Volume 26, Issue 4 – February 15, 2022,
Go to Barry Zalma videos at Rumble.com at https://rumble.com/zalma
Quote of the Issue
“Do Not Pray for An Easy Life; Pray for The Strength to Endure a Difficult One.” - Bruce Lee
Go Directly to Jail, Do Not Pass Go
Chutzpah: Convicted of Insurance Fraud Appeals to Avoid Going to Jail
Tarek Abou-Khatwa appealed his conviction of a complex, multi-year insurance fraud scheme. He previously asked the court to delay the start of his incarceration pending the outcome of that appeal. On January 31, 2022, the court denied his request, explaining that Defendant’s appeal did not present a “close question” as to each count on which he was sentenced to prison.
In United States of America v. Tarek Abou-Khatwa, Criminal No. 18-cr-67 (TSC), United States District Court, District of Columbia (February 4, 2022) Tarek’s multiple appeals in an attempt to avoid was again brought to the USDC.
Defendant filed an “Emergency Motion” with the USDC stating his intent to lodge a second appeal, this time challenging the court’s January 31 Order, and he requested that his self-surrender date be postponed pending the outcome of that new appeal.
Defendant’s conviction is presumed valid and he bears the burden of rebutting that presumption. In his previous motion, Defendant failed to rebut that presumption because he did not present a “substantial question of law” as to each count of his conviction for which he faces imprisonment. Accordingly, the court held Defendant’s self-surrender date in place.
Defendant, undeterred by his losses in the USDC, now argues that his self-surrender date should be delayed while he appeals that decision. He contended that his current self-surrender date is not “sufficient to allow time for briefing before both the district court and the court of appeals, as the parties originally intended.” He claims that additional time is necessary for “a motion to the D.C. Circuit appealing this Court’s order denying release pending appeal [to be] decided by that Court.” He also argues that refusal to grant further delay would “frustrat[e] his appeal rights under Section 3145(c) and Rule 9(b).”
The court disagreed that emergency action is necessary to avoid “frustrating his appeal rights under Section 3145(c) and Rule 9(b).”
ANALYSIS
First, 18 U.S.C. § 3145(c) pertains to appeals of detention orders, not release from custody, and so it is inapplicable. Second, nothing in the court’s January 31, 2022, Order restricts Defendant’s ability to seek relief from the Court of Appeals. The court, aware that the timeline for Defendant to both appeal this court’s January 31 Order and receive a decision on that appeal before his February 10 self-surrender date, is truncated. However, Defendant-not the court-bears responsibility for that accelerated schedule.
Actually, Defendant notified the court that he was appealing his conviction on June 10, 2021 and filed his opening appellate brief on November 1, 2021. Defendant could have moved to delay his surrender date pending appeal at that point, but instead waited until December 6, 2021. When Defendant did eventually file his motion, he requested only a one-month delay, from January 10 to February 10, 2022, which the court granted.
And third, rather than immediately appeal the court’s January 31 Order, Defendant waited two days to again move for relief and then proposed an additional two-day briefing schedule. In short, Defendant’s concerns about his ability to obtain relief from the Circuit are a product of his own doing.
Finally, in a footnote in his reply brief, Defendant requests that if the court denies the present motion that he be permitted “a short postponement, e.g., two weeks, so that he may appeal the Court’s disposition of the instant motion.” In other words, Defendant would like three appeal tracks: one attacking the merits of his conviction, which is now fully briefed and awaiting disposition from the Circuit; a second challenging the court’s January 31 Order denying his request to delay his sentence pending the first appeal, which Defendant reports “is being filed today,” and a third challenging this decision to deny his request to delay his sentence pending resolution of the second appeal.
Accordingly, the court denied Defendant’s latest request to delay the start of his incarceration.
ZIFL OPINION
Tarek’s fraud must have been very successful since he has the funds to have lawyers bring multiple motions and appeals to avoid incarceration. The actions are a clear explication of the concept of “chutzpah” or unmitigated gall. His efforts continue to fail and it is time that he reports to federal prison and begin his sentence after conviction for fraud. The USDOJ should consider determining what other crimes he was involved in that allows him funds to support the multiple motions and appeals.
