Auto insurance fraud is any act made by a policy holder to fraudulently obtain payment from an insuring institution. Unfortunately, auto insurance fraud leads to billions of dollars of loss on behalf of insuring institutions, which then translates to increased costs on behalf other, law-abiding customers.
Regardless of the type of auto insurance policy in question, insurance fraud can be divided into two main categories. The first, considered hard-fraud is when someone acts to intentionally collect on an insurance policy. Examples of hard-fraud include intentional auto accidents, destruction of property, and, usually in collaboration with a medical expert, the faking of injuries.
The second, most common form of insurance fraud is referred to as soft-fraud. This type of fraud is also described as opportunistic fraud, because it also occurs during legitimate insurance proceedings. In the case of soft-fraud, policy holders will exaggerate the severity of the damages incurred or injuries sustained. Though most people do not consider this to be a serious offense, it is nonetheless a crime. The most common form of this type of fraud involves exaggerating the severity of the personal injury sustained an during accident, or filing a claim for an existing injury not sustained during the incident in question.
Actual cases of hard-insurance fraud are rarer and take the form of staged collisions and other complex schemes. They usually involve preying on unsuspecting motorists. The most common types of these types of fraud center on manipulating other motorists into situations in which they are forced into an accident where they appear to be at fault, but in which they were actually manipulated by two or more defrauders working in concert
Motorists may be given a signal they have the right away, at which point the defrauding part will crash into them, and subsequently deny giving the signal. Defrauders may also have a method of activating and deactivating their brake lights in order to facilitate a rear-end collision, with the blame for such an accident being squarely on the shoulders of innocent motorists. Read the rest of this entry »