Regulators were warned years ago that insurance companies were altering Florida claims [Miami Herald]
When
Hurricane Irma had churned through the area about 18 months earlier, but there were still broken tiles on the roof's windward side -- the side that bore the brunt of the storm's force. When Buvens tested other tiles, trying to lift them with three fingers, many were loose.
Hired by
But that's not what the homeowners received.
After seeing Buvens' estimate, United Property and Casualty, known as UPC, sent engineers to the home. The engineers found six broken tiles but reported no damage. A final report -- with Buvens' name on it -- said the claim wasn't covered and the homeowner was owed
Buvens' 2019 case is the earliest known accusation that an insurance company manipulated a homeowners' assessment to reject or lowball a claim, a potential felony under state law.
The case, which came out in a civil lawsuit, was reported in 2021 to the state agency that investigates insurance fraud, the
But state investigators quickly dismissed the complaint without interviewing Buvens. A spokesperson for the head of the agency,
Since then, at least seven other adjusters for insurance companies have come forward saying their reports were similarly manipulated to pay homeowners less than their claim estimates. Four have given sworn testimony in civil cases, which can be used in criminal court. Three others spoke during the
Patronis' office has reopened Buvens' case as part of a larger investigation into claims against United Property and Casualty, now insolvent.
The initial response from state regulators reflects how officials pursue complaints of fraud by policyholders and their advocates but not complaints against insurance companies, said
"There appears to be no motivation to go after insurance companies," Quinn said.
Adjuster sent to assess claim
The owner of the
"The contractors pretty much handled everything," the owner said recently. He asked that his name not be used because he feared appearing in a news story would make it harder for him to find homeowners insurance for his other properties.
(Lawmakers last year banned homeowners from assigning their insurance benefits to a contractor, blaming such practices for driving up insurance prices.)
When it received the claim, United Property and Casualty assigned an independent adjuster to assess the damage. Many insurers use contracted adjusters after storms. Licensed adjusters document the damage, determine whether it should be covered and estimate the repairs.
That contractor employed Buvens, who had been a licensed field adjuster since 1992 s Hurricane Andrew. He also had a law degree from
With his experience, he was one of only two field adjusters that United Property and Casualty used for assessing tile roofs in
Buvens saw that wind had damaged the roof. The ceiling had water stains consistent with storm damage, he originally determined. He estimated repairing the garage and removing debris would cost another
But the estimate that the homeowners later received from United Property and Casualty concluded there was no wind damage, and they were owed nothing.
Denial triggered lawsuit
The homeowners' contractor, SFR Services, sued United Property and Casualty on their behalf.
In 2020, lawyers took Buvens' sworn deposition for the case.
When asked why he concluded that there was no storm damage to the home, Buvens said he was "told to put that in the report" by a desk adjuster working for United Property and Casualty and by the company that hired him. He said that they also told him to remove the
He added that the claim director approached him about the deposition and told him to "play ball" or "I wouldn't be working for [United Property and Casualty] anymore," Buvens testified.
"I said, 'I tell the truth, the whole truth. If you don't like it, I'm sorry about that. You will have to do what you have to do.' "
Orders to change estimates didn't stop at that particular homeowners' claim, Buvens said. United Property and Casualty was "constantly changing claim-handling practices," he told lawyers, saying he knew of more than 1,000 instances "where they asked licensed field adjusters to go against their statutory duties to handle claims in good faith with the policyholder."
Buvens said such instances included the insurance company "ignoring damages" and "removing estimates that the field adjuster wrote."
United Property and Casualty offered to settle the case. The company paid
Under
Quinn, with the
Investigators with the association, including a former prosecutor, felt Buvens' statement in the deposition was legitimate. In 2021, they alerted the
The allegations had a precedent: In 2016,
The association's complaint went to a fraud investigator at
The investigator asked Buvens to come to
Buvens said he never heard anything more about it. The department closed the case "due to lack of participation by witnesses," department spokesperson
Buvens disputed that he wouldn't cooperate. As evidence, he forwarded multiple emails sent to Patronis' main address asking why he had received only "one, single initial communication" in response to his complaint.
"Very plainly, the department has not followed up on the numerous UPC complaints that have been filed," he wrote to Patronis.
Eight adjusters have come forward
Since then, at least seven other independent adjusters working for United Property and Casualty and other
In depositions, two adjusters said they were told only to go to the home to document the damage -- someone above their head would fill out whether the claim was covered.
In December, three other adjusters told a
After
Quinn forwarded to Patronis' office a complaint by another independent adjuster working for United Property and Casualty. That adjuster,
"This is again UPC standard on these Hurricane Irma claims," the employee says, according to the voicemail obtained by the
Text messages sent to a group of adjusters show a supervisor telling them that on Hurricane Irma claims, United Property and Casualty "no longer want you to turn in any estimate whatsoever for any damages."
"They are going to be doing denials on all of them," the supervisor wrote. The messages were included in a federal racketeering lawsuit filed by SFR Services against United Property and Casualty and adjusting firms last year.
Patronis' office said they referred the cases to the state
By October, company officials told regulators they were pulling out of the
When asked about the adjusters' cases in March, Patronis said his office was investigating. Buvens confirmed that an investigator has reopened his case.
"If there's criminal acts being found, we will prosecute to the fullest extent," Patronis told the Herald/
But he cautioned that "there's two sides to every story."
"Contractors can suck. Public adjusters can suck. Insurance companies can suck," Patronis said. "But I can't stress enough: It's a disaster. There's a reason why they call it 'disasters.' They're not going to go smoothly."
(C)2023 Miami Herald. Visit miamiherald.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
CODE OF BUSINESS CONDUCT AND ETHICS – Form 6-K
RPA in Insurance Market Analysis From 2022 To 2031 Is Provided to Determine the Market Potential.
Advisor News
Annuity News
Health/Employee Benefits News
Life Insurance News