The Citizen (KZN)

Blue House is the people’s again

PROBES: MARKED INCREASE IN THE INVOLVEMEN­T OF SYNDICATES – WHO EVEN USE MULES

- Laura du Preez Du Preez is editor of Smart About Money

– Thousands of South Koreans poured into the presidenti­al Blue House in leafy northern Seoul yesterday, after President Yoon Suk-yeol made good on a campaign promise to return the once-fortified compound to the people.

The building, named for the approximat­ely 150 000 hand-painted blue tiles that adorn its roof, has been home to South Korea’s leaders since 1948 and was restricted to the public.

That has changed since Yoon, a former top prosecutor who was sworn in on Tuesday, refused to move in, saying the hilltop headquarte­rs fostered an “imperial” presidency and undermine communicat­ion with the public. Instead, Yoon is working from the 10-storey defence ministry building.

It is not always gangs – relatives have also killed for life insurance payouts.

Fraud investigat­ions by life insurers have turned up more evidence of deathly get-rich schemes in which syndicates take out funeral insurance on victims they subsequent­ly kill in order to submit a claim.

Syndicates, particular­ly in the Eastern Cape, look for every opportunit­y to exploit and there has been upward trend with unnatural deaths in the last few years, says Megan Govender, convenor of the forensics standing committee at the Associatio­n of Savings and Investment SA (Asisa).

These organised criminals were involved in 68 of the 3 268 cases of fraud involving funeral policies last year, statistics released by Asisa yesterday reveal.

In four cases, beneficiar­ies of policy proceeds were involved in this fraud.

Syndicates are familiar with life and funeral insurers’ policies and procedures. In some cases, they murder a victim. In others, they obtain paupers’ corpses from mortuaries and stage hit-and-run accidents, Govender says.

As insurers are doing more to uncover the fraud, syndicates have taken to using runners, or mules, to do the work for them, he says.

It isn’t always syndicates that kill, opportunis­ts – sometimes family members – have also killed for life insurance payouts.

Govender says one life insurer is investigat­ing a suspicious case that arose last year, when cover was taken out a day before a mother and her daughter were shot in a field in the Eastern Cape.

South Africans were shocked last year by the court case of Nomia Rosemary Ndlovu, a former police officer, who was handed six life sentences for the murder of her partner and five family members in order to claim funeral and life insurance taken out on their lives.

Also last year, Pastor Melisizwe Monqo and hitman Phumlani Qhusheka were sentenced to life for the 2018 murder of a member of the God’s Work Internatio­nal Ministries whose life they had insured.

Monqo’s wife, Siphosihle Pamba, received a 20-year sentence.

High-profile cases involving murders contribute­d to R787.6 million in fraudulent and dishonest claims on funeral, life and disability claims that were detected last year, the Asisa statistics reveal.

The increase in syndicate involvemen­t has led one life insurer to warn South Africans who have family members who abuse alcohol or drugs and/or live on the streets, not to let unscrupulo­us people take advantage of them by getting their identity documents and taking out policies on their lives.

Priyen Moodley, an independen­t forensic, risk and business intelligen­ce consultant, says syndicates apply for cover for people who are homeless, sickly, abusing substances or involved in gang or criminal activities.

Motive for death

After a relatively short period of time – typically under two years – the insured person dies unnaturall­y from gunshot wounds, a stabbing or a hit-and-run accident and the motive proves to be the insurance claim, he says.

In other cases, family members insure the lives of these people because they know they are vulnerable, Moodley says.

Carina Thompson, a manager at Xtnd – a forensic and fraud detection company that works with insurance company Assupol – says people from all walks of life can fall victim to fraud, but the homeless and the addicted are particular­ly vulnerable.

Sometimes they are coerced into assisting fraudsters to make misreprese­ntations to insurers to initiate a policy, she says.

Moodley suggests vulnerable relatives be encouraged to get counsellin­g or enter rehabilita­tion.

And they should not share personal informatio­n, such as identity numbers, with strangers, he says.

Killers who seek to profit from their victim’s deaths often use funeral policies as the cover is easy to take out and pays out quickly – some companies will pay out in four hours.

Funeral policies also have shorter or no waiting periods for accidental deaths.

Policy benefits can be as high as R100 000 and some insurers pay double the benefit for accidental deaths. There is also no limit on the number of policies you can take out.

Moodley says if you know or suspect that someone has taken out cover on your life in an irregular manner, you have the right to make contact with that insurer to verify this.

Alternativ­ely, you could contact your financial advisor and request an updated list of policies taken out on your life, he says.

Thompson says there are also consumer sites that promise free reports. In return, you may be required to give permission for the site to share your details with a financial advisory practice.

Govender says fraudulent and dishonest claims were a small proportion of the R608 billion paid last year to honest policyhold­ers and their beneficiar­ies.

However, if left unchecked, fraud and dishonesty would ultimately result in higher premiums for the honest, he says.

This is a good reason to blow the whistle if you are aware of fraud.

Fraud hotlines

Moodley says insurers have fraud hotlines and you can also report crime to the SA Insurance Crime Bureau, or to the police.

You can make anonymous reports, but keep them factual with as much informatio­n as possible about who is involved and how in the alleged fraud, he says.

You can also keep fraud numbers down by reporting the theft of your identity documents or cards to the police and to the department of home affairs.

Last year, insurers uncovered 2 271 cases worth R295 million involving fraudulent documentat­ion.

Fraudsters use IDs to create fictitious deaths or forge birth or marriage certificat­es and to take out policies and submit fraudulent claims.

Moodley suggests you also list missing documents with the SA Fraud Prevention Services to flag your identity as compromise­d.

Thompson says you should ensure that you use only the correct and credible details of institutio­ns when you provide the death certificat­e or the death report on a family member.

Fraudsters can use a death certificat­e or report to profit from your relative’s death.

Misreprese­ntation of facts is also fraud. Insurers detected more than 3 000 cases involving R487 million in which policyhold­ers had misreprese­nted facts.

Govender says misreprese­nting or not disclosing important informatio­n such as lifestyle or health issues is incredibly short-sighted.

“When claims are declined as a result, this is likely to have devastatin­g financial consequenc­es for those financiall­y dependent on a policyhold­er.”

In one extreme case detected last year, a nurse used someone else’s blood to support her claim for a severe illness benefit. She alleged she had suffered a needle injury at work that resulted in her being infected with HIV.

Investigat­ions revealed there was no such incident. Her attempt to defraud the insurer earned her a R10 000 fine and suspended five-year jail term.

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