
New York construction firm and it’s owner
sentenced for insurance fraud.
Mahendranauth Khargie, 36, and his company, GC Stud Inc., substantially underreported the total amount of their payroll during three policy periods between April 2019 and March 2022, resulting in premium fraud. As a NYSIF Workers’ Compensation policyholder, Khargie and his company are required to provide financial records concerning income and employee payroll to NYSIF every year the policyholder renews its coverage. Records revealed that large payments to the defendants were made by three different steel and iron fabrication companies during the time of the investigation. The defendants hid the money, deposited the funds in a JPMorganChase account, and did not provide that account to the NYSIF premium auditors. Over the course of the scheme, Khargie underreported his payroll to NYSIF by more than $3.5 million, resulting in underpayments of the company’s Worker’s Compensation policy premiums.
Construction company must pay $725,000 for wage theft settlement. Christian Siding, a construction company that has worked on projects across DC, must pay $725,000 to resolve allegations that the company failed to pay “prevailing wages" to workers on three publicly-funded affordable housing projects and misclassified workers as independent contractors on 13 additional projects. They were not paid overtime wages when they worked more than 40 hours in a week, did not receive paid sick leave, and were not protected by unemployment insurance or workers’ compensation. The Office of the Attorney General (OAG) also alleged that Christian Siding deprived these workers of overtime wages and benefits, like paid sick leave and overtime pay, that they were legally entitled to. Under the terms of a settlement agreement, Christian Siding will pay more than $364,000 to 229 harmed workers, as well as $360,000 in penalties to the District, and will be required to make significant changes to its business practices and submit to compliance monitoring for two years.
California suspects linked to insurance scam involving staged rideshare crashes. A staged crash on the I-215 freeway that targeted a rideshare driver and aimed to defraud their insurance has led to felony convictions for four men, including one from Hesperia, while a fifth suspect from Adelanto remains charged and faces additional counts of pimping, pandering, and false imprisonment. Kalil Davis pleaded no contest to insurance fraud and assault with a deadly weapon. He was sentenced to 180 days in county jail and two years of felony probation. Meanwhile, Deshawn Perater-Nickson was the registered owner of the vehicle used in the staged crash. He was arrested earlier this year and initially charged with insurance fraud and assault with a deadly weapon. However, while in custody, investigators uncovered evidence linking him to additional crimes including false imprisonment, pimping, and pandering. He is expected to appear in court on January 26, 2026.
GEICO alleges a $4 million no-fault pharmacy fraud scheme in Queens. In a filing dated November 26 in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York, GEICO set out detailed allegations against United Pharmacy NYC Inc., its owner, Irina Alishayeva, two nurse practitioners, and a series of unnamed “John Doe” defendants. The lawsuit alleges: GEICO alleges the defendants exploited individuals involved in motor vehicle accidents who were eligible for Personal Injury Protection benefits by systematically dispensing certain prescription drugs without regard to genuine patient care. According to the filing, the defendants submitted more than $4 million in pharmaceutical claims through United Pharmacy under GEICO policies.
State Farm sued over PHL policies as buyers insurance claim fraud, gutted payouts. The lawsuit, Jason v. State Farm, 25-cv-14507, filed Nov. 26 in Chicago, accuses State Farm of fraud and unjust enrichment, arguing the insurer concealed what it knew about PHL’s condition and the repercussions for policyholders. The allegations: Plaintiffs say they trusted State Farm’s agents and brand, only to discover years later that their promised benefits had quietly shrunk. Three customers bought PHL-issued life insurance from State Farm agents: Jenny Nappo, Patrick McLaughlin and Gordon Jason. Nappo says she expected a $2mn payout when her husband died of cancer but received only $300,000. McLaughlin and Jason each bought policies worth $1.5mn and $500,000, respectively, and now report their benefits capped at $300,000 apiece. PHL’s troubles aren’t new. The Connecticut-based company has dealt with outdated actuarial assumptions, poor investment performance and a decade of balance sheet erosion. Its owner, Golden Gate Capital, tried to stabilise the business using complex risk-shifting transactions, but the fixes didn’t hold. Thousands of policyholders ended up in limbo as PHL’s capital hole widened. Golden Gate didn’t respond to requests for comment. State Farm says it’s aware of the lawsuit but hasn’t been served and can’t comment on the specifics.
Iowa man receives deferred judgment for forging pet insurance claim. Greg Buelow pleaded last Thursday to tampering with records, an aggravated misdemeanor. In his written plea, Buelow admitted “I did falsify, destroy, remove or conceal a writing or record with the intent to injure, deceive or to conceal a wrongdoing.” In addition, he pleaded guilty last week for submitting a forged receipt for pet medications to an insurance company and received a deferred judgment Tuesday. Buelow provided false information to an insurance company for a pet insurance claim. The submitted falsified invoice for reimbursement, purportedly issued by a veterinary clinic, was for prescription medications for his dog. The incident happened June 2, the complaint stated. The complaints don’t include the amount of false reimbursements.
Texas man arrested on organized criminal activity and insurance fraud charges. Jorge Celiz, has been arrested and is currently in custody in Tarrant County, Texas, where he is facing two serious felony charges. The allegations: No additional details regarding the alleged criminal scheme have been released, and it is unclear whether more charges may follow. U.S. authorities have not yet issued a formal statement regarding the circumstances leading to his arrest. Celiz is expected to face court in the coming days as the investigation continues. Records indicate that Celiz has been placed on no-bond hold conditions, meaning he cannot be released until further court proceedings. His current housing location is the Tarrant County Corrections Center, where he remains detained pending legal action.
|