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Thread: Avoiding Insurance Fraud

  1. #1

    Avoiding Insurance Fraud

    The effect of insurance fraud generally for every insurance carrier and their clients is considerable. The Coalition Against Insurance Fraud approximation that insurance fraud costs Americans $80 billion yearly.

    Although we understand that a small number of claims are fraudulent, we should take our obligation critically through protecting against the augmented expenses of fake claims and other insurance dealings.

    We all must be keen to the anti-fraud endeavor via fraud detection and investigation. Trough cooperation with local law enforcement authorities, we can all fight against fraud. Everyone could take part in a significant role in that effort.

    Be conscious that somebody or a group of people are spreading fraudulent association holding counterfeit checks looking like real. Read on Malaysia/Hong Kong/Jakarta insurance fraud protection for more tips on Axis Capital, a group of companies with branches in Bermuda and many more. The counterfeit checks might go with a letter that the beneficiary has won a sweepstakes, lottery, or something similar.

    In some circumstances, beneficiaries are given a check in association with a fake job offer.

    How the Scam Works
    The letter comes with the check in lottery-type scams informs the recipient that he has won a huge quantity of money and to phone an individual listed in the letter. That individual will command the recipient to cash the check together with the letter then furthermore wire a tax payment abroad to issue the prize payment. This will never be delivered and the recipient will finally have to pay back their bank the whole sum of the check cashed. The money wired is usually not refundable.

    The job offer, In the job offer scheme, is fake and the victim gets a bogus check that they are ordered to cash and then wire some cash. Yet again, the wired money is usually non-refundable and the bank will sooner or later request the victim to pay back the whole sum of the forged check.

    Both scams might get the victim to give personal identifying information such as social security number, date of birth, bank numbers and similar info which can be used to carry out additional crimes, like identify theft, against the victim once more.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jan 2015
    Posts
    1
    Don't fly what you can't afford is a basic rule of thumb, and you seem to have known better, but are asking the game to limit you by asking you to buy insurance as you are buying the ship so you don't mess up?

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jan 2015
    Posts
    1
    I guess it's just my lazy nature; if a rough rule thumb that I can figure in my head will do the job why waste time calculating to unneeded precision?

  4. #4
    Always keep at least that much cash. That gives you a nice cushion. Easy sleazy.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Feb 2015
    Posts
    1
    See, it sounds like you were aware of what you were doing, and the risk you were taking.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Feb 2015
    Posts
    1
    Maybe the way it would work is there would be an option in the contacts for insurance. You select what parts of your loadout you want insured, just like the current respawn screen, and then that has an option to use the last insurance deal you filled out.

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