Insurance Fraud: The Orphan Child of the U.S. Justice System
I am tired of those who give lip-service to the need for insurers to
defeat insurance fraud. I am frustrated by those judges who give probation
to admitted insurance criminals.
by Barry Zalma
Barry Zalma Inc.
Every month Zalma's Insurance Fraud Letter (ZIFL) publishes lists of
prosecutions and the wild variations in sentences imposed on people who
commit almost identical crimes. According to the Coalition Against Insurance
Fraud:
Insurance fraud occurs every day and in every state. People of all races,
incomes and ages are victimized. ...
Insurance fraud is hard to measure because so much goes undetected, and
complete research has yet to be done. Still, we have enough evidence to
know that fraud is widespreadand expensive. Insurance fraud is an
equal opportunity crime. It is committed by members of every race, religion,
or country of origin. Insurers and those who pay premiums for insurance
are the victims. Police and prosecutors ignore the crime and expect insurers
to investigate and help prosecute the crime.
Insurers and those who buy insurance should both be screaming at the
top of their lungs to their legislators, police, and prosecutorial agencies
that the crime must be stopped. They do not. Because of a lack of interest
on the part of the public, prosecutions happen rarely and the punishment
is spotty and widely diverse. Check the "Good News" section
in ZIFL at http://www.zalma.com and you will see punishments from zero
jail time to 15 years in prison. The deterrent effect of fraud prosecutions
is inconsequential since most people get away with it.
A Proposal
I propose a major advertising campaign explaining to the public, prosecutors,
judges, and juries how much they personally spend every year to allow
fraud perpetrators to continue their practice. Insurers who spend billions
on advertising their product could take a mere 1 percent of their advertising
budgets to ask the public to help fight fraud, turn in fraud perpetrators,
demand that they be prosecuted and demand that the judges put them in
jail.
Regardless of how effective an insurer's special investigative unit (SIU),
without the support of the public, press, prosecutors, and judges, insurance
fraud will remain the orphan child of the U.S. justice system. Until insurance
fraud prosecution is adopted as the cause of the majority of the public,
it will continue to succeed.
Nothing will happen until the public and public servants are convinced
it is a serious problem. Ask your local prosecutors what they would do
if a gang was robbing American banks on a daily basis of $100 billion
every year. Would they create a special task force to catch and prosecute
the criminals? Why do they do almost nothing about those who steal the
same amount from insurers with their pens rather than with guns? It is
time the insurance industry and all who work in it demand that insurance
fraud be recognized as a major crime and that those who are convicted
be sentenced to the most severe punishments allowed by law.
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Diversified Risk Insurance Brokers
phone: 510/547-3203 fax: 510/547-5648
5900 Christie Ave
License # 0529776
Emeryville, California 94608
copyright © 2001
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