INSURANCE FRAUD |
Insurance Fraud
The Canadian Coalition Against Insurance Fraud defines insurance fraud as any act or omission with a view to illegally obtaining an insurance benefit -- in other words, any action where claimants walk away with money to which they're not entitled.
Insurance fraud of all types is estimated to be a leading source of criminal profits in North America, and includes a full range of fraudulent acts: completely fabricated claims, inflation or padding of genuine claims, false statements on insurance applications, and internal fraud.
Fraudulent claims represent approximately 10 to 15 per cent of claims paid out. Insurance fraud amounts to approximately $1.3 billion per year in Canada. This cost is paid for by honest policyholders through increased premiums.
Manitoba Public Insurance continues to undertake and support various initiatives to combat auto insurance fraud, including:
In Manitoba, for the year 2001, estimated direct savings realized through the Corporation's anti-fraud, anti-crime activities totalled $5 million. Estimated direct savings to policyholders through subrogation (recovery of monies from claimants who already received benefits for fraudulent claims) amounted to $9.4 million over the same time period.