Texas Disaster Legal Help Podcast
Texas Disaster Legal Help Podcast
Avoiding Contractor Fraud After a Disaster
New Podcast from Texas Disaster Legal Help (TDLH)! After natural disasters, salespeople often go door-to-door in damaged neighborhoods offering cleanup or repair services. While many of these individuals are honest and reputable, others are not. Listen to our guest from the National Insurance Crime Bureau, Fred Lohmann, speak on what to look for in a legitimate contractor, the most common scams, and the number one red flags that tell you to run from a company. Learn more at www.nicb.org or become one of our volunteer attorneys.
Visit our website at https://texasdisasterlegalhelp.org/
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Transcript Contractor Fraud
Speaker: Fred Lohmann from NICB (https://www.nicb.org/)
Date: Sept. 24, 2021
00:02
okay here we are
00:04
all right hello folks uh this is pablo
00:06
maguire with another episode here for
00:08
our podcast series
00:09
uh we're gonna start telling you a bit
00:11
about the project and then going over to
00:12
our speaker who's quite knowledgeable in
00:13
the issue of contractor fraud
00:16
uh we are coordinated we are a current
00:18
project between legal aid northwest
00:20
texas
00:21
lone star legal aid and texas rio
00:23
grande legal aid aimed at improving
00:25
access to justice for those affected by
00:27
disasters our project allows both
00:29
disaster survivors and pro bono
00:31
attorneys to access critical resources
00:33
in one place while at the same time
00:35
making it easier to connect disaster
00:36
survivors needing help with volunteer
00:38
attorneys willing to provide it
00:40
in this way the project team hopes to
00:42
increase the number of disaster survivor
00:44
clients who receive high quality legal
00:46
assistance as they continue to navigate
00:47
the recovery process
00:49
after a disaster
00:51
and provide the support and mentorship
00:52
pro bono attorneys need to achieve the
00:54
success
00:56
so with that introduction out of the way
00:58
again i'm pablo almaguer from texas rio
01:00
grande legal aid uh here with me are
01:02
the usual host belinda
01:04
martinez from lone star legal aid who is
01:06
here and we used to have another
01:07
gentleman here who left us and we
01:10
now have amy allen from legal aid of
01:12
northwest texas joining us uh in the
01:14
hosting chair so uh you're gonna
01:17
hear her voice and maybe that'll be uh
01:19
you prefer that over the
01:21
what is it stuart’s voice in the past
01:23
whatever he had to say
01:25
uh but we missed the guy but let's go
01:27
ahead and start with the uh presentation
01:29
here you wanna introduce our speaker
01:32
yes thank you pablo
01:34
uh with us today is frederick p lohmann
01:37
he serves as the director of field
01:38
operations southwest region of the
01:40
national insurance crime bureau
01:42
the region encompassed the state of
01:44
arkansas louisiana new mexico oklahoma
01:46
and texas
01:48
he supervises a staff of special agents
01:50
and support personnel assigned to
01:51
investigate criminal conspiracies
01:53
involving insurance fraud vehicle cargo
01:56
and heavy equipment thefts
01:58
mr lohmann began his career in law
01:59
enforcement as a military policeman in
02:01
the united states marine corps
02:03
he served as a law enforcement officer
02:04
for 20 years with state municipal law
02:06
enforcement agencies in oklahoma and
02:08
texas and has been commissioned for 43
02:11
years
02:12
mr lohmann joined the national insurance
02:14
crime bureau in 2006 and he has over 23
02:16
years of experience conducting complex
02:18
investigations into suspected property
02:20
casualty commercial insurance fraud
02:22
burglary motor vehicle
02:24
and heavy equipment thefts so obviously
02:26
just
02:27
an expert in this field thank you for
02:29
joining us mr lohmann
02:31
thank you for having us
02:34
okay first question i'd like to get into
02:36
is just
02:38
contractor fraud scams um who's most at
02:40
risk for those
02:43
well uh we've noticed that
02:47
the elderly and also
02:51
those individuals that live in
02:53
impoverished areas
02:56
typically get
02:59
really focused on or targeted
03:02
by the contractors and uh
03:05
we see this in the aftermath of
03:07
catastrophes we're seeing this
03:10
in louisiana
03:12
with hurricane ida in the aftermath of
03:15
that but you know any time there's a
03:18
natural disaster uh and there's an
03:20
opportunity for those that have a little
03:22
larceny in their heart uh we see them
03:26
come in from out of state and they
03:27
basically prey upon uh you know these
03:30
these vulnerable groups
03:32
to take advantage of
03:37
great and especially after a disaster
03:40
you're
03:41
already
03:42
not focused you're a little bit
03:43
traumatized so
03:44
i think a lot of the scammers kind of
03:46
get through even some of the
03:47
sophisticated people sometimes
03:50
that's true
03:52
you know
03:53
a lot of people that may be the very
03:55
first time that they've suffered a hail
03:58
loss or uh or a flood or some type of
04:02
natural disaster to their home their
04:04
vehicle
04:05
and you know they don't know really what
04:07
to do
04:09
and obviously, they should work with
04:11
their insurance company if they have
04:13
insurance coverage
04:14
uh if they do have questions or
04:16
they have concerns they shouldn't be shy
04:19
about reaching out to the insurance
04:21
industry uh that provides those policies
04:24
and get some guidance
04:26
and direction right
04:29
absolutely they are there to assist you
04:31
correct and you don't want to rely upon
04:34
the person that's knocking on your door
04:36
offering
04:37
you know uh
04:38
really to sell you the moon that's
04:40
that's the first mistake to make
04:43
is to uh go along with
04:45
that
04:47
exactly
04:48
what are the most um
04:50
common type of scams what do you run
04:52
into most often
04:54
well and obviously in north texas uh
04:58
the biggest issue we have are hail
05:00
storms i mean we had this year 2021 we
05:03
had a storm that was uh that uh
05:06
damaged over
05:08
i think it was over a billion and a half
05:09
dollars in property losses uh to the
05:13
north texas area i i myself
05:19
had to deal with three claims concerning
05:22
some rental properties that we had
05:24
and
05:26
you know they
05:27
we had the solicitors come out uh from
05:30
everywhere we had solicitors as far away
05:32
as minnesota that came down with their
05:35
trucks
05:36
and uh we're offering to do the repair
05:38
works on the uh on the uh
05:42
residential homes that we uh rented out
05:44
and so
05:45
there's a lot of money to be made but
05:48
sadly uh
05:49
you really have to do your homework as a
05:51
consumer to protect yourself and make
05:54
sure that you're dealing with a
05:55
reputable
05:57
contractor and the hail storms are you
06:00
know probably the most predominant
06:02
issue up here in north texas if you live
06:05
along the gulf coast area texas
06:08
uh you know you may have more issues
06:11
with hurricane
06:13
you know wind storm damage
06:15
to the roofing structures but up here
06:17
it's predominantly
06:19
hail and that's when the consumers are
06:22
most vulnerable in the aftermath of
06:24
those storms and you got to do your
06:26
homework to protect yourself yes amy
06:31
can you talk a little bit about um
06:33
particularly roofing contractors and how
06:35
they
06:36
try to work in your deductible into that
06:39
into the pricing in that billing
06:42
well as you know
06:44
from your prior experience amy this
06:47
that's illegal in texas now
06:50
for them to be complicit in uh scheme to
