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MPI releases first “top frauds” list


January 8, 2004   by Canadian Underwriter


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To bring fraud fighting into the spotlight, Manitoba Public Insurance (MPI), the province’s government auto insurer, has released its first ever “top five frauds” list.
Topping the list is a Winnipeg man who dumped and set fire to his mother’s car rather than buy her a new one. Investigation by MPI’s special investigation unit (SIU) resulted in the man begin ordered to pay a $2,500 fine plus $537 restitution.
Yet another man set fire to his company vehicle, destroying the vehicle plus the night deposit from the fast food restaurant he managed, about $5,000. The man not only faces paying restitution of $8,000 to his employer and $11,000 to MPI, but also an 18-month conditional sentence.
A $400 fine and $200 in costs were the result for a Steinbach man who claimed his vehicle had been struck in a hit-and-run when it was proven the vehicle had actually struck a concrete surface.
A man who reported his 1978 Camaro stolen was later convicted of fraud under $5,000 and received a one-year sentence when the SIU discovered the Camaro had been observed being stripped for parts weeks before the claim was filed.
And rounding out the list is a man who claimed injury after his vehicle was rear-ended, but who tipped off investigators with comments made in a newspaper article about his growing one-man business. When it was found the “injured” man was performing tasks such as loading trucks and building pallets, he plead guilty to fraud under $5,000 and ordered to pay restitution of $2,996 to MPI.
MPI estimates that SUI investigations saved its policyholders about $5 million in 2002-2003 based on money recovered and claims denied. In 2003, 93 charges were laid against 61 people. And between March 2002 and February 2003, Manitoba’s courts handed down $46,000 in fines and $127,416 in restitution.


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