Archive for the ‘Assurance / Insurance’ Category
January 16th, 2012
Alleged victim loses everything
The trial starts Thursday of a down-on-his-luck businessman Norman Glass, who stole another man’s identity and made millions selling his victim’s assets to unsuspecting buyers.
Get-rich-quick scheme
About six months ago Glass cooked up a get-rich-quick scheme after hearing about an American living in the UK, who owned a building lot as well as an apartment on 14th Street. He began by assuming the identity of the property owner, a man named Kalev. Glass grew a beard and acquired a cane, a cap and the gait of a man 26 years his senior. He then created the documents that would enable Glass to present himself as Kalev. He began spending time outside the latter’s apartment building, where he collected Kalev’s mail and absorbed whatever information he could find. He used a computer to create a high-quality forgery of Kalev’s official identity card using Kalev’s personal information and his own photograph.
Sells Apartment
Next, according to Glass’s charge sheet, he placed an advertisement for Kalev’s apartment on an online classified-ads site, for $450,000. He also listed the lot with real estate agents and asked a prominent law firm to help him dispose of the property. At that point Glass also announced that he also had an apartment he wanted to sell. A man who is identified in Glass’s indictment only as D went for the bait. He was nearing retirement after working for the past 40 years at an engineering company where he was on the staff of a missile project. D and his wife met Glass at the upscale law office. There, in the presence of attorneys and real estate agents, a contract was signed. No one knew that Glass was not Kalev, the property’s real owner.
Payment
D agreed to give Glass 90 percent of the payment as soon as the property deed was assigned to him, and to pay the balance after the property development fees were paid.
The next day, Glass went alone to the Registry Office, carrying Kalev’s ID card and copies of the notarial seals used the previous day on the deed of sale: Glass had had them duplicated at a stationery store. No one at the registry office questioned his credentials, and he registered the lot to D and his wife. Afterward, as promised, D paid Glass from his retirement savings, in cash.
The police
A week or so later, as D waited for Glass to call and tell him the sale was completed, the near-retiree instead got a call from Superintendent Ross of the police fraud unit. Ross summoned D and his wife to unit headquarters where he told them: "We think you are victims of a sting. You purchased a lot from a con artist who impersonated Kalev," Ross explained. In addition, the real Kalev filed a police complaint over the theft of the property. D and his wife were overwhelmed. "I felt as if my world had crashed around me. After 40 years of work, that was all the money I had and suddenly they tell me I’m left with nothing. They asked me to point out the man in the picture and all at once many things became clear. I am simply lost," said D.
Error
Glass, the police say, made one fatal error in his perfect sting: Somehow, one of the documents he gave the lawyers contained his real name. Fraud squad detectives created a sting of their own, stringing him along and arranging for a meeting at the law office, where he was arrested. In a search of Glass’s home after his arrest, police officers found the cap, the cane and eyeglasses he wore to the contract-signing at the lawyers’ office.
Glass denied any connection to the affair and claimed that someone framed him. The police have not found the money that D paid Glass, who owns no property that could be seized in order to repay D.
Be alert! Don’t be a victim!
Tags: Apartment purchase, identity theft, Property deals, Sting
Posted in Assurance / Insurance, Business, Credit Cards, Economy, Employment, Finance, Identity Theft, Personal / Internet, Retirement | No Comments »
January 14th, 2012
How do you mean he turned left instead of right?
Hundreds of telephones must be ringing in deserted offices around the world and in Italy today. The phones in insurance companies are unmanned on Saturdays and calling on Sunday won’t do any good either. Can you imagine the chaos that has already started and will continue for the next days, months and even years as insurance companies pass the buck from one to another? Can you explain, how, in the year 2012, a luxury cruise liner, the Costa Concordia, owned by the Carnival Corporation and operated by Costa Cruises, built in 2004 at a cost of about $570 million can hit a sand bank off the coast of Italy and end up on its side in the water with a huge hole in its bottom?