06:55
basically waive the deductible is is
06:58
illegal the texas attorney general uh
07:01
consumer protection division has the
07:03
primary responsibility now to
07:05
investigate those
07:07
uh those types of crimes they're a class
07:09
a misdemeanor in texas
07:11
and uh essentially
07:13
you have an obligation as an policy
07:17
holder as an insurer
07:18
when you have a uh
07:20
a loss resulting from hail whether it's
07:22
on your automobile or your home
07:26
uh the insurance companies can compel
07:28
you to provide proof that you've paid
07:31
that deductible you know that's that's
07:33
your part
07:35
of uh
07:36
of getting your home repaired or your
07:38
vehicle repaired that's your
07:40
responsibility and the contractors uh
07:43
frankly don't have any legal standing to
07:46
relieve a policyholder of that
07:49
responsibility that contracts between
07:52
the consumer the policyholder and the
07:55
insurance company that they're doing
07:56
business business with but they'll
07:58
promise all kinds of things
08:00
um you know uh to to
08:03
as part of that deductible waving and
08:06
the thing a consumer has to remember
08:08
is if they're relieving
08:11
you of that responsibility if let's say
08:13
it's 2 000
08:15
somewhere in that job, there's going to
08:18
be 2 000
08:19
less work
08:20
done
08:21
in that repair whether it's drip
08:24
edge uh or flashing or uh it may be a
08:28
substandard
08:30
you know shingle that will be applied to
08:32
the roof something is going to get cut
08:34
in that process there's nothing for
08:36
nothing
08:37
and
08:39
you have to be very vigilant to prevent
08:41
those types of things from happening and
08:43
you should as a consumer if a contractor
08:46
offers that you should walk away from it
08:49
immediately or and ask them to leave
08:51
your home and close the door
08:54
because if you are complicit in that you
08:56
are complicit you're basically violating
08:59
the law yourself
09:03
one of my other um i guess favorite scam
09:05
stories is the
09:07
roofer that comes and checks your roof
09:08
out and has something on the bottom of
09:10
his feet that damages your roof
09:13
yes
09:14
they call they refer to that in the
09:16
insurance industry is mechanical damage
09:19
and there are numerous ways to do that
09:20
it can be as simple as taking a
09:23
ball-peen hammer and going up on your
09:25
roof
09:26
and just striking away
09:29
indiscriminately at the various
09:30
locations on the roof another one is
09:33
called spinning or diming where they'll
09:36
take a coin
09:37
and uh they'll go along you know the
09:40
roof uh surface
09:42
and they'll damage these
09:44
shingles uh with that coin or some
09:46
something similar to that but what
09:49
people need to understand is nature is
09:51
very
09:52
uh
09:53
very indiscriminate it does not uh
09:56
it does not cause losses or hail strikes
10:01
in
10:02
patterns and as humans, we're pretty
10:05
predictable and that's typically what
10:08
they see
10:09
uh when the insurance adjuster or
10:12
investigator was up on a roof you'll see
10:14
these patterns emerge and then you know
10:17
right away that that was mechanically
10:19
applied
10:20
and sadly the consumer once again
10:23
is uh is being victimized because now
10:27
if you
10:28
if you didn't have a
10:30
a hail loss if you didn't have hail
10:32
damage uh
10:34
now you have to contend with
10:36
vandalism to your roof and you're
10:38
going to have to pay your deductible if
10:41
in fact, the insurance company covers the
10:44
vandalism loss to the roof that was
10:46
caused by the uh the contractor you've
10:48
got to be vigilant if you let somebody
10:50
up on your roof, you better be paying
10:52
attention to what they're doing up there
10:54
and watching them
10:56
uh but you know it it's not beyond the
10:59
possibility
11:00
that they'll just go up on your roof and
11:02
you'll hear something because we have
11:04
we've got reports of that and you come
11:07
outside and you check on it and all of a
11:09
sudden you got people on your roof
11:10
like what are you doing up there well
11:12
we're checking to see if you have hail
11:14
damage there's no cost don't worry about
11:16
it well they've been up there and
11:18
nobody's been watching them
11:21
and i know sometimes what you
11:23
often see and i hate to
11:26
it does seem to be roofers not hating on
11:28
roofers but it just does seem to be
11:30
roofers um
11:32
my own story after harvey um once again
11:35
door-to-door solicitor for contracting
11:37
roofing surface
11:39
um
11:40
some of those guys are legit it's just
11:41
it seems to be these are the guys that
11:43
scam a lot of times
11:45
um
11:46
i talked to my husband we were putting
11:48
tarps up on the roof offered to help him
11:50
put the tarp on the roof
11:52
said hey keep me in mind when you need
11:54
your roof repair which we did know we
11:55
need our roof repaired we didn't go with
11:58
him next thing we know he's sending a
12:00
invoice to our insurance company for a
12:02
500 dollar
12:03
roof inspection
12:05
that he did
12:06
so
12:07
yes sent a demand letter got the oag involved
12:10
explained i was attorney suddenly the
12:12
invoice disappeared but
12:14
other people in my neighborhood
12:15
weren't as lucky
12:17
so
12:19
you just have to be careful the thing they'll
12:20
they'll take advantage of the
12:22
opportunity
12:23
and uh and sadly especially when you're
12:26
dealing with them that you know they
12:28
could be confused um you know they may
12:30
pay money up front which you should
12:32
never do
12:33
uh and then sadly you know they'll take
12:36
the money and run and they'll never have
12:38
removed the damaged shingle or made a
12:41
repair of any sort and now you've paid
12:44
them up for the work that was supposedly
12:47
they were supposed to do
12:49
and uh they're gone you have no idea who
12:51
they are where they where they've went
12:54
and now the people that can least afford
12:56
uh
12:57
you know to have to reach back into
12:59
their wallet and pay for the repairs are
13:02
the ones that are you know in that
13:03
position to have to do that yeah you
13:06
really have to control
13:08
uh that environment whether it's you
13:11
know when they first knock at the door
13:12
don't be afraid don't be bashful ask
13:15
them for the solicitor's license if you
13:17
look they live in a community that
13:18
requires that they'll have that license
13:21
tell them to get off your property and
13:23
don't be afraid to call the police and
13:25
report it uh you have to be vigilant
13:28
in protecting yourself and you're
13:31
right you bring up a great point
13:33
not every roofing contractor is a
13:36
scammer
13:37
we have worked very closely for the last 10
13:40
years
13:41
with roofing contractors association of
13:43
texas
13:44
and the north texas roofing contractors
13:47
association
13:48
and we established this relationship
13:51
uh going back uh to uh commissioner
13:54
eleanor kitzman's uh war on hail that
13:57
she held in irving texas some years back
14:00
and that opened up the big block
14:02
insurance industry
14:04
and um
14:06
nicp
14:07
and the roofing contractors that we're
14:11
all working together now because
14:13
legitimate contractors can't compete on
14:16
a loving level playing field with those
14:18
that cheat so we're working together and
14:21
that's in the best interest of
14:23
everything
14:24
especially the consumers
14:28
mr lohmann i'm going to ask uh you
14:29
mentioned now a couple of times or a
14:31
couple of resources there to call the
14:33
police when something happens and then
14:34
you mentioned the oag or attorney
14:36
