Small Businesses Should Be Wary of Various Insurance Scams

Due to the nature of the insurance business, the opportunities for fraud are legion. Pay particular attention to insurance claims relating to autos, health, worker's compensation, and, workplace accidents.

Insurance is an industry based on the distribution of risk. You insure a piece of property, for example, your car, for a premium payment of $700 a year. If you suffer a loss of the use of that property due to an accident, your insurance company will make you whole, minus any deductible.

While insurance is a necessity to protect us against losses that can devast us, workers' compensation, health, vehicle and other property insurance, and agent and underwriting duties provide the ideal circumstances for various types of fraud.

Agents and Underwriters Have Opportunities to Commit Fraud

Agents and underwriters have endless opportunities to defraud both insureds and insurers.

The Fraud: Premium frauds, settlement check diversions, false death claims, false statements and misrepresentations, and the creation of fictitious policies are but a few of the frauds committed by agents and underwriters. And while the most newsworthy might be going South with a huge premium instead of paying it over to the carrier, there are other, more subtle ways to defraud as well:

The Flaw: Insurance salesmen can be very persuasive, and their jargon very perplexing. Insurance frauds come about when buyers fail to understand what they're getting, or agree to buy something and sign a contract that has blank spaces, or tend to trust that the charming agent is looking out for their interests instead of his own.

The Fix: Caution and vigilance is needed on the part of the buyer. If you don't understand it, don't buy it. If it's not spelled out in writing, don't buy it. If it sounds too good to be true . . .(say it out loud) it is!

Vehicle Insurance Schemes Abound

There's an endless variety in vehicle insurance frauds and we all pay for them in the form of ever-increasing premiums.

The Fraud: Here are but a few examples of vehicle insurance fraud:

The Flaw: It's hard to tell if an accident is staged unless you are a trained observer or the fraudsters try it once too often.

As far as the switching of used parts when you're paying for new ones, unless you're a professional, you would not likely be able to tell if parts were genuine new or used from a junkyard.

The Fix: Being a careful driver and a savvy consumer of auto services can help your insurance company keep your premiums down.

Property and Casualty Scams Take Many Forms

Property and casualty scams have been around for ages and can succeed if business owners let their guard down. Claims for non-existent property, overstated losses and the old 'slip and falls' are the all too common examples of property and casualty scams. 

The Fraud: My car somehow caught fire and was a total loss. Did I mention that my priceless violin was in the back seat? Oh well, I'm insured for contents.

Jack made a big sale in the middle of the month and his inventory was reduced to almost nothing. But then there was that huge fire, and somehow those goods that were sold never got taken off the inventory records before the insurance claim was made.

Pepe sends his insurance guy a copy of the paperwork for a boat and buys substantial coverage for it. Sadly, he soon reports the vessel sank in quite deep water during a fishing trip.

A major hotel receives notice of a lawsuit from a person who claims to have slipped on water carelessly left on the lobby floor, causing her to fall and injure her back.

The Flaw: Violin and inventory ashes don't make for good evidence of fraud. How can an insurance firm prove these items never existed?

A bill of sale and title to a boat won't float. How can an insurance firm prove the boat never existed when it allegedly sank in deep water?

Un-witnessed slip and fall claims almost always end in a settlement. The cost of contesting the litigation is too high.

The Fix: For expensive items, insurance firms should demand to see and touch the goods they're insuring, but this is often impractical. Unfortunately these frauds are, like so many others, counted as a cost of doing business, and the public pays higher premiums to cover the false claims.

Life Insurance Fraud Is Rare

Some scams can be a life-and-death issue. especially when it comes to life insurance fraud.

The Fraud: Murder for profit sounds movie script-ish, but it's done. It is assumed that many deaths termed accidental or suicides are actually murders for profit -- but nobody, of course, can prove how many get away with this.

And yes, a stranger can indeed insure your life -- not legally but it's certainly done. Phony death certificates are easily manufactured. It's illegal these days for a funeral home to mail certificates lest they fall into fraudster hands.

The Flaw: Agents selling life contracts can be in collusion with the fraudster or perhaps just sloppy in documenting the veracity of the application. Small death claims are rarely contested, so if the fraudsters are not too greedy, they might just get away with false death claims.

The Fix: Diligent follow-up of even minimally suspicious claims would catch the amateur fraudsters. Any offshore deaths should be considered suspicious. Computer programs can sometimes catch duplicated addresses or Social Security numbers when a crook becomes sloppy and reuses them.

Identifying and Preventing Workers' Compensation Fraud

Although only a small fraction of workers' compensation claims are fraudulent, the cases that do occur are expensive.

There are two basic types of workers' compensation fraud:

Employer fraud. Employer fraud, also commonly called premium fraud, are those acts of fraud--including under-reporting payroll, misclassification of employees' duties and experience modification evasion--committed by an employer, for the purpose of reducing premium liability.

Employee fraud. When you suspect you may be dealing with employee fraud, there is a long list of factors to consider as warning signs of possible employee workers' compensation fraud. Among them are the following:

Tip

You may not discriminate against a worker who has filed previous workers' compensation claims. However, when you have several behaviors present or you observe an emerging pattern, don't be afraid to investigate further for possible fraud or to forward your suspicions to the appropriate authority.

The workplace may have these factors present:

The injury situation may be described in one or more ways:

The medical relationship can be described in one or more of the following ways:

The claim itself, or the claimant's attorney, may act in these ways:

Outside activities can sound the alarm of fraud:

Fraudulent workers' compensation claims cut into your business's productivity, and can send your workers' compensation premiums sky-high. By being sensitive to the possibility that any claim might be fraudulent, you reduce your risk that a fraudulent claim, however rare, gets by undetected.

Tools to Use

The Business Tools contain a checklist to help you prepare a workers' compensation claim.

Health Insurance Frauds Can Be Committed By Employees, Agents or Providers

Fraud in our health care system is rampant, and negatively impacts the availability, cost, and quality of health care for those who truly need it.

The Fraud:

The main categories of health care fraud that concern small businesses include:


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