Wisdom
“If they don’t give you a seat at the table, bring a folding chair.” – Shirley Chisholm
“The beauty of doing nothing is that you can do it perfectly. Only when you do something is it almost impossible to do it without mistakes. Therefore, people who are contributing nothing to society, except their constant criticisms, can feel both intellectually and morally superior.” – Thomas Sowell
“When you know what you are willing to die for, then you will know what to live for.” — Jewish saying
“It was an age of miracles, it was an age of art, it was an age of excess, and it was an age of satire.” — F. Scott Fitzgerald
“I myself know nothing, except just a little, enough to extract an argument from another man who is wise and to receive it fairly.” – Socrates
“When action grows unprofitable, gather information; when information grows unprofitable, sleep.” — Ursula K. Le Guin
“Education is the key to unlock the golden door of freedom.” – George Washington Carver
“If you are depressed you are living in the past, if you are anxious you are living in the future, if you are at peace, you are living in the present.” — Lao Tzu
“In the depths of Winter, I finally learned that within me there lay an invincible summer.” – Albert Camus
“No need to hurry. No need to sparkle. No need to be anybody but oneself.” – Virginia Woolf
“Patience is a necessary ingredient of genius.” – Benjamin Disraeli
Fraud by Insurance Company Officials
Insurance fraud is not a crime limited to people defrauding insurers. Sometimes, insurers and their officers commit fraud in many ways, including, but not limited to:
Submission of falsified financial statements.
Misuse of company funds.
Issuance of unauthorized insurance policies.
Insurance plans not authorized by the state Departments of Insurance.
Individuals not licensed to do the business of insurance.
Fraudulent group/individual health plans.
Some examples of fraud by insurers claimed under homeowners policies include:
Insisting that the insured allow the insurer to generate the loss inventory after a covered loss.
Issuing policies with a declaration page showing policy limits that the insurer knows is higher than the actual cash value or replacement cost of the property, the risk of loss of which is insured, to take premium for a greater risk than that actually taken.
Using economic coercion to force the claimant to use their preferred repair vendor.
Undercutting market rates to lure employers to acquire Workers’ Compensation insurance while failing to properly maintain sufficient funds in reserve to cover claims.
Use of an unqualified or dishonest Medical Examiner to avoid payment of claims.
Use of unethical defense attorneys to avoid payments of claims.
Use of unethical private investigators.
Use of Special Investigative Unit investigators whose only purpose is to deny claims rather than in an effort to avoid fraud.
In In re Insurance Brokerage Antitrust Litigation, 618 F.3d 300 (3rd Cir., 2010) understand that the allegations that gave rise to the litigation raised serious questions and caused the insurance industry enormous amounts of money to defend themselves.
Section 1 of the Sherman Act provides: “Every contract, combination in the form of trust or otherwise, or conspiracy, in restraint of trade or commerce among the several States, or with foreign nations, is declared to be illegal.” 15 U.S.C. § 1. In addition to demonstrating the existence of a “conspiracy,” or agreement, “the plaintiff must show that the conspiracy to which the defendant was a party imposed an unreasonable restraint on trade.”
As the District Court recognized, plaintiffs’ “broker-centered conspiracies” are alleged as hub-and-spoke conspiracies, with the broker as the hub and its insurer-partners as the spokes. This type of conspiracy has a long history in antitrust jurisprudence.
Overlaying the broker-centered conspiracies, plaintiffs aver, was a “global conspiracy.” In this alleged scheme, the defendant brokers, “with the complicity of the Defendant Insurers,” agreed “to conceal from the general public and other brokers [i.e., non-conspiring brokers]” the existence of the broker-centered conspiracies and the details of the contingent commission agreements. Plaintiffs contend that this “agreement not to disclose the Contingent Commission agreements and resulting profits was a naked horizontal restraint of informational output that directly affected the price of insurance.” The District Court concluded that the complaints’ factual allegations fail to plausibly imply horizontal non-disclosure agreements among the defendant brokers or the defendant insurers.
The court found that it is clear that at least the following activities are the business of insurance, either because they pertain to risk-spreading or to the contract between the insurer and the insured:
1. preparing and filing a rating-schedule, either on behalf of an individual company or jointly through a rating bureau;
2. deciding upon rating classification differences between individual policies and group marketing plans, either individually or jointly through a rating bureau;
3. authorizing agents to solicit individual or group policies;
4. accepting or rejecting coverages tendered by brokers.