general's office the audience here are
14:38
attorneys right and so they might want
14:40
to know when they have this client come
14:42
in they might know the legal side and
14:43
you said what's happening what to do
14:45
but what do you recommend that we tell
14:47
our clients you know who to report it to
14:49
apart from the police or along with the
14:51
police and attorney general is there
14:53
other other groups
14:57
well if it's a if it's an
14:58
anti-soliciting violation
15:01
in the communities that have those
15:02
ordinances you would report that to the
15:05
local
15:06
police department they have jurisdiction
15:08
to enforce a city ordinance if it's a
15:11
A situation where the contractors uh for
15:14
example
15:15
going to or offering to waive the
15:16
The deductible on a say a roofing claim that
15:20
gets reported either to the national
15:22
insurance crime bureau
15:24
to the texas department of insurance
15:26
fraud unit or to the texas attorney
15:28
general uh consumer protection division
15:30
all those low uh
15:32
entities uh they can either call uh
15:35
an 800 number and report that or they
15:38
can go online to those organizations and
15:41
report those allegations
15:43
to them also the north texas roofing
15:45
contractors association has just
15:48
initiated a uh a project
15:51
where they've established a
15:53
website for consumers
15:56
and other contractors to report
15:58
contractors that are you're trying to
16:01
waive deductibles so they've they've
16:04
taken the the initiative to be part of
16:06
the solution and then those tips will
16:09
come to the nicb we'll investigate those
16:12
and if they rise to a level uh where
16:14
there's potential criminality then we'll
16:17
prepare a case and refer that to the
16:19
attorney general
16:22
guess i follow up on that then because
16:23
i'm thinking of an attorney's mind here
16:25
you know you're chasing sometimes you
16:27
know a certain company or individual
16:29
uh
16:30
i'll ask a couple of questions but the
16:31
first one yes i want to ask you can
16:33
where can an attorney go to start
16:35
looking in to see if this opponent or
16:37
this contractor or this person has come
16:39
around trying to prey on the client has
16:42
done this somewhere else around the
16:43
state because we know they move around
16:45
where would you recommend that we go and
16:46
look for that and research those issues
16:50
well it's not only for the attorney but
16:52
for the attorney's client or for any
16:54
consumer you want to check
16:57
available databases a simple google
17:00
search may approve uh or provide a lot
17:03
of information about somebody that's
17:05
outscanning the better business bureau
17:07
we have relationships with those with
17:09
that those entities throughout the state
17:12
um angie's list and the good contractors
17:15
list places like that you can query
17:17
those contractors to see if there's any
17:19
adverse reporting
17:21
you can go to the
17:23
north texas roofing contractors
17:25
association and rcat the roofing
17:28
contractors association of texas you can
17:31
actually put in the name of those
17:33
contractors and see if they know if
17:36
they have standing with those
17:37
organizations because even though we
17:40
failed to accomplish licensing for
17:42
roofing contractors or contractors in
17:45
general in texas
17:47
those organizations are taking it upon
17:49
themselves to establish
17:51
licensing credentialing for their
17:54
membership and it's very stringent very
17:58
very strictly controlled requires uh in
18:01
proof of insurance for workers
18:03
compensation general liability and these
18:06
are all things that protect the consumer
18:08
as well
18:09
so you can go to those
18:11
sites and check those uh
18:14
contractors out through them and
18:16
if you're having problems you can pick
18:18
up the phone and call them and they will
18:19
gladly
18:20
attention as part of that vetting
18:22
process before you hire a contractor so
18:25
there's lots of sources out there uh you
18:28
know amy would probably
18:29
agree with me but you know the attorney
18:32
general or the department of insurance
18:34
fraud unit or nicb we're not able to
18:37
share our investigative files with with
18:40
the public
18:42
that was going to be my other question
18:44
about that the other free discovery that
18:45
i can get is in the mindset
18:47
and i guess associated with that issue
18:49
that i think you've kind of made obvious
18:51
here and i'm assuming it's true that
18:53
these folks these
18:55
companies these scammers they seem to be
18:57
moving around the state but maybe the
18:58
nation right i mean they're not you know
19:00
a locality or other places and maybe
19:03
because if you wanted to look at these
19:04
databases in case they're one of those
19:06
that just moved down from the north to
19:07
the south or from another state am i
19:09
correct in thinking that
19:11
that's common
19:12
yes it is very common
19:14
and uh you know that's the unique thing
19:17
about the national insurance crime
19:18
bureau we've been in existence for over
19:20
112 years so we've been doing
19:24
this a very long time as an institution
19:27
and part of our uh
19:29
our success and our value is that we're
19:32
able to look and see
19:34
uh from a satellite viewpoint you know
19:37
the scammers and the and the criminal
19:39
organizations that are operating within
19:41
the united states and we see that
19:44
transient movement of those
19:46
organizations from state to state
19:48
community to community and it gives us
19:50
the opportunity to alert the insurance
19:53
industry as well as our federal state
19:55
and local law enforcement partners and
19:57
give them some you know strategic
19:59
outlook as to what's happening and we
20:02
track that very very closely and you
20:04
know you just have to show up
20:06
at a disaster site and just look around
20:11
look at the license plates on the
20:13
on the contractor vehicles and you'll
20:16
see out of state plates
20:18
you know you'll see
20:19
it's very obvious that people come
20:21
in from all over the country when when
20:24
there's an opportunity
20:26
a lot of it is uh
20:28
these people show up with good
20:31
intentions they're there to help but
20:33
there's also a
20:35
segment that shows up and they're
20:37
looking to to cash in at the expense of
20:41
others
20:42
so when we had the tornadoes in wiley um
20:45
a couple years ago that one that
20:46
happened right at christmas time i know
20:48
that we had some people that came in
20:50
from way up north wisconsin michigan
20:52
somewhere up there bought a brand new
20:55
truck
20:55
had paper plates on it
20:57
got a phone number a local number and
20:59
then put a magnet on the side of the
21:01
truck that was a local phone number but
21:02
they were nowhere near local and they
21:04
took all kinds of money and cash and
21:06
insurance checks and then just flat
21:08
disappeared and i know we're kind of
21:10
jumping ahead maybe to red flags but
21:13
um if a truck is wrapped they've spent
21:15
some money and they're a company that's
21:16
at least local
21:18
um but a magnetic sign on the side of a
21:20
truck and a paper plate on the back of
21:21
one should be some kind of a red flag
21:26
absolutely and i just want to know as
21:28
far as another resource to check out um
21:30
if you are a member and i think it's
21:31
even open to non-members but aarp has a
21:34
fraud watch network
21:36
and they have a website and telephone
21:37
number that you can get into
21:40
um and get some more information about
21:42
some companies especially the ones on
21:43
the watch list
