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--Zerothis (talk)22:30, 29 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Hello, all --
I realize that this is a distasteful subject to many in the horse field, especially among those with a love of show jumpers, but theJohn Edwards andRielle Hunter affair currently in the news has opened up many, many questions on the subject of the late 20th centuryhorse murders scandal. The reason for that, in case you don't know, is that Rielle Hunter was formerly Lisa Druck, whose father, James Druck conspired to have her beloved show jumper Henry the Hawk electrocuted to collect the insurance money on him. This tragedy formed the backgtound for a 1988 novel based on Lisa Druck's life, calledStory of my Life byJay McInerney. Later, in the early to mid 1990s, the scandal was exposed to the public through articles in the New York imes and Sports Illustrated, and then through a full-length book called "Hot Blood." An FBI investigation into the horse murders led to the conviction of a number of highly placed people in the show jumper and general equatrian sports world on charges of insuracne fraud.
When Rielle Hunter's background was probed, due to her affair with John Edwards, it turned out that she and her horse were prominent victims of the horse murder insurance scam. But in trying to link this information up to her bio article, it turned up that there is no article on the subject of the horse murders at Wikipedia, doubtless because the scandal occured before the development of the world wide web. There is an article on the murder of the millionairessHelen Brach whose death, in 1977, was also connected to the horse murder scandal. An article was just created todsay, but it is not comprehensive in scope and needs to be expanded greatly lest it be deleted.
I am looking for a few good editors who have the brackground to write ahorse murders article, and to link it to the Helen Brach,show jumping, and Rielle Hunter articles. No need to reply to me -- if you are interested, you know what to do. I will try to help, also, as best i can, but the topic is far from my usual fild of writing, and i would prefer to see it handled by those with the greatest depth of knowledge on the subject.
I am posting this identical request to a number of horse-rleated talk pages, so you may see it more than once, for which i apologize in advance.
Sincerely, catherine yronwodeCatherineyronwode (talk)02:43, 15 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The first external link listed for this article is to www.insurancefraud.com, operated by a for-profit investigative company. The site may seek to promote the services of an organization, and is certainly not the biggest organization fighting insurance fraud. There is a non-profit major organization in the United States that seeks to fight insurance fraud, the National Insurance Crime Bureau (NICB). Recommend the current link be replaced with a link to the NICB. Their website is www.nicb.org, and they have a direct link on their site where you can report insurance fraud (https://www.nicb.org/cps/rde/xchg/nicb/hs.xsl/3199.htm).
Sirubberduckie (talk)16:25, 24 February 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Today (27 August 2009) I added a link to NICB and a reference to reporting services they offer on their site - I would like to see another editor review and decide if it should be moved. I'd like to see a small section about reporting insurance fraud and/or a link to a new Wikipedia page which can be populated with links to insurance fraud reporting resources for each US state fraud bureau, (and any international ones), law enforcement, non-profit, and possibly even for-profit reporting companies. I am not planning on adding it myself (but would be happy to help populate it if someone else added it) because of my affiliation with an insurance-related not-for-profit company.
Eisolson (talk)20:39, 27 August 2009 (UTC)[reply]
What do you call it when the insurer commits fraud to deny payment? Is that still called insurance fraud?—Precedingunsigned comment added by76.85.196.235 (talk)22:40, 5 August 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Edited a statement which claimed that insurance fraud was only criminalized in 48 of 50 US states. The source it points to indicates that its criminalized in all states, just to a varying degree.Napkin65 (talk)01:13, 22 December 2010 (UTC)[reply]
This article concentrates on customers defrauding the insurance industry. To balance the article do you not think comment and information about the insurance industry defrauding their customers is in order here too:- Money Saving Expert[1], MSN Money[2], CorpWatch[3] etc...
I have no doubt Wiki members may find many documented examples of how the insurance industry defraud customers. From an individual levels like righting your car off after an accident when not truly a right-off, to a corporate levels like pumping premiums up claiming losses but making billions in profits or selling your details to unscrupulous third parties companies or mailing groups.... or even selling insurance customers don't need or want - PPI for instance.
Is anyone up for the challenge to balance this article.... after all the Financial Services Industry are quick to point the finger when it suits them financially or image wise but never admit they have been at it too.HuttonIT (talk)11:43, 12 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]
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Cheers.—cyberbot IITalk to my owner:Online21:57, 28 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
There currently appears to be a debate about whether citations to law firm websites should be 100% removed regardless of the value and unique content on the website that is serving as a source for new content. I am creating this talk discussion in part because of the back-and-forth between Arlaw and Legalwriter1976 (me) and to comply with the conflict resolution steps outlined in the Wikipedia Edit Warring page. Namely, there is a push to reaching consensus instead of just editing back and forth. The example in question for this page involves unique, relevant content that cites to a long and in-depth article about insurance fraud defense that is hosted on a law firm website. Compare the article in question to common law firm spam pages that only have 300-500 words. The citation is the actual source for the added content, and the only reason the content and citation appears to have been removed is that the article is on a law firm website. Looking at Arlaw's list of edits/contributions to other pages, it is clear that he/she is doing a great job removing link spam. In the context of this page and upon closer examination, the value added here is not link spam however.
Legalwriter1976 (talk)00:09, 15 August 2017 (UTC)[reply]
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This WIKI is clearly bias toward insurance companies. Insurance companies can commit insurance fraud and do on a regular basis. Appraisers accept bribes for overwritten settlements all the time, for steering work toward a specific shop for financial gain, for intentionally underwriting claims as a deterrent to commit insurance fraud, which by all measures if this practice is adopted systematically defrauds consumers. Why aren’t these clear examples of insurance fraud not permitted? They keep getting erased.2600:6C64:427F:BDA2:987C:11DF:1BD2:63F9 (talk)10:46, 25 September 2022 (UTC)[reply]
The stand-alone examples section for auto fraud does not strike me as helpful. There are no criteria for inclusion or exclusion, and any effort to be inclusive would be voluminous. Further, a good portion of that section discusses forms of fraud that should be explained outside of such a section, and should be reorganized out of it. While individual, notable examples may be useful within discussion of specific types of fraud, I suggest that the stand-alone "examples" subheading and subsequent content be removed, with content otherwise suitable to the article being improved and reorganized.Arllaw (talk)21:42, 5 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]