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Insurers Have 'Cash for Clunkers' Program, But It's Not by Choice

By Ed Leefeldt | Sep 10, 2009

Insurers are finding out that they too have a “Cash for Clunkers” program. But it’s not being offered by them or the government. Policyholders are illegally torching their cars to collect.

The National Insurance Crime Bureau’s latest reports of dubious insurance claims show that suspicious car fires have risen 20 percent for the first half of the year and questionable auto glass claims are up 76 percent.

In California, which has been particularly hard hit by the real estate recession and a looming budget crisis, officials have reported a rise in both auto arson and auto theft fraud.

In fact, fraudulent claims were up in virtually all categories nationwide, which doesn’t bode well for profits at property/casualty insurers such as Allstate and Travelers. A total of 41,619 “questionable claims” were processed this year compared with 36,743 for the first half of 2008, an increase of 13 percent.

Car insurers aren’t the only ones being fleeced. Fake product liability claims, such as razor blades supposedly found in cereal boxes, are up 90 percent, the NICB said.

“A senior investigator at a major insurer just told me he’s seeing a spike in fake ‘slip and fall’ insurance extortions against businesses,” says Jim Quiggle of the Coalition Against Insurance Fraud in a BNET Finance interview. Nationally, slip and falls showed almost a 50 percent increase.

Insurance scammers are nothing if not creative. Many businesses are illegally lowering workers comp premiums by falsifying information to say that high-risk roofers are low-risk clerks, or hiding workers in shell companies, says Quiggle. He’s also seeing well-insured businesses go up in smoke, as when a financially troubled car dealer died of a heart attack while torching his inventory.

When it comes to burning cars for insurance, Houston holds the dubious distinction of heading up the list, according to Fox News. The head of the city’s arson unit says 85 percent of all vehicle fires turn out to be arson.

Ed Leefeldt is an award-winning investigative and business journalist who has worked for Reuters, Bloomberg and Dow Jones, and is the author of The Woman Who Rode the Wind, a novel about early flight.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Cash for clunkers: NADA asks government to suspend program

    Consumer Reports - 96 days 1 hour 10 minutes ago

    It looks like itâ??s happened again--Cash for clunkers may have run out of money. The National Automotive Dealers Association (NADA) has asked the U.S. government to suspend the Cash for clunkers program following a dealer survey it conducted earlier this week that found the $3 billion fund has been depleted. Just yesterday, the Department of...

  • Clunker Hangover May Drive Auto Sales From First to Worst

    BNET Auto - 63 days 2 hours 43 minutes ago

    The government's Cash for Clunkers program may have worked too well, in that demand has fallen sharply since the U.S. Department of Transportation

  • Chrysler has too few cars to continue Cash for Clunker Additional Rebate

    Automotive - 111 days 17 hours 19 minutes ago

    Chrysler had introduced earlier this month an incentive program of its own that dovetailed with the governments "Cash for Clunkers" incentive. The automaker added a rebate of $4,500 over and above offered from the CARS program. This gave certain consumers a a total of $9,000 to buy a Chrysler. Now thats one heck of an incentive! ...

  • Cash for Clunkers jumpstarts Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep Auto Sales

    Automotive - 76 days 20 hours 18 minutes ago

    The government's Cash for Clunkers program seems to be a success. Chrysler, considered by many as one of the weakest among the Detroit Three, even had a good month. The company reports that its sales were up 5 percent from July with 17 of its 26 models had a year-over-year and/or a month-over-month increase in retail sales. Top brands included...

  • Driving Out of Germany, to Pollute Another Day

    New York Times - 108 days 2 hours 52 minutes ago

    Germany’s “cash-for-clunkers” program is being undermined as cars that were supposed to have been junked are finding their way to markets in Africa and Eastern Europe

 

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