Because the McCarran-Ferguson Act does not bar plaintiffs’ claims the court’s analysis is dispositive. Given the long path our discussion has taken, a brief synopsis of that analysis is in order. Courts confronted with a motion to dismiss must assess whether the complaint contains “enough factual matter (taken as true) to suggest that an agreement was made. The bid-rigging allegations supply the requisite “further circumstance.” Because they plausibly suggest an unlawful horizontal conspiracy not to compete for incumbent business, plaintiffs have adequately met the requirement for setting forth a claim against those defendants in the asserted commercial conspiracy who are alleged to have participated in bid rigging. This agreement to divide the market, if proven, would be a naked restraint of trade subject to per se condemnation.
The Third Circuit concluded:
For the forgoing reasons, we will vacate the dismissal of the Sherman Act claims with respect to defendants alleged to have engaged in bid rigging in the Marsh-centered commercial conspiracy; the dismissal of the RICO claims based on the alleged Marsh-centered commercial enterprise, with respect to those same defendants; the dismissal of the RICO claims based on the alleged CIAB enterprise, with respect to the defendant brokers; and the dismissal of the state-law claims. We will affirm the District Court’s judgment in all other respects and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
[This article was adapted from my book, Insurance Fraud Volume II – Volume One available as a Kindle book and a paperback at amazon.com. Volume Two Available as a Kindle book and a paperback]
California Department of Insurance Issues 14 Cease and Desist Orders to Protect California Consumers from Unlicensed Health Coverage
The California Department of Insurance has issued a Cease and Desist Order against First Continental Life & Accident Insurance Company for illegally acting as an insurance company in the state and providing health coverage without the proper certification. The Department also served 13 additional Cease and Desist Orders on multiple entities and licensees that aided and abetted First Continental.
“When consumers purchase health coverage they should have full confidence that they have the coverage they are promised,” said Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara. “Transacting insurance without the proper licensing or certification is not only breaking the law, it is putting consumers at risk. My Department will continue to take action to protect consumers and stop illegal actions by companies and licensees.
The Department launched an investigation after receiving information that California consumers were sold health plans underwritten by First Continental. The investigation uncovered allegations that between October 2019 and September 2021 consumers purchased health insurance plans underwritten by First Continental. Many of these consumers thought their policies included full medical coverage; however, when these consumers attempted to use the coverage they found the coverage was limited and did not cover the medical expenses they were led to believe when they purchased the policies.
First Continental did not have authorization at the time to transact insurance in California. First Continental was previously authorized to transact in California, but after failing to meet policyholder requirements the Department issued a Cease and Desist Order against the company in 2002. In June 2012, First Continental officially withdrew from the State of California and has remained without the proper certificate of authority to transact business in the state.
Consumers who have purchased health coverage through First Continental or any of the below entities or licensees should contact the California Department of Insurance at (323) 278-5000.
The Cease and Desist Orders were served against the following:
• First Continental
• Administrative Concepts, Inc. – License #0C38805
• Association for Better Health
• Association Health Care Management, dba Family Care
• Evolve Health
• First Health Network
• Get Me Care
• National Association of Preferred Providers
• Service Industry Trade Alliance
• Matthew Deprey – License #0M50797
• Curtis Garceau – License #4026934
• Fabian Vergara – License #0M31165
• Samantha Mabie – License #0L30001
• Scott Russell – License #0N03621
See the full issue at the .pdf below.
Concealing a Weapon Used in a Murder is an Intentional & Criminal Act
Post 5002
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In Howard I. Rosenberg; Kimberly L. Rosenberg v. Chubb Indemnity Insurance Company Howard I. Rosenberg; Kimberly L. Rosenberg; Kimberly L. Rosenberg; Howard I. Rosenberg v. Hudson Insurance Company, No. 22-3275, United States Court of Appeals, Third Circuit (February 11, 2025) the Third Circuit resolved whether the insurers owed a defense for murder and acts performed to hide the fact of a murder and the murder weapon.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Adam Rosenberg and Christian Moore-Rouse befriended one another while they were students at the Community College of Allegheny County. On December 21, 2019, however, while at his parents’ house, Adam shot twenty-two-year-old Christian in the back of the head with a nine-millimeter Ruger SR9C handgun. Adam then dragged...
