� A Florida auto insurer charged consumers, including the state�s insurance commissioner, an estimated $4 million for coverage that policyholders never requested.
Sometimes an entire company is one big fraud. According to the Government Accountability Office, 200,000 policyholders in the United States had fake coverage from bogus insurers between 2000 and 2002. Unknowingly armed with the phony benefits, those policyholders rang up a total of $252 million in unpaid claims during that span.
Many phony insurers prey on the poor, the elderly, the immigrant community and sick people who have been denied coverage elsewhere. These predators offer rates that truly are too good to be true and sometimes use company names that are similar to those of respectable insurers. Though these companies and the counterfeit coverage they sell have not been licensed or approved by the state, many of the bogus insurers employ licensed agents, hoping that the salesperson�s credibility will be enough to avoid suspicion. A portion of these agents claim they sell these policies in good faith, only to realize later that they have been fooled just as much as their customers. Certainly, as an insurance producer, you should research the credentials of companies you plan to represent.
At other times, an insurance company and its policies are legitimate but individuals do all the defrauding. In a relaxed and unorganized work environment in which job duties are not specifically defined and errors are nearly untraceable, claims adjusters might manipulate forms so that they or an accomplice can receive checks that should go to a health care provider or a policyholder.
In the cases of unethical agents and brokers, frauds are perpetrated because of various types of greed. When this greed is exposed, members of the producer�s community tend to express shock and tell reporters things like, �He was such a nice man!� or �I used to sit next to her in church every Sunday.�
These statements lend support to an intriguing aspect of the consumer-insurer relationship. As much as the public seems to dislike insurance companies in an abstract sense, people generally have positive feelings about their own agent or broker. The industry as a whole, they might say, is unfair, corrupt and cold-blooded, but agent John Smith and broker Jane Jones are ethical professionals who would not steal a stick of gum even if the grocer left the room.
With these sentiments in mind, agents and brokers have even clearer incentives to learn about fraud and to actively discourage their peers from engaging in it. As difficult as insurance sales is now, imagine how difficult the job would be if a majority of people had negative opinions of their personal agents or brokers because too many of them acted unethically.
As easy as it is to view fraud prevention as something the claims department should handle, the customer probably does not have a trusting relationship with his or her claims adjuster. Nor is the person likely to have a trusting relationship with top-level insurance executives or trade groups, who have traditionally been the ones to make the case for greater fraud awareness. If the industry wants to reach its customers and convince them that insurance fraud is a problem worth tackling, it may discover that agents and brokers are its best messengers.