21:45
um
21:46
and just to quickly because we are
21:47
dealing with um survivors from ida and
21:51
some of those
21:52
some of those displaced from ida and
21:53
some survivors from nicholas um
21:56
be careful out there for fake fema
21:59
inspectors
22:00
that's a big thing that you see um
22:04
or a lot of times a lot of scammers will
22:06
promise to fill out
22:08
applications or promises of government
22:10
grants or other funding to prepare your
22:12
house for a very small application fee
22:15
run away do not do that fema will never
22:17
charge you anything and any fema
22:19
inspector will have credentials and
22:22
like mr lohmann said
22:25
challenge him on that saying let me see
22:27
your credentials let me see this let me
22:28
see that because
22:31
a good contractor someone who's on the
22:33
level is going to show you that
22:35
or if he doesn't have that on him right
22:37
now he's not going to try to
22:39
high pressure you into a sale or signing
22:41
something
22:42
um
22:43
so that kind of goes into something i
22:45
did want to
22:46
bring up and amy brought up earlier just
22:48
red flags what are some just
22:50
pretty obvious things that if comes up
22:52
if when you're talking to one of these
22:53
contractors run
22:56
well
22:57
amy brought up a couple of them uh if
23:00
they knocked on your door
23:01
uh they solicited that you're soliciting
23:04
your business you didn't ask for it you
23:06
should reject it
23:08
if they don't have a solicitor's permit
23:10
and that's required by your municipality
23:12
your jurisdiction uh you know turn them
23:14
away close the door
23:16
uh paper plates magnetic signs uh as we
23:20
refer to some of these uh contractors uh
23:23
and even in the roofing industry
23:25
legit contractors will refer to them as
23:28
you know two chucks in a truck
23:30
if they if they have the appearance of
23:33
being transient right they don't belong
23:36
um
23:36
you really want to be vigilant and
23:39
challenge those people you know i say
23:42
this all the time
23:43
that roof
23:45
protects the most important things in
23:47
your life your family your possessions
23:50
and you want to be very careful and
23:52
vigilant on who you permit to do
23:56
that type of work um
23:58
you know
23:59
work with your local
24:02
building inspectors and your local
24:04
communities uh you know
24:07
you never know about these people they
24:08
could be wanted they could have criminal
24:10
histories they could be sex offenders
24:13
you just don't know and those are not
24:15
the people that you want on your roof or
24:18
in your home okay and uh but as far as
24:21
red flags go those are some of the
24:23
things if you know ask him for
24:26
information and if you can't verify
24:29
the address or the phone number or
24:32
the email address that they give you
24:34
know those are all things that should
24:36
tip your scales to walking away from
24:39
uh you know
24:41
any type of relationship or contract if
24:44
they pressure you that's another tactic
24:46
they'll pressure you to sign on the
24:48
dotted line don't do it
24:50
uh if if you have any questions at all
24:52
you should walk away
24:54
and give yourself time to think contact
24:58
uh either family members they trust or
25:00
the insurance industry and get some
25:02
advice
25:06
absolutely and um
25:09
i think you stood out earlier asking for
25:11
all the money up front is kind of a red
25:13
flag most contractors don't do that
25:17
at least they don't
25:19
yeah so
25:20
just
25:21
that's usually a big red flag too
25:24
um i know you said that
25:26
if you do find yourself scammed to file
25:27
a police report um what kind of records
25:30
should someone have um what should they
25:32
like keep as far as um
25:36
helping the
25:37
police be able to track these people
25:38
down
25:40
well obviously any document that the
25:43
that the contractor gave you or provided
25:46
you would be important the documentary
25:49
evidence
25:50
uh of their involvement but
25:53
you know
25:54
if if you haven't you know done your due
25:57
diligence and you know
25:59
wrote down the uh the description of
26:01
their vehicle and the license plate and
26:04
the name of the company uh maybe the
26:06
website or whatever it is that they
26:07
provided you you know it very easily
26:12
you know
26:13
they could get away with it i mean we've
26:15
seen this time and time again
26:17
where they'll show up they'll target uh
26:20
you know the disenfranchised
26:22
uh poorer communities the elderly uh
26:25
they'll take the money and then they
26:26
take off and sadly
26:29
you know people are trusting they want
26:31
to believe that uh they're truly there
26:33
to help and you know when you discover
26:36
that you've been taken unless you've
26:38
really got some good information on who
26:40
they are you know they're in the wind
26:43
and it's very difficult to identify them
26:45
let alone you know find them and
26:47
prosecute
26:52
basically be suspicious
26:54
until the work's complete
26:57
you know you
26:58
Hate, hate to recommend to people
27:01
to be
27:01
you know so suspicious of
27:04
everybody you encounter
27:06
but
27:07
maybe it's just
27:08
43 years in the business uh
27:11
i
27:12
there's very few people i trust and i
27:15
wish more consumers would
27:17
would have more of a
27:19
Jaundiced eye i do
27:21
you know i hate to see people taking
27:22
advantage of it just breaks your heart
27:25
because again in my experience it's the
27:27
people that least can afford it
27:29
are the ones that are victimized so yeah
27:32
i wish they would be more suspicious
27:34
uh and not as trusting
27:37
well and on topics since we're talking
27:38
about disasters the problem we really
27:40
run into here is that they're desperate
27:42
at this point
27:44
um you know everyone in their
27:46
neighborhood has damage to their house
27:48
or
27:49
during the uri storm everyone had
27:52
frozen pipes and you know so you were
27:54
desperate for anybody who could say oh i
27:56
can be there within the next x amount of
27:59
time
28:00
so you were willing to sacrifice some of
28:02
that
28:02
under a normal circumstance when you
28:04
might have
28:05
been a little more diligent
28:07
right now all you could think about is a
28:09
roof over your head
28:12
amy you pick up a great point because
28:14
you are desperate you you obviously you
28:17
if you have a hole in your roof uh you
28:19
know because of the hail
28:21
and you you don't have the means uh
28:24
to get tarp on there to protect the
28:26
damage from getting worse and somebody
28:28
shows up and says yeah i can do that for
28:30
you
28:31
yeah you you tend to be you know out of
28:34
desperation uh to do your part to
28:36
protect the you know the laws from
28:38
getting worse to do that and listen they
28:41
know that they're preying upon those
28:44
opportunities and vulnerabilities and
28:46
they're going to exploit them
28:48
not all of them again the vast majority
28:50
are good hard-working people and
28:52
business owners and they do want to do
28:55
what's right but
28:57
you have to be aware that there are others
28:59
out there that they're predatory they're
29:01
just looking for an opportunity
29:03
to exploit and uh to steal from people
29:09
you know recently the state bar actually
29:11
prosecuted an attorney and i think it
29:13
was the north texas area maybe dallas
29:15
fort worth area after a hail storm
29:18
and he had an office down here in the
29:19
valley too but what this guy was doing
29:21
is these roofers were going around you
29:23
know getting some contracts maybe
29:24
legitimately i don't know otherwise but
29:27
