Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Running a scam

Schemes lead to rate hikes, Citizens says

- By Ron Hurtibise Staff writer

A Miami man faces insurance fraud, likely to cause rate hikes, officials say.

A Miami man has been charged with bilking South Florida’s largest insurer out of nearly $100,000 with the type of water damage claims fraud that officials warn will spur years of rate hikes without new state laws.

According to a news release from the state Department of Financial Services, Julian Garcia-Selleck acted as an unlicensed public insurance adjuster between March 2012 and January 2016, when he met with homeowners seeking help in handling their insurance claims against state-run Citizens Property Insurance Corp.

Garcia-Selleck promised homeowners he would relieve them from the stress of the claims process by filing claims on their behalf, officials said.

“He would then solicit the services of a local artist to use a caffeine-based liquid to paint what looked like water stains on the ceilings, walls, and floors of homes to either inflate the cost of existing water damage claims or in order to generate a fraudulent water damage claim,” the release said.

He also enlisted public notaries to forge homeowner signatures and notarize fraudulent claims documents he later submitted to insurance companies, often without the knowledge of homeowners, the release said, adding that he cashed and kept at least $99,000 in claims checks issued by insurance companies.

Garcia-Selleck was arrested and charged with one count each of scheme to defraud and acting as an unlicensed public adjuster and nine counts each of insurance fraud and grand theft. He faces 30 years in prison.

The local artist was arrested in 2013, and four public notaries were arrested in 2015, all in connection with the case, department spokesman Jon Moore said in an email Friday. The artist and three of the notaries confessed to their roles and cooperated in the investigat­ion, the spokesman added. None of the homeowners were involved in or profited from the fraud scheme, he said.

In an email statement, Citizens spokesman Michael Peltier said, “Citizens applauds the success of state investigat­ors and local prosecutor­s in tracking down this South Florida scheme. Fraudulent activity like this hurts neighborin­g Citizens policyhold­ers, who must pick up the tab through higher rates.”

Citizens officials have been warning for several years about water damagerela­ted claims fraud originatin­g, and over the past two years have approved hefty premium increases they said would not have been necessary if fraud weren’t occurring.

They and other insurers want the state Legislatur­e to pass laws restrictin­g the ability of third parties to pursue insurance benefits on behalf of policyhold­ers. The ability to secure assignment­s of policy benefits gives contractor­s — often serving illegally as an unlicensed public insurance adjuster — incentive to inflate and falsify insurance claims, causing millions of dollars in unnecessar­y payouts and legal costs, they say.

After 10 percent rate hikes were approved in September for Citizens customers in South Florida, Citizens CEO Barry Gilway warned of similar increases “for years to come” if the Legislatur­e fails to act.

However, plaintiffs’ attorneys counter that outright fraud is far less common than the insurance industry contends. Unwarrante­d restrictio­ns would hurt all policyhold­ers by making it easier for insurance companies to underpay or deny payment for legitimate claims, they say.

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