No ordinary ship
How could this ship, a modern cruise liner and the largest ship to be built in Italy at 114,500 tons, 950 feet long and 118 feet wide and able to carry 3,700 passengers and a crew of 1,100, come to such an ugly end? She is lying on her side about half submerged in the water like some mammoth sea creature waiting for the kindly sheriff to end her misery by putting a bullet through her head. The ship had 1,500 staterooms; 505 had private balconies and 55 had direct access to the central spa. The Costa Concordia had one of the world’s largest wellness centers at sea, the Samsara Spa, a two-level, 20,000 foot wellness area, with gym, a thalassotherapy pool, sauna, Turkish bath and a solarium. The ship also had four swimming pools, two with retractable covers, five spas and a poolside screen on the Pool deck. There were five onboard restaurants, thirteen bars, a cigar and cognac bar and a coffee and chocolate bar. Entertainment options included a three-level theater, casino and a discotheque. There was a children’s area equipped with PlayStation products, Grand Prix motor racing simulator and an Internet cafe.
Here come the insurance claims
In the “Claim Age” in which we live, I imagine that every single passenger and crew member who was on board on Friday evening will be lodging a claim against the ship’s owners, the Master, the helmsman, the cruise operator and anyone who has the any connection to the cruise-shipping industry. Even though the ship didn’t sink like the Titanic, who whose 100 year disaster will be commemorated in April this year, just about everything will be recovered but will have been ruined by immersion in sea water. If it is not soaked for a few weeks, the fumes of the salt will do the job.
Now what?
Naval engineers must all be hard at work working out a system of sealing the hull and hauling the giant back onto its bottom. Is there going to be fight over salvage rights, salvage fees and who gets what? Will the ship be fully repaired and made seaworthy again? Will you be booking a cruise on the Costa Concordia sometime in the future?
Posted in Assurance / Insurance, Business, Economy, Employment, Finance, Health Insurance, Travel | No Comments »
January 12th, 2012
My money tree is bare and the there are no new buds
I have suffered a dramatic change. I have had to move from “spending” to “not spending”. I built my personal financial system carefully over years and years of spending money, sometimes cautiously, sometimes rashly and sometimes wildly. At all times I planned, saved and budgeted, always keeping spending directly linked to earning. Now I’m in a “hold spending” period. I saved hundreds of dollars in 2011 by getting some good deals on financial products. You can do it too.
Our shopping expeditions
Years ago I fell into the habit of accompanying my wife on her trips to the supermarket. These outings ranged from ‘totally boring’ to ‘mildly interesting’ until I discovered that there’s a man’s world in the supermarket. I discovered the 10 varieties of olives, the 20 varieties of pickles and the carousel of fiery hot spices. I found the exotic cheese counter and the cheap tee-shirt rack. I bought what I fancied. My job was great, the salary package was generous and I always had money in the bank.
Job collapse
At about 9am one morning I received a phone call from the owner of the company I was managing: “We are closing down. Not enough work, blah, blah, blah… the faltering hi-tech industry, yak, yak, yak… Our shopping trips changed. I still accompany my wife. We go to the supermarket – with a list. We buy the items on the list and come home. Money saved: Considerable.
I’ve made some changes
In the good old days when I had a problem with money, my first port of call would be the bank and my friendly bank manager who would always lean over backwards to help me. That’s gone. These days when I have a problem with money I put as much distance as I can between me and the bank. I’m just another customer and I’ve never met the manager. I changed banks recently, mainly because the bank on Pine Street offered better deals than the bank on Elm Street. If the bank can treat me a casual customer, then I can treat the bank as a casual service.
Check your insurances
I had sudden urge to make sure my “papers” were in order in case I got hit by a bus. The results were surprising. Other than stuff like life insurance, pension and savings which I regard as a ‘do not open’ box unless the agent is present, I looked at such fascinating items as household and auto insurance. It’s been years since I received these policies. If you work on the basis of ‘no claims, no look’ as I do, the years slip away. I took them out and called a couple of new acquaintances in the insurance business. Surprise! The trusty old agents I had used all these years were no longer looking after my interests. They were renewing my policies every year without looking at the premiums. I replaced these policies with a new agent and saved huge amounts of money for the same coverage. I also told the new agent that I would be shopping around for new quotations at every renewal date. If the old agents didn’t look after me do I still have to look after them?
Tags: Banks, Insurance, Money, spending, supermarket
Posted in Assurance / Insurance, Business, Economy, Employment, Finance, Money, Personal / Internet, Retirement, Shopping | No Comments »
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