in those documents they would sign up
29:29
as clients of this attorney without
29:31
knowing that they were setting up as an
29:32
attorney and they prosecuted him at the
29:34
federal level barbarity i think he's
29:36
serving time when we took his license or
29:38
the state market uh have you heard about
29:41
those incidents too where there's a
29:42
barrier tree going on the lawyers come
29:44
in also and try to pick up some clients
29:46
yes that was very prevalent down in
29:50
the valley
29:51
is where it started and then it uh it
29:54
migrated up into
29:56
the san antonio area and then eventually
29:58
houston and dallas fort worth but yes
30:00
i'm very familiar with that uh
30:03
and you know we had lots of complaints
30:05
from insurance consumers has you
30:08
know basically told us
30:10
we didn't
30:11
sign up for this we didn't know about
30:13
this
30:13
but yet uh you know
30:16
they they quickly found out that
30:19
when they got noticed from their
30:20
insurance company no you're you have an
30:23
attorney we can't even talk to you
30:25
uh so yes that's that was very prevalent
30:28
and and it's greed if they're they're
30:30
chasing the money it's an opportunity to
30:34
to exploit people uh and the and the
30:37
hailstorm or the catastrophe loss is is
30:41
the mechanism to which they can do that
30:45
can you talk the same thing happens with
30:46
adjusters and i didn't even know what an
30:49
adjuster was and what their role was
30:51
until i started with the job where i
30:53
worked with you fred can you explain a
30:55
little bit about what an adjuster does
30:57
and why you would or wouldn't need one
30:59
involved in some kind of a contractor
31:01
situation
31:03
well you know most
31:05
all insurance companies especially
31:07
property casualty insurance companies
31:09
that are dealing with auto and homeowner
31:11
losses you know they have a
31:14
staff of professionals known as claim
31:16
adjusters
31:18
Or claim representatives it depends what
31:21
they refer to
31:23
how they refer to them within those
31:24
companies but it's their responsibility
31:28
to receive the first report or loss from
31:30
their insurance their policyholders if
31:33
they've suffered a loss and then they
31:35
actually investigate the claim they
31:38
determine if there's a liability and if
31:40
they establish that there's liability uh
31:43
it's a legitimate loss then they go
31:45
about the process of adjusting the loss
31:47
that's determining uh the scope and the
31:50
value and what it's going to take to put
31:54
that property back into the condition it
31:56
was in uh prior to the time of the loss
31:59
it has to go back to the
32:01
to that condition that it was in prior
32:03
to the loss and it's their
32:05
responsibility through the insurance uh
32:08
claim adjusting process and the
32:10
company's internal best practices to do
32:12
that and essentially what it comes down
32:14
to is insurance companies
32:17
uh they're obligated under the
32:19
policy to pay the claims that they owe
32:22
and not pay the claims that they don't
32:24
know
32:25
so
32:26
it all comes down to whether there's
32:29
liability and there's coverage and
32:31
that's another part of the process is
32:33
that claim representative is going to
32:35
determine if there's coverage for that
32:38
damage or that claim loss and that's all
32:41
part of that that their responsibility
32:43
and their process
32:45
and so they're very
32:46
uh very astute uh they're trained
32:50
and knowledgeable in the
32:52
adjusting process
32:54
and have a wealth of information many of
32:57
them doing this a long time and so if
32:59
you have questions about that the
33:01
consumer or even their attorney can
33:03
always talk to the uh
33:05
the claim representative and uh you know
33:08
and get their questions answered
33:15
thank you for that um
33:17
and just another thing i know what
33:19
helped me
33:20
when uri
33:21
came
33:22
it was very nice because since i had
33:24
gone through harvey i kept my list
33:26
of contractors from harvey so it was
33:28
very easy to say no thank you i already
33:30
have a plumber no thank you already have
33:32
a contractor
33:33
so i know this sounds like a lot of work
33:36
but sometimes just doing some research
33:38
and finding out where your local
33:39
contractors are and the ones that are
33:41
legitimate the ones that are in the area
33:43
so as amy said pull up with paper plates
33:46
and a magnetic sticker you know they're
33:48
not from the area
33:50
um
33:52
and as i say an ounce of prevention is
33:53
worth a pound of cure
33:55
sometimes just doing your homework
33:56
before can save you
33:59
having to hire one of us
34:02
to find a scam contractor well that's excellent
34:03
advice
34:05
uh you know i myself i've got a a book
34:09
and i've got
34:10
my plumbers and my electricians
34:13
my roofing contractors I have a list
34:16
of the people that i would go to
34:19
whenever i have a problem with either my
34:21
home or you know one of our rental
34:23
properties uh i i use the same people i
34:26
know them i trust them they've been
34:28
vetted
34:29
uh that you know they're responsive
34:32
uh they're professional and so i don't
34:35
have these issues
34:36
you know god forbid when we have losses
34:39
i have people i can go to and i can
34:41
trust to come out and to do the job and
34:44
to do it correctly uh and not take
34:46
advantage of me so i would encourage
34:49
everyone
34:50
uh to to establish that list that's the
34:53
best time to do it is when you don't
34:55
need them don't wait till it's crunched
34:58
don't wait until you've had a
35:00
catastrophic loss a hurricane uh or a
35:04
terrible hail storm
35:05
or
35:06
tornado damage you know then you're
35:08
desperate and
35:10
when you're desperate you're vulnerable
35:15
absolutely
35:17
um did anyone else have any other
35:19
questions
35:21
i have one
35:22
so
35:24
um if you have a loss and your claims
35:26
agent says that your loss is worth ten
35:27
thousand dollars and then you have
35:28
someone come out and give you an
35:30
estimate for fixing it and their
35:32
estimate is 17 000
35:34
what do you do with that discrepancy how
35:36
do you move forward if your insurance
35:38
company tells you one number and the guy
35:40
who wants to come out and fix it who you
35:42
trust
35:43
um tells you a different number what do
35:45
you do then
35:46
well we always
35:47
you know uh as national insurance crime
35:49
bureau and even most of your insurance
35:51
companies will recommend that you get
35:54
three estimates from three from three
35:56
reputable contractors and see where
35:59
those estimates fall in relationship to
36:02
the estimate that was provided by
36:05
the insurance company and of course if
36:07
you if you
36:10
reach a point where you're at an
36:11
impasse
36:13
the consumer is able to retain the
36:15
services of an independent adjuster to
36:18
represent them
36:20
the consumer of insurance uh in
36:23
negotiations and settling the claim with
36:25
their insurance company
36:27
um and there's other remedies
36:30
such as uh you know um
36:32
uh
36:33
they could go to mediation uh and and
36:36
and try to resolve the differences in
36:40
what the insurance company's offering or
36:43
believes the claim value is as opposed
36:45
to you know what your public
36:47
adjuster or your contractor
36:50
has there are ways to
36:52
to basically meet in the middle and get
36:54
the get the claims settled where you
36:56
know where both parties
36:58
uh you know can agree uh with what the
37:01
decision is but you know if you reach
37:04
those situations where there's an
37:05
