Texas Department of Insurance Fraud Unit opened
investigations into more than 550 insurance fraud cases in 2013.
More than $10.3 million in insurance fraud
was identified in criminal cases referred for prosecution in 2013, the
department said. Court-ordered restitution for cases that reached final
adjudication during this same period totaled more than $7.5 million.
“The amount of insurance fraud committed in
Texas is growing and the schemes to make false claims for insurance benefits
are becoming more complex,” Texas Insurance Commissioner Julia Rathgeber said.
“I would like to thank local prosecutors for their diligent efforts to combat
fraud with all of the tools available to them. Together, we can build a strong
line of defense against these crimes.”
These are
the fraud unit’s top 10 cases for 2013:
- Mike Klein filed continuous injury claims
with his health insurer after his retirement from the San Antonio Fire
Department. Klein forged paperwork from his doctor and supervisor in support of
the claims. Klein pleaded guilty to insurance fraud, a second-degree felony. He
was sentenced to 120 months deferred adjudication and ordered to pay $2,000 in
fines and $117,140 in restitution.
- George Martinez was employed by multiple
employers while he was receiving workers’ compensation benefits after being
injured at his primary place of employment.
Martinez did not notify his workers’ compensation insurance carrier of
his other employment as required by law. Martinez pleaded guilty to insurance
fraud and was sentenced to 48 months deferred adjudication. He was also ordered
to pay $2,000 in fines and $7,196 in restitution.
- Christopher Purser and Robert S. Mills sold
fictitious marine insurance to the owner of Shoreline Cruises of Lake George,
NY. When the cruise ship Ethan Allen sank and killed 20 elderly tourists, the
company was left with no valid insurance
coverage. Purser and Mills pleaded guilty in U.S. Federal Court – Southern
District of Texas to federal charges stemming from an investigation by the TDI
Fraud Unit, the Internal Revenue Service, and the Federal Bureau of
Investigation. Purser was sentenced to 188 months in prison. Mills was
sentenced to 120 months in prison and was ordered to pay $2.45 million in
restitution.
- In Dallas County, Sylvia Leyva-Talamantes
billed Blue Cross and Blue Shield for 110 health claims for services that were
not rendered. She received more than $28,131 in benefits from these false
claims. Leyva-Talamantes pleaded guilty to insurance fraud, a second-degree
felony. She received 120 months deferred adjudication and was ordered to pay
$2,000 in fines and $28,131 in restitution.
- Leslie Ray Collins of Sugar Land, also a
former insurance agent whose license was revoked in 2009, collected insurance
premiums for fictitious residential and commercial insurance policies that he
created. Collins failed to forward the premiums to an insurer to bind valid coverage
but instead used the funds for personal benefit. He also obtained premium
financing agreements on fake policies and kept those funds. Collins used the
funds in a commercial real estate scam that resulted in the loss of several
millions of dollars to investors. The Harris County 338th District Court
convicted Collins of a first-degree felony of misapplication of fiduciary
property with value of more than $200,000 and sentenced him to 12 years in
prison. The court also ordered payment of $162,424 in restitution. This case
was initiated by a complaint to the TDI Fraud Unit.
- Olanrewaju “Larry” Omoyele posed as
owner/operator of Rose Tree Medical Clinic and caused different attorneys to
file false claims with various insurers for treatment of patients allegedly
injured in auto accidents. Neither the clinic nor the patients named on the
insurance claims existed. Insurers paid
a total of $114,382 to either Rose Tree Clinic, the attorneys, or to the people
allegedly involved in the accidents.
Omoyele went to trial and was found guilty of insurance fraud, a
first-degree felony. He was sentenced to
84 months in prison and ordered to pay $131,182 in restitution.
- Former insurance agent Leon “Randy” Sinclair
III of Houston convinced more than 30 elderly customers to liquidate insurance
products and other assets and place the proceeds in charitable gift annuity
accounts. Sinclair then misappropriated
more than $16 million from the accounts. A Harris County District Court convicted
Sinclair of first-degree felony misapplication of fiduciary property and
sentenced him to 20 years in prison. The conviction followed a 16-month TDI
Fraud Unit investigation.
- Sylvia Vazquez submitted false cancer
treatment claims to her insurer, when in fact she had not been treated for cancer.
Vazquez pleaded guilty to insurance fraud, a third-degree felony, and was
sentenced to 120 months deferred adjudication, 120 hours of community service,
and was ordered to pay $50,025 in restitution.
- Former licensed escrow officer Pearl J.
Whitworth of Huffman fraudulently diverted customer funds to a Texas
corporation for which Whitworth was the registered owner. Thirteen wire
transfers, totaling more than $299,000, were made from the title company
business account where Whitworth worked to her personal bank account. She
pleaded guilty to first-degree felony theft, was sentenced to 120 months’
probation, and ordered to pay the full amount of the wire transfers in
restitution. TDI revoked Whitworth’s escrow officer license.
- Richard Trevino, DBA Chiro-Health Inc.,
billed health insurers for $515,063 of chiropractic services that were not
rendered and received $153,536 in reimbursements. Trevino pleaded guilty to insurance fraud, a
first-degree felony. He was sentenced to
60 months’ probation, 200 hours of community service, and ordered to pay full
restitution.
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