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PIP insurance fraud explained


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Florida is one of the most expensive states for car insurance, according to the Insurance Information Institute. A fender bender can cost an insurance company tens of thousands of dollars.
Listen HereWalt Dartland was targeted in a staged accident years ago in Miami, but he knew immediately what was up. Dartland is a former Florida D deputy Attorney General and is now executive director of the Consumer Federation of the Southeast. “All of a sudden they just plain stopped,” said Dartland, “and because I was going so slow, I basically hardly touched them. They immediately got out of the car, and I tried to tell them we better call the police department and get a report on this. They said no. They pulled the car across the highway and walked right into a chiropractor’s office.”
The way this works is a clinic owner will recruit a group of people to stage a minor accident. No one is actually hurt, but the passengers go straight to the clinic. No treatment is given, and claims of $10,000 per person are filed under the driver’s PIP coverage. The money is split between the passengers, clinic operators, and lawyers.
Florida’s No-Fault Law was supposed to cover economic losses and medical treatment for crash victims without the need for a lawsuit to establish who’s to blame. But in the last five years, the state has seen a 275 percent increase in PIP related lawsuits.
Gov. Rick Scott calls PIP fraud a billion dollar tax on Florida’s citizens. He told a crowd gathered for a PIP rally at the Capitol, “You are sick and tired of a billion dollars a year in fraud. You’re tired of it. You’re tired of scammers taking advantage of you.”
Cydnee Knoth lives in Tampa and came to Tallahassee to complain about her premiums. “PIP is the biggest thing I pay for on my insurance, more than liability,” said Knoth. “I carry $100,000 worth of liability and that is cheaper than carrying $10,000 of personal injury.”
Tampa and Miami are among the top 10 most expensive cities for car insurance because of staged accidents. Chief Financial Officer Jeff Atwater says moving to one of those cities can increase your monthly insurance payment 50 to 100 dollars. He said, “The average family in Miami-Dade County with a teenage driver is now paying over $3200 a year for the value of coverage that is only worth $10,000.”
Atwater said Florida lawmakers mandated no-fault coverage and they are the ones who must fix it. But he doesn’t want PIP to go away. “I would say there is value in a no-fault system, that someone can get quick care and coverage when they have access to no other healthcare,” said Atwater. “For us in Miami- Dade, there is well over 25% of our population that has no other healthcare other than what’s offered in PIP.”
The Florida House and Senate have two competing bills for PIP reform. Atwater likes the House version. So does the governor as welll as the business and insurance industries. The bill requires accident victims to seek treatment at a hospital, not a clinic, within 72 hours. It also puts a cap on attorneys’ fees. The bill has passed one committee so far.
The Senate version is supported by attorneys, chiropractors and some consumer groups. It requires police to use long form reports at accident scenes. It provides for more regulation of clinics and creates a fraud task force. It has not been taken up by any committees.
Both versions would force insurance companies to eventually lower their rates. Changes in the bills are expected, but Atwater thinks some kind of reform will pass. “I believe there’s one last good fight in us and I believe it’s this year,” he said.
Gina Jordan, WLRN-Miami Herald News
Posted by Gina Jordan on January 29, 2012 in WLRN Session | Permalink

Read more here: http://miamiherald.typepad.com/nakedpolitics/2012/01/pip-insurance-fraud-explained.html#storylink=cpy

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