impasse you do have opportunities uh and
37:09
alternatives to deal with that either
37:11
the public adjuster we even you know
37:13
retaining the services of an attorney to
37:16
represent you in those uh in those
37:18
particular instances
37:20
you know i remember back in the day when
37:22
we were all um
37:24
trying to find that better deal because
37:26
of the deductible issue and it was
37:27
allowed back then
37:29
you never wanted your insurance adjuster
37:32
and your contractor to be there
37:33
evaluating it at the same time because
37:35
you kind of didn't want the guy to know
37:36
what your insurance company was going to
37:37
give you in a check
37:39
is that maybe um something that we need
37:42
to think about differently and have
37:43
those two out there at the same time to
37:44
talk is that a good idea or a bad idea
37:47
I don't think it's a bad idea amy um
37:51
for example uh again i go back to the
37:54
contractors i use and i trust
37:57
uh
37:58
i
37:59
i got the estimate from the insurance
38:00
companies for the properties that we
38:02
suffered losses on i turned right around
38:05
and i gave those estimates to my uh to
38:07
my trusted roofing contractor then i
38:10
have nothing to fear i have nothing to
38:12
hide this is what my insurance company
38:14
is allowing and you know here you go and
38:19
in every case
38:21
what my contractor came back to me with
38:24
in terms of the scope uh the scale and
38:27
the cost of the repairs
38:30
we made it we got it done for what
38:32
the insurance company you know uh came
38:35
up with in terms of the estimate and you
38:37
know deal with trusted uh insurance
38:40
companies as well so
38:42
you know i listen
38:44
if you're trying to beat the system then
38:46
obviously you don't want to you don't
38:48
want to do that right but if you're if
38:51
you're if you're just trying to play by
38:53
the rules
38:54
and get your repairs
38:57
for your losses taken care of uh quickly
39:01
and done the right way
39:03
and i say yeah i
39:04
i have no problem sharing that
39:06
information with my contractor because i
39:09
trust my contractor yeah put all your
39:12
cards on the table right yeah you know
39:14
he's never let me down yet
39:16
and
39:17
and he knows what i do for a living so
39:21
i
39:21
i don't think i'll have an issue with
39:23
that i think you're probably right um
39:25
the only other thing that i wanted to
39:27
point out just in terms of consumers is
39:29
it is on the consumer to make sure that
39:32
if the insurance company said we're
39:34
going to replace a b c d and e
39:36
that your roofer replaces a b c d and e
39:40
or that your contractor when they're you
39:42
know fixing pipes and whatever they
39:44
don't cut a corner because it is your
39:45
responsibility to make sure that
39:48
what
39:49
the insurance company is paying for your
39:51
contractor is doing
39:53
um that's absolutely correct you have to
39:56
be engaged
39:59
uh amy and uh
40:01
and fred i think it's obvious the people
40:03
that are listening and they didn't know
40:04
this that you all have worked together
40:05
in the past i'm sure
40:07
uh and amy you were a prosecutor from
40:09
what i understand right because you
40:11
mean you're previous okay
40:13
i was i prosecuted for insurance fraud
40:16
uh okay good to know you by the way good
40:18
to know i'll call you my friend uh
40:20
so and she was a good one
40:22
it sounds like it because here you are
40:24
fred and how is it that you use fred in
40:26
those criminal prosecutions and then
40:27
i'll ask a question on the civil side
40:30
um we
40:31
we worked together with um
40:35
um prosecution um like big schemes we
40:39
had investigators on the texas
40:41
department of insurance fraud unit and
40:43
they had
40:44
investigators on their side they could
40:46
work up a case and then they would turn
40:48
that case over to our unit and then that
40:50
unit would pass it along to us as
40:52
prosecutors so we kind of
40:54
we got to cases from different areas but
40:56
a lot of the cases that we ended up
40:58
prosecuting came through partners
40:59
through the national
41:01
insurance crime bureau that's
41:03
interesting and have you i'm sure you
41:04
probably have testified a good deal mr
41:06
lohmann
41:07
in court yes yes certainly have not only
41:10
in my law enforcement career but uh
41:13
here at nicb and also as an investigator
41:16
with the insurance industry uh who i
41:18
worked for after i first retired from
41:21
law enforcement so
41:23
um it's it was a good uh collaborative
41:26
effort uh and uh
41:28
you know operating arrangement to the
41:30
point that nicb trained uh almost all of
41:34
the
41:34
investigators at the department of
41:36
insurance fraud unit they all received
41:38
training on uh what we referred to as
41:41
roofing structures 101. so
41:44
my agents and and
41:45
their investigators were trained they
41:48
actually went up on the roofs they
41:49
learned the parts of the roof and uh
41:52
knew what to do so
41:54
it was uh it was a great you know great
41:56
collaborative effort
41:58
yeah let me tell you one thing you're
41:59
the kind of witness that uh if i go to
42:02
court i you hope you're on my side
42:04
because to cross you i mean makes me
42:06
look bad i don't want to do that
42:09
um
42:10
you just got to speak the truth it's
42:11
very real easy when you do that you know
42:14
as for an attorney that's a gray area no
42:16
i'm just kidding yeah you're right about
42:17
that that's what i told my clients if
42:18
you have the truth the truth is
42:20
consistent you know if you lie it's not
42:22
and so it's always helpful but you're
42:23
right about that that's a good way to
42:24
say it
42:25
and so let me ask you so for the civil
42:27
practitioner that is having to go
42:29
through this process maybe helping in a
42:30
pro bono case and they're a little
42:32
confused what's going on can they reach
42:34
out to an nicb or to somebody
42:36
to help them kind of sort through these
42:38
matters and see if they're going the
42:39
right route or not
42:41
i'll help anybody that that calls for
42:43
help
42:45
absolutely
42:46
he just can't give any specific
42:47
information on a specific active
42:48
investigation there you go
42:51
that's that sounds well that's a
42:52
prosecutor right there
42:54
that was definitely one of the things
42:55
that i will kind of give everyone a
42:57
caveat about is that and i don't know if
42:59
fred is the one that started these
43:00
meetings but we used to have meetings
43:01
where
43:02
all the different
43:04
insurance agencies and their
43:05
investigators kind of came together
43:07
the sharing of information um was
43:10
revolutionary in terms of oh my gosh we
43:12
have that happening with us too oh we
43:14
have three or four cases with that same
43:16
guy
43:17
within the investigation world and
43:19
within the law enforcement community
43:21
they do share information
43:23
um and it was amazing how
43:25
you know four or five different
43:26
insurance companies were coming across
43:28
the same scam that showed up on my desk
43:30
really
43:31
yeah so there is talk it's good talk
43:33
that sounds interesting i think you know
43:35
you think about it insurance companies
43:37
have money they're just like banks
43:39
so the crooks just don't target one
43:41
insurance company
43:43
all of them
43:46
yeah i looked at i was looking at your
43:47
website uh it's for folks out there to
43:49
want to look at it's
43:52
nicb.org there's actually even a
43:54
specific section on this sas reference
43:57
for the fight prevention and theft
43:58
pretty detailed
44:00
is your contact information somewhere on
