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Staged Auto Accidents
Many dishonest drivers will maneuver innocent motorists
into auto accidents. The cars may only suffer a small
dent, but the crooks still make large — and illegal
— claims for car damage and fake injuries against
your auto insurance company, or their own.
Often these accidents are staged by organized crime
rings that bilk dozens of unsuspecting drivers.
The scams
Swoop and Squat
A suspect vehicle suddenly swoops in front of you and
jams on the brakes, causing a rear-end collision. Often
the suspect car has passengers who pretend to have painful
back or neck injuries, even though the collision was
at low speed. The driver and passengers then make large
collision and injury claims against your auto policy,
for example.
Drive Down
You're trying to merge into traffic, and a dishonest
driver slows down and waves you forward. He then crashes
into your car, but denies waving you into traffic and
blames the accident on you. Crooked drivers may also
wave you out of a parking space with the same come-on.
Sideswipe
Be careful if you're driving in the inner lane of a
dual left-turn lane at a busy intersection. Crooks will
deliberately ram you if you drift into the outer lane
while turning.
Shady Helpers
A stranger may approach you at the crash site, or telephone
you soon afterward. Maybe you just had an honest accident,
or it was all a setup. Regardless, this stranger tries
to convince you to get repairs at a specific auto-body
shop, seek treatment from a certain doctor or chiropractor,
or visit a lawyer he knows who can help you sue for
injuries. Be careful — it may be a setup: That
body shop may try to illegally pad your repair bill.
The doctor or chiropractor may give you shoddy or no
treatment, but bill the auto insurer thousands of dollars.
The lawyer may encourage you to sue the auto insurer
for thousands of dollars even if you have only minor
or no injuries.
The price you pay
Record blemished
You have a costly claim on your insurance record —
this could raise your auto premiums hundreds of dollars,
or even mean your policy isn't renewed.
Victims terrorized, killed
Innocent drivers are terrorized, injured and even killed
by these schemes. One entire family, including an infant
daughter, died when their car was hit by a truck when
a staged accident went wrong.
Life disrupted
Your life is disrupted as you deal with the seemingly
endless details of car repairs, claim settlement, police
reports, lawyers, possible lawsuits and other problems.
Premiums rise
Everyone's auto premiums rise because insurance companies
pass the costs of bogus claims onto honest policyholders.
At the accident scene
- Never tailgate — allow plenty of space between
your car and the car ahead of you. This will give
you ample time to stop if the lead car suddenly jams
on its brakes.
- Look beyond the car in front of you while driving.
Apply your brakes if you see traffic slowing.
- Count how many passengers were in the other car
if you're in a collision. Get their names, phone numbers
and driver's license — more people may file
claims than were in the car. Also get the car's license
number. Note: Keep a pen and paper in your glove compartment
so you're always ready.
- How do the passengers behave? Did they stand around
and joke, but suddenly act "injured" when
the police arrived?
- Keep a disposable camera in your glovebox. Take
pictures of the other car, the damage it received
— and the passengers.
- Call the police to the scene. Get a police report
with the officer's name, even for minor damage. If
the police report notes just a small dent or scratch,
it'll be harder for crooks to later claim serious
injuries or car damage.
- Get involved if you're a witness. Watch for the
warning signs of a scam, and help the honest victim
with details.
After the accident
- Contact the Lawrence Police Insurance Fraud Unit
if a stranger tries to steer you to an unknown body
shop, doctor, chiropractor or lawyer. Give officials
the names, addresses and phone numbers of these providers.
- Only see medical and legal providers you know and
trust, or at least ones that are recommended by people
you trust. Never let yourself be suckered by a stranger
off the streets.
- Keep careful records of your medical treatments
— dates, treatments given, and diagnoses. Compare
your records against the statements you receive to
make sure the bill wasn't padded or treatments outright
fabricated.
- Check out your doctor or lawyer. Contact your state
medical licensing board to ensure your doctor is licensed
and has no complaints. Contact the American Bar Association
to see if your lawyer has been disciplined for unethical
behavior.
- Contact the National
Insurance Crime Bureau if you suspect a scam.
The toll-free number is 1-800-835-6422 (24 hours a
day, seven days a week). Give license plate number,
location of the accident, people involved, why you
think this was a fraud, and as many other details
as possible.

Contact Information
| Insurance Fraud Investigator |
Det. Michael Simard |
| E-Mail Address |
MSimard@lawpd.com |
| Telephone |
978-794-5900 ext. 623 |

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