Mississippi attorney Richard Scruggs, the foremost legal opponent of insurance companies over Hurricane Katrina claims, was hit with criminal contempt charges yesterday by special federal prosecutors
If claim association membership is any indication, from the few claim club lists this writer has seen recently, the most active members are independent property adjusters.
A new application of DNA testing, already used in a number of worker' comp cases, has the potential to save insurers billions of dollars in defense costs, a scientist who pioneered the process
A new application of DNA testing, already used in a number of workers' health injury cases, has the potential to save insurers billions of dollars in defense costs, a scientist who pioneered the proce
The legal battle between a major insurer and a high-profile plaintiff attorney over claims for properties damaged in Hurricane Katrina expanded on three new fronts last week--with a judge's call to
A Massachusetts man and his wife are charged in an indictment that includes mail fraud, identity fraud, and an insurance fraud scheme that involved submitting false claims that they had been injured
The Alabama U.S. Attorney's office said there would be a meeting today to discuss a judge's order to bring a criminal contempt prosecution against a high-profile attorney, involved in Hurricane Katrin
Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink and U.S. Attorney James R. Klindt have announced that five individuals have been indicted on charges of workers' compensation fraud. In a 25-count indictment, the
The Marsh insurance brokerage's claims management subsidiary, CS Stars, has reached a $60,000 settlement with New York authorities over a security breach that exposed data from 540,000 people in the s