44:01
that website if people want to get a
44:03
hold of you yes sir it is it's under the
44:05
southwest region but
44:07
they can eat they can contact me at f
44:09
lohmann
44:11
at
44:11
nicb.org
44:13
uh or phone number eight eight eight two
44:15
four one eight one two seven
44:19
this is great lohmann that's l
44:25
i'm sure people are writing that down i
44:26
want to give you a call about this this
44:28
is really great information
44:32
are those i want to use you as a witness
44:34
and those that if they see you they're
44:35
going to say quickly
44:37
i'd have to check with the bosses on
44:39
that but uh you know if i'm subpoenaed
44:43
well i'll push it up the
44:44
headquarters and we'll see what they say
44:49
let me tell you i want to represent you
44:51
as your agent when it comes to expert
44:52
testimony telling you i want to cut of
44:54
that because you're going to definitely
44:55
have people calling you i mean just
44:56
consider because it is you know it's an
44:58
unfortunate circumstance that you know
45:00
we have this organization network of our
45:02
own legal aid because of the constant
45:04
presence of disastrous natural disasters
45:07
and now even man-made ones you know when
45:09
the shooting happens or some other ones
45:10
and then it's pandemic so within legal
45:13
services there's a subset of a specialty
45:15
for this i can imagine throughout
45:17
industries and other places the same
45:18
thing is happening so these uh fraud you
45:21
know issues are unfortunately quite
45:23
common on chairman
45:25
well you know nicb is a non-profit
45:28
organization so we're in this for the
45:30
right reasons we want to do right by the
45:33
insurance industry our federal state and
45:35
local law enforcement partners in the
45:37
american public and your organization
45:40
does the same thing you're in it for the
45:42
right reasons you're trying to help
45:43
people and so you know i i like that and
45:47
anything i can do to help organizations
45:49
like yours uh you know I’m all in
45:53
because again it's the people that can
45:55
least afford to be victimized seem to be
45:58
the ones that are always victimized
46:02
yeah that's something i think you
46:03
probably hear
46:04
uh throughout most of our podcast that
46:06
that our clientele or uh or our low
46:10
income poverty population
46:12
is the one that seems to be preyed upon
46:14
in many ways not just on these issues
46:15
but you know on many other matters uh i
46:17
mean
46:18
these like water filtration services you
46:20
know uh these repairs of the vehicles
46:23
all these things that happen out there
46:25
solar panels so gosh yeah solar panels
46:29
um
46:30
i noticed on your website too that you
46:32
have classes you provided are they for
46:34
law enforcement only or do you provide
46:36
some courses for other industries or
46:39
well we do
46:40
we do offer what we call fraud smart and
46:43
Nicb classes
46:45
that are tailored for the insurance
46:47
industry so
46:48
uh there for the claims representatives
46:50
to alert them and to train them on what
46:52
to look at as they process claims to
46:55
identify
46:56
you know potential suspicious claims
46:59
involving insurance fraud allegations we
47:02
also do that for federal state and local
47:04
law enforcement we provide a separate
47:07
site for law enforcement and then we do
47:10
you know in-person delivery of this
47:12
training uh to our insurance industry
47:15
and law enforcement partners but you
47:17
know even people like myself within the
47:20
organization you know i talk to civic
47:22
groups and other organizations
47:24
we just do that to try and get the word
47:26
out because we we recognize that the
47:29
educated consumer that's your best
47:31
defense against this
47:33
so we're you know we're we are not at
47:36
all opposed to speaking to organizations
47:40
to enlighten them
47:41
on what they can do to prevent this type
47:44
of activity from happening
47:46
have you seen some of this activity go
47:49
online if you will on the internet
47:52
through solicitation by email or website
47:54
or something like that
47:56
i i have not not yet
47:59
but you know there's always a first but
48:00
no i have not yet uh
48:02
you know observed any of that online
48:06
sorry to say it's only a matter of time
48:08
i mean just the way our clients are
48:09
being preyed upon nowadays unfortunate
48:11
in many ways
48:12
there you go is it well like texas if
48:14
you don't like the wet the weather wait
48:16
a minute well if you're looking for the
48:19
next scam just wait a minute it's coming
48:22
yeah i think you're right about that
48:24
it's september right now i'm in south
48:26
texas and i think we started with fall
48:27
end up with summer in one day right
48:29
definitely
48:34
someone scanning facebook for pictures
48:36
of oh no our house is damaged and then
48:39
hitting those ugh
48:42
oh great there's going to be some way to
48:43
figure that one out in their balloon
48:45
exactly only a matter of time
48:47
just let your imagination run wild
48:50
they'll figure something out
48:52
i feel like we beat up on roofers on a
48:54
regular basis so i kind of want to share
48:56
the wealth if there's one more question
48:57
i'm trying to think of what other
48:58
disasters i've come across and one of
49:01
the big ones is during hurricanes and
49:03
flooding like during harvey
49:05
the reselling of cars that had been
49:06
flooded
49:08
how how does that happen how can i mean
49:11
if i'm looking to buy a used car which
49:13
we all know the used car market right
49:14
now is
49:15
way low in inventory how can i be sure
49:18
that none of those cars are coming from
49:20
damage with flood from ida is there a
49:22
way to well
49:23
well one of the best ways is you can go
49:25
to the nicb website www.nicb
49:30
and go to vin check
49:32
okay
49:33
then check and you can put the vehicle
49:35
identification number of the vehicle
49:38
you're inquiring upon into the check and
49:41
if that vehicle is stolen or if that
49:43
vehicle has been branded as a total loss
49:47
flood damaged vehicle it will be
49:50
reflected
49:51
in ven check now there is a
49:54
there's a caveat to that
49:56
so if the vehicle was not processed by
49:59
an insurance company let's say it was a
50:01
a vehicle that only had liability
50:03
insurance
50:05
as required by you know
50:07
various states
50:09
uh those vehicles
50:10
sadly they can they can go right through
50:12
the cracks so if you had a vehicle that
50:14
did not have comprehensive collision
50:17
coverage things of that nature wasn't
50:19
processed by the insurance industry and
50:22
there's one of their salvage companies
50:23
then very likely that vehicle uh could
50:26
be sold to unsuspecting consumers um
50:31
you know after it was flooded uh
50:34
you know back in katrina we processed
50:37
physically
50:38
by hand
50:39
over 375 000 flood damage vehicles with
50:43
our front our federal state and local
50:45
partners you know that was back when you
50:48
you had to
50:49
physically verify the the public then
50:52
the federal safety sticker and if you
50:54
had trouble you had to go to
50:55
confidential numbers to identify it but
50:57
every one of those vehicles from katrina
51:00
went into what nicb established as the
51:03
the national insurance cri bureau flood
51:06
dated
51:07
flood database okay and from that it's
51:10
grown into ven check so that's one of
51:12
the best ways to do it you can also run
51:14
a carfax
51:16
report there's other companies out there
51:19
that provide these vehicle reporting um
51:23
reports on on vehicles that you can run
51:25
and you got to do your due diligence
