‘Runner’ Bill on the Move in Mass. Legislature
The Massachusetts Joint Committee on Criminal Justice has favorably reported out a bill designed to fight insurance fraud by cracking down on “runners” who promote auto insurance fraud.
“The first step in effectively fighting auto insurance fraud is to treat runners like the criminals they are,” said Gerald Zimmerman, assistant general counsel for the National Association of Independent Insurers, which has been active in supporting the bill.
“Runners” steer accident victims to the clinics of crooked health care providers for “treatment,” and collect a fee for each “referral.”
S.B. 170, sponsored by Sen. Cynthia Stone Creem, would reportedly penalize the practice of acting as or hiring runners with imprisonment of not more than two and a half years, or a fine of not more than $5,000, or both.
“The Joint Committee’s recommendation of ‘ought to pass’ for S.B. 170 puts the bill one step closer to enactment,” added Zimmerman. “We urge Massachusetts legislators to ratify this important bill.”
- Truist Finishes Insurance Subsidiary Sale; Broker Rebrands as TIH, Names All-Star Board
- Berkshire’s Jain on Cyber: ‘The Mindset Should Be You’re Not Making Money’
- Insurer Chubb Readies $350M Payout Tied to Baltimore Bridge Collapse
- Cracks in O’Hare Columns Aren’t Insured Property Damage, Just Bad Product – Court