Renewal Notices Sent Electronically Are Legal, Approved by the State and Effective
Post 5000
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Washington state law allows insurers to deliver insurance notices and documents electronically if the party has affirmatively consented to that method of delivery and has not withdrawn the consent. The Plaintiffs argued that the terms and conditions statement was not “conspicuous” because it was hidden behind a hyperlink included in a single line of small text. The court found that the statement was sufficiently conspicuous as it was bolded and set off from the surrounding text in bright blue text.
In James Hughes et al. v. American Strategic Insurance Corp et al., No. 3:24-cv-05114-DGE, United States District Court (February 14, 2025) the USDC resolved the dispute.
The court’s reasoning focused on two main points:
1 whether the ...
Rescission in Michigan Requires Preprocurement Fraud
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Lie About Where Vehicle Was Garaged After Policy Inception Not Basis for Rescission
This appeal turns on whether fraud occurred in relation to an April 26, 2018 renewal contract for a policy of insurance under the no-fault act issued by plaintiff, Encompass Indemnity Company (“Encompass”).
In Samuel Tourkow, by David Tourkow v. Michael Thomas Fox, and Sweet Insurance Agency, formerly known as Verbiest Insurance Agency, Inc., Third-Party Defendant-Appellee. Encompass Indemnity Company, et al, Nos. 367494, 367512, Court of Appeals of Michigan (February 12, 2025) resolved the claims.
The plaintiff, Encompass Indemnity Company, issued a no-fault insurance policy to Jon and Joyce Fox, with Michael Fox added as an additional insured. The dispute centers on whether fraud occurred in...
Insurance Fraud Leads to Violent Crime
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CRIMINAL CONDUCT NEVER GETS BETTER
In The People v. Dennis Lee Givens, B330497, California Court of Appeals, Second District, Eighth Division (February 3, 2025) Givens appealed to reverse his conviction for human trafficking and sought an order for a new trial.
FACTS
In September 2020, Givens matched with J.C. on the dating app “Tagged.” J.C., who was 20 years old at the time, had known Givens since childhood because their mothers were best friends. After matching, J.C. and Givens saw each other daily, and J.C. began working as a prostitute under Givens’s direction.
Givens set quotas for J.C., took her earnings, and threatened her when she failed to meet his demands. In February 2022, J.C. confided in her mother who then contacted the Los Angeles Police Department. The police ...
Police Officer’s Involvement in Insurance Fraud Results in Jail
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Von Harris was convicted of bribery, forgery, and insurance fraud. He appealed his conviction and sentence. His appeal was denied, and the Court of Appeals upheld the conviction.
In State Of Ohio v. Von Harris, 2025-Ohio-279, No. 113618, Court of Appeals of Ohio, Eighth District (January 30, 2025) the Court of Appeals affirmed the conviction.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
On January 23, 2024, the trial court sentenced Harris. The trial court sentenced Harris to six months in the county jail on Count 15; 12 months in prison on Counts 6, 8, 11, and 13; and 24 months in prison on Counts 5 and 10, with all counts running concurrent to one another for a total of 24 months in prison. The jury found Harris guilty based on his involvement in facilitating payments to an East Cleveland ...
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To Dispute an Arbitration Finding Party Must File Dispute Within 20 Days
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EXCUSABLE NEGLECT SUFFICIENT TO DISPUTE ARBITRATION LATE
In Howard Roy Housen and Valerie Housen v. Universal Property & Casualty Insurance Company, No. 4D2023-2720, Florida Court of Appeals, Fourth District (January 22, 2025) the Housens appealed a final judgment in their breach of contract action.
FACTS
The Housens filed an insurance claim with Universal, which was denied, leading them to file a breach of contract action. The parties agreed to non-binding arbitration which resulted in an award not
favorable to the Housens. However, the Housens failed to file a notice of rejection of the arbitration decision within the required 20 days. Instead, they filed a motion for a new trial 29 days after the arbitrator’s decision, citing a clerical error for the delay.
The circuit court ...