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May 19, 2009 |
Volume
17, Number 5
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Frasco Investigative Services Tracks Down Insurance Fraud

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Frasco’s Steven Schulmeister is sometimes called upon to surveil suspected fraudsters.
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By Nicole Zaro Stahl
NETWORK Editor
Headquartered in Burbank, Frasco Inc. has been providing insurance
investigation services throughout the western United States since 1964.
A recent strategic partnership with another leader in the field, Falls
Church, Virginia-based USIS, a major supplier to the federal
government, now gives the combined organizations the ability to offer
nationwide, end-to-end solutions in support of fraud detection,
regulatory, and monitoring needs.
The company consists
of three divisions, the largest of which is Frasco Investigative
Services, primarily focused on workers' compensation, auto accident,
and liability investigations. Frasco Profiles is the pre-employment
background division, providing screening and drug testing on a
nationwide basis. Frasco Workplace Investigations provides
investigative services to assist in the evaluation of workplace
misconduct allegations. Frasco also offers periodic sexual harassment
prevention training to California companies with 50 or more employees,
as mandated by state statute.
Steven Schulmeister is the branch
manager of the Bay Area California office of the Frasco Investigative
Services, at 4637 Chabot Drive. “Our forte is all avenues of insurance
investigation,” he comments. Most of the branch’s activity relates to
workers' compensation, automobile liability, and general liability
cases—for example, slip-and-falls at retail stores.
The
investigator’s job is to collect information for what the industry
calls AOE/COE statements, referring either to an incident that arose
out of employment or occurred during the course of employment,
respectively. Interviews with the injured party, supervisors, and
possibly coworkers or witnesses are part of the process. “This gives us
an outline of what all has occurred during the course of the injury at
work. We want to do this early on when thoughts are fresh, compared to
six months down the road when details get forgotten,” Schulmeister
notes.
Throughout the process Frasco investigators are looking
for inconsistencies or contradictions—an injury that happened on a date
the employee was not working, or a history of disciplinary actions for
not wearing appropriate safety gear, for example. “Add-on” injuries
seem to be on the rise. “We used to see more incidents that were cut
and dried, like a back injury where a person can no longer bend over.
Now we are seeing claims for more than one injury: someone hurt his
back and right shoulder and also incurred a psychological injury, which
is a little more difficult to document,” Schulmeister relates. A claim
of stress might have causes beyond the workplace, and through
interviews with the employer or coworkers, investigators might uncover
factors like a recent divorce, financial hardship, or a family illness.
“There is a long equation to determine if someone has become
disabled and to what extent,” Schulmeister says. “There are depositions
with attorneys, medical reviews, doctors’ appointments, and
surveillance, along with the interview with the claimant. We provide
just one variable of the whole equation.”
Schulmeister points
out that California is quite progressive when it comes to insurance
fraud. “We were one of the first states to actually consider insurance
fraud a felony. People can go to jail, or pay restitution in the
hundreds of thousands of dollars. It’s a good deterrent,” he allows,
concluding, “it is still important for the insurance company to
investigate claims and make sure they are justified.”
For more information, visit www.frasco.com.
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