Fighting insurance fraud is an important department job
The Anti-Fraud Division of the Kansas Insurance
Department (KID) worked nearly 850 cases of suspected insurance fraud in Kansas
during 2013. That’s a pretty hefty number for our four-person division, but
that figure is an average one for us, unfortunately.
On a national level, if insurance fraud was a
business, it would be a Fortune 500 company, according to national reports. It
is, by all accounts, the second largest economic crime in America; only tax
evasion exceeds it.
This type of fraud is the intentional
misrepresentation of facts and circumstances to an insurance company in order
to obtain payment that would not otherwise be made.
Insurance fraud costs upwards of $80-120 billion
annually, but most importantly, it adds hundreds of dollars to your annual
insurance premiums, as companies have to include that cost of doing business in
the premiums you pay.
The fraudulent activity comes in all shapes and
sizes, from accident insurance and annuities through health insurance and
homeowners claims to renters insurance and travel insurance. It also includes
application or policy fraud, where the applicant—or an unscrupulous agent –
provides false information or forged documents.
The reasons for committing fraud are as numerous
as the people who commit it—the need for money for some legitimate (in their
minds) or illegitimate activity, or maybe just plain old greed. But whatever
the motivation, when our anti-fraud division receives a report of suspected
fraud, our investigators first make a determination about the alleged activity
in terms of who should actually follow up.
Some reports are clearly not insurance fraud and
are placed with an appropriate outside investigative agency. Others are not
insurance fraud but are consumer issues or market conduct issues that other
divisions in KID would investigate. For example, if our anti-fraud
investigators determine the activity is not criminal insurance fraud but a
problem with agent conduct, then KID’s Producer Licensing Division will receive
the report.
Information from consumers is often forwarded to
an insurance company’s special investigative unit for followup, and some cases
that are clearly violations of federal law are referred to a federal
investigative agency such as the FBI.
If our anti-fraud investigators determine that
suspected fraud falls within the insurance law in our Kansas Statutes, then our
investigators interview witnesses, take statements and collect and analyze
evidence. Once everything is complete, we make a decision on the merit of the
case by asking two simple questions: Was it really insurance fraud? Did the
facts warrant a prosecution?
If the answers are Yes, then we submit an
affidavit to our In-House Special Assistant Attorney General to determine who
prosecutes the case and where the case will be filed. This process involves our
Legal Division and the Attorney General’s office.
The process can be lengthy, but it is thorough,
and I would put our investigators up against any agency in terms of making sure
no stone is unturned.
If you suspect any type of fraudulent Kansas
insurance activity, contact the KID Anti-Fraud Division by calling
1-800-432-2484. You will be doing your insurance premium dollars a favor.
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