51:27
because
51:28
you know they can clean these cars up
51:31
uh they can get them running and then
51:33
sell them to an unsuspecting consumer
51:36
and the thing about it is at some point
51:39
there's going to be
51:41
mechanical and electrical problems with
51:43
those cars
51:45
if you look at a modern day automobile
51:47
it's nothing more than a computer uh
51:50
with four wheels so
51:52
you got to be real careful and vigilant
51:54
about that
51:55
fred how much does it cost to do a
51:57
check through the nicb website
52:00
it's free there's no no cost to
52:02
consumers
52:04
i was looking at the website you've got
52:05
like
52:06
12 15 different sources that you go and
52:08
look at from those vins that's
52:10
amazing a resource and i also found
52:12
something interesting i wanted to ask
52:13
you about for example
52:15
what is a staged auto accident
52:18
apparently you all talk about those and
52:20
i want to hear about them not that i'm
52:22
going to do one of those i'm wondering
52:23
if i've been a victim of them
52:25
well i'll i'll just give you an example
52:28
uh you know
52:30
you know you have a uh
52:32
well let's let's use a senior citizen
52:34
that's at the walmart and they just went
52:36
up there to do some grocery uh shopping
52:38
and they're in their vehicle and they're
52:40
about to back out right to go home
52:43
and
52:44
there's a car behind him and the car is
52:46
waving come on out come on out and of
52:49
course they put it in reverse and they
52:51
start to come out and that car
52:52
accelerates and runs into him right
52:56
and so
52:57
just so happens there's a witness oh
53:00
yeah that
53:01
that lady she just backed right into
53:03
that car when he when he was trying to
53:05
go past her right and now all of a
53:08
sudden even though it's a low impact uh
53:10
collision right
53:12
very low g
53:13
involved uh they got all kinds of back
53:16
and neck problems right and they're
53:18
going to a chiropractor they've got an
53:20
attorney representing them and
53:22
you know typically maybe that uh that
53:25
senior citizens got pretty good
53:27
insurance high high coverage limits and
53:30
and they're in it for the cash right so
53:33
they staged that accident it was
53:34
intentionally done
53:36
uh another example we just finished a
53:39
case uh you can you can google it but it
53:41
was uh targeting 18 wheelers in the new
53:44
orleans area right so these trucks were
53:47
leaving a refrigerated area of new
53:50
orleans
53:51
high high policy limits right commercial
53:54
trucks and they would staged accidents
53:56
where they would slam on their brakes
53:58
let the truck run into the back of them
54:00
and just so happens there's like five
54:02
six people in the car they're all hurt
54:05
they're all going to the same attorney
54:07
they all go to the same medical provider
54:09
for treatment and and they're getting
54:12
paid just
54:13
you know
54:15
left and right the money's just pouring
54:17
out the word gets out
54:19
now you have an epidemic of this stuff
54:21
right and it was in the millions of
54:23
dollars
54:25
and it got so bad that when we had a
54:28
cooperating witness that was initially
54:30
part of it and that person
54:32
uh gave us information they found out
54:35
about it and they some of the other
54:37
participants killed them
54:41
so
54:42
you know this is big money this is in
54:44
the millions of dollars uh
54:46
and you know that's the extreme of what
54:49
happens but it's intentionally caused
54:52
accidents it's either they actually do
54:54
the accidents or they'll create
54:56
accidents on paper
54:58
where you you'll have two parties
55:00
collaborate they don't really own the
55:02
vehicles there's they're salvage
55:03
vehicles they just have a title but
55:06
let's face it you can go right online
55:08
uh or pick up the phone and get
55:10
insurance policies real quick now once
55:12
you got the policy you have the means uh
55:15
to be able to file a claim
55:17
right
55:18
so it's very very common staged
55:20
accidents
55:22
the reason i ask that is because our
55:23
audience you know the pro bono attorneys
55:26
who are not doing these kind of stage
55:28
cases especially for the pro bono work
55:30
are going to be consumers may be personal
55:32
injuries they might hear about these
55:33
situations it'd be good for them to know
55:35
that there's a place now you can
55:36
probably go to and find
55:38
out it's happening because i do remember
55:40
now that you told me the louisiana
55:41
incident i don't know where in the
55:43
nation it was where like three or four
55:45
cars come up around somebody you know
55:47
and then why would you stand on the
55:48
brakes in front and they had the person
55:50
in the middle right and then they'd be
55:51
uh hit from behind and they couldn't go
55:54
to the sides because they were
55:56
cornered in i guess and the next thing
55:57
you know everybody was hurt and after a
55:59
while people started getting like
56:01
seriously hurt and they reported when
56:03
with the scammers each other because
56:04
they were seriously being injured and
56:06
couldn't believe the amount of planning
56:08
and time that it took to get that kind
56:10
of problem
56:12
well again
56:13
there's a lot of money sometimes uh
56:16
that's on the table uh with these staged
56:18
accidents especially when you're dealing
56:20
with commercial automobile policies
56:26
we're almost at the five minute mark i
56:27
don't know if there's anything else you
56:28
all want to ask amy or belinda or mr
56:30
lohmann wants to kind of give us here at
56:32
the end
56:38
any other sound stage advice you want to
56:40
give us machine learning we probably
56:41
haven't covered yet about not only
56:42
contractor quite better what a homeowner
56:43
can do when these disasters hit
56:49
you know you can go to the nicb website
56:51
we have uh we have consumer information
56:55
bulletins and
56:56
pdfs available for download and it gives
56:59
a lot of great advice that you can refer
57:02
to i suggest you go there print them
57:04
off and just keep them handy along with
57:07
that list of good contractors to to use
57:11
if and when
57:12
and god forbid you have a loss
57:16
or save fred's cell phone number and
57:17
call him and ask him for his list
57:20
exactly
57:22
exactly
57:23
you know we uh when these disasters hit
57:26
we do have disaster uh recovery centers
57:28
um drcs are called and it might be good
57:30
to have this information there for them
57:32
for the consumers i mean the last thing
57:33
in their mind is about you know
57:35
hopefully they're not thinking about
57:36
somebody committing far but that's the
57:38
worst you know realization to be double
57:40
doubly victimized you know you're not
57:41
getting your
57:42
uh employment back your car back you
57:45
know your house is not being repaired
57:47
and then somebody comes over and does
57:48
this to you so it'd be good to have that
57:49
information
57:51
to educate our clients
57:52
yeah i'd be happy to send whatever you
57:55
folks need
57:57
it's all free of charge
58:00
so we like that's how we do it we're the
58:01
best attorneys money can't buy so yeah
58:03
we appreciate it i like that
58:08
uh mr lohmann i think uh yeah we covered
58:11
most everything i wanted to cover here
58:12
on this or something else belinda or amy
58:13
have to uh address here we don't want to
58:15
take much of your friday afternoon
58:19
now this has been
58:21
amazing thorough
58:23
yeah so thank you so much yeah yeah it
58:26
was good seeing you again amy nice to
58:28
see you too thank you so much for your
58:29
time friend
58:33