InsuranceFraud

    By The Associated Press

    | 4:30PM 5/11/2012
    A pharmacy in Kansas billed Medicare for more than 1,000 prescriptions each for two patients in a single year, part of a pattern of questionable billings at 2,600 drugstores nationwide uncovered by federal investigators in a report Thursday.

    By Dayana Yochim

    | 1:00PM 12/30/2011
    Bogus burglaries, fake funerals, self-inflicted air rifle assaults -- people go to great lengths to convince insurers to cut a check to cover their personal and financial losses. But the financial gain from phony pain and suffering is often short-lived.

    By Sheryl Nance-Nash

    | 7:00AM 12/12/2011
    Here's yet another reason to watch what you say and do online: Insurance companies are already surfing social media sites to get the scoop about their customers, and what their data-miners find may soon be compiled into a new way to rate you as a risk: a social networking score.

    By Geoff Williams

    | 3:15PM 12/18/2009
    The Insurance and Financial Advisor, a Web site that covers the news of the insurance industry, reported that Daniel Macken, of Wrigleyville, Illinois, is under arrest, charged with the felony of insurance fraud. Apparently, Macken, 60, took out two life insurance policies, worth $200,000, on...

    By Mitch Lipka

    | 5:45PM 10/07/2009
    Crooks really don't know any bounds to how low they can go. Video aired on Good Morning America showing members of an insurance fraud ring setting up motorists -- mainly women -- for collisions is a demonstration of the depths they are willing to plumb. The crooks stage accidents that make the...

    By Zac Bissonnette

    | 8:00AM 6/11/2009
    The Associated Press reports that "Driven to desperation, a growing number of financially strapped car owners are torching, sinking or ditching their vehicles and then reporting them stolen to cash in on the insurance." In Las Vegas, car insurance fraud cases are up more than threefold and other...

    By Tracy Coenen

    | 1:30PM 1/10/2008
    A former legal secretary in Massachusetts demonstrates for us what not to do: lie about being disabled. Teresa Brooks sued her employer, law firm Peabody & Arnold, saying they fired her because of her disability, a disabling spinal condition. The law firm said she wasn't disabled at all, and...