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Insuring Profits Over People

This is an incredibly important post from Commonscribe at Daily Kos. There are a number of reasons more than two years after Katrina hit that the rebuilding of New Orleans is not happening. But the primary reason is insurance related. The freaking blood suckers just won’t pay folks that paid their premiums for years, even decades. They’ve come up with every excuse possible, including outright fraud:

The insurance industry doesn’t want you paying too much attention, because what’s happening on the gulf coast will probably be coming soon to a town near you. While the nation’s distracted and insurance reform is now bottled up in the Senate, the industry is once again moving to protect profits at the expense of the rest of us, particularly those living on the gulf. And make no mistake: these are not isolated cases—this is an industry-wide effort.

The latest target? A group of former insurance adjusters turned whistleblowers who are seeking to reinstate their false claims lawsuit against the good hands people at Allstate, the good neighbors at State Farm and no fewer than twelve other insurance companies.

The lawsuit alleges that the industry systematically classified wind damage as flood-related, and pushed those costs onto the federal flood insurance program. The whitleblowers claim to have documented this behavior in hundreds of cases in Louisiana alone.

It’s all part of the growing body of evidence that the industry acted as one to defraud and delay in the wake of the storm, and it follows hard on the heels of the release of the so-called McKinsey documents. These documents are a 150,000+ page cache of material relating to the industry’s outside consultants, McKinsey & Co., that in the 1990′s counseled clients like State Farm and Allstate on ways to reduce claim payments by lowballing policyholders willing to settle quickly and litigating those holding out for more. One document described the strategy as moving “from good hands to boxing gloves.”

These documents have been both the industry’s best and worst kept secret. While lawyers have long known of the documents existence, the companies have gone to great lengths to avoid releasing them. At one point last year, Allstate was paying $10,000 per day in contempt-of-court fines for refusing a Indiana judge’s order to make them public. Contempt of court charges for doing the same thing in Missouri ran to over $4 million.The company finally caved earlier this month, posting the bulk of the documents on its website after it was ordered to stop selling new policies in the state of Florida.

This is not necessarily good news for gulf coast policyholders looking for ammunition to fight Big Insurance. Incredibly, not a single one of those 150,000 pages deals with catastrophic loss claims for things, like, say, hurricanes. And there is no indication the company will be compelled to release any further documents anytime soon.

In the meantime, insurance rates in the gulf have risen by as much as 300%, and Louisiana now has some of the highest premiums in the country. And largely because of this, an American city rots and turns to brownfields, and residents all along the crippled gulf, forgotten by the nation, are left to fend for themselves against a multi-billion dollar industry seeking to protect record profits at all costs. With Washington sitting on the sidelines, private attorneys and state insurance commissioners are understaffed and ill-equipped to stand alone against the insurers; just last month, Louisiana hit Allstate with the largest fine it possibly could for illegally dropping policyholders. The penalty? A relatively insignificant $250,000.

4 responses so far

4 Responses to “Insuring Profits Over People”

  1. Hi, Great Post. I wish everyone would pay such attention to their post as you do. I came acros your blog on yahoo when searching for an insurance. I will come back to your blog. Escuse me for my poor englisch, i am from the netherlands.

    Best regards!

  2. Hi, I like your post. I wish everyone would pay such attention to their post as you do. I came acros your blog on yahoo when searching for an insurance. Glad i found your blog! Escuse me for my poor englisch, i am from holland.

    Best regards!

  3. Hi, Neat post. I wish everyone would pay such attention to their post as you do. I came acros your blog on google when searching for an insurance. I will come back to your blog. Escuse me for my poor englisch, i am from the netherlands.

    Best regards!

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