The Michigan Daily - Friday, July 20, 19Q4 --Page. 17 SWINDLERS COLLECT THROUGH BOGUS ACCIDENTS Insuranee firms lost $1 million in fake claims PHILADELPHIA (AP) - When a young Philadelphia woman told an in- surance claims adjuster she reported an auto accident that never happened, and collected insurance money, gover- nment and industry investigators, were naturally interested. But James Trovarello, a U.S. Postal Service inspector, had no idea when he questioned the woman that he was on the verge of unearthing one of the biggest phony accident scams federal authorities had ever seen. From September 1982, when Trovarello interviewed Linda Craig, to the end of last month, federal grand juries have indicted more than 180 people for staging "accidents" that cost the insurance industry more than $1 million in bogus claims. INVESTIGATORS have an additional 90 or so suspects and expect more indic- tments by the end of the month. Trovarello said he was "absolutely" surprised by the size of the scam, which was allegedly coordinated by a ninth- grade dropout working as manager of a Center City Philadelphia law office. "I didn't think a scheme like this could operate on the magnitude it did," said Trovarello. THE FIRST indication something was amiss came on the last day of summer 1982. An adjuster from the J.C. Penney Casualty Insurance Co. called John Hoda, an industry in- vestigator from Philadelphia, to tell him about Linda Craig. Craig had told the adjuster that her cousin, Aseneth Livingston, had proposed a way to make some easy money: report that she'd been driving a car that struck an auto with four passengers. Hoda, a special agent for the In- he thought only four or five people were involved in filing false claims. Trovarello went to the Mid-East In- dex Bureau, an insurance industry in- formation clearinghouse, with the names of the four "victims" of the "ac- cident" Craig had described. Each of the four had previously reported they had been invoved in ac- cidents in which four or five others 'People were getting taken, but who were they going to complain to? They couldn't go to the police.' - John Hoda J.C. Penney Casualty Insurance investigator Livingston, the postal inspector said, "It became quite clear that there was a large and elaborate scheme to defraud going on here, and that there was someone behind it named 'Big Mama."' ARREST AND search warrants for people implicated - the number grew to 40 within three weeks - also provided crucial evidence in the form of a notebook Livingston kept. It listed Big Mama's phone number. Big Mama, as it turned out, was Mable Ketter, a huge woman with a booming voice who was a key figure in the operation. She was a "runner" bringing alleged accident victims to the law firm of Rosenfield, Ring & Benn, Trovarello said. ACCORDING to court testimony, the participant from north Philadelphia would gather around Ketter's kitchen table and decide who would be the vic- tims and who would be the "hitters" in the accident. Once they had their stories down, they would go to the Rosenfield law of- fices, where William Mele, the office manager, would usually accept the case for the firm. "You don't call Bill until you got it all together," testified Ketter in December at Mele's trial. "Then you call Bill Mele when you got something to tell him." surance Crime Prevention Institute, an investigative arm financed by the in- dustry, contacted Trovarello because early evidence indicated suspects were using general delivery postal box. THE TWO went to Craig's north Philadelphia home to see if she had more to say. The woman told them she was to have been paid $250 for her participation. "She had a belief that it was a very big scam," recalled Trovarello. AT FIRST, the postal inspector said, were injured. Trovarello investigated and found that none of the accidents had actually occurred. "IMMEDIATELY, it blew up," Trovarello said. "And it just kept growing." Craig agreed to wear a concealed tape recorder and to allow her home telephone calls to be recorded. "She became a very good infor- mant," Trovarello said. After one particularly revealing phone conversation between Craig and Jackson asks blacks to support Mondale {Continued from Page h1) booed King and Young on the conven- manager, discounted suggestions that believed most likely to disrupt the par- "We're entering a new phase of the tion floor, and said he was embarressed blacks will be leaving the convention ty, Mondale forces did what was campaign," King said entering the by their behavior. empty-handed. "Nothing can be further divisive," he said, referring to Mon- meeting. "Unity comes from working Although Jackson told the convention from the truth," he said. dale's appointment of Georgia state together." Tuesday nightthat he would work for MONDALE HAS promised to include Democratic chairman Bert Lance as King added that "you win some and the nominee, Lamont Godwin, a top blacks in leadership positions in his his general campaign chairman. you lose some ... The negotiation is still Jackson aide, said the campaign wants campaign and, if he is elected, in his going on." "rainbow person" - from the civil administration. Godwin said the Jackson camp can- JACKSON CALLED for the unity, rights leader's political constituency - Although Jackson has pledged his not make its campaign machinery work meeting Wednesday during a speech as co-chairmain of both the Democratic support, Godwin said, "There are some for Mondale unless there is a smooth, before a' caucus of black convention National Committee and the Mondale of our people who are not as con- harmonious relationship among blacks. delegates. In that speech, he repriman- campaign. siliatory." "That's what's being negotiated ded delegates who had heckled and Arnold Pinkney, Jackson's campaign "Even though we were the ones now," he said. Candidates fought long, hard (Continued from Page 8) consideration from afar. The National Organization for Women threatened a floor fight if a woman was not chosen, and reports surfaced that Geraldine Ferraro, a three-term member of Congress and former prosecutor from Queens, N.Y., had flubbed her interview. On July 11, Hart said for the first time that he would take the No. 2 job if asked. But he was too late. Ferraro flew to Minnesota that night, and at noon on July 12, she and Mondale entered the chamber of the Minnesota House of Representatives in St. Paul - the same forum in which Mondale had announced his own candidacy on Feb. 21,1983. "History speaks to us today. Our founders said in the Constitution, 'We the people,' not just the rich or men or whites but all of us," said Mondale. "our message is that America is for everyone who works hard and con- tributes to our blessed country. That's battle what my choice is about and that's what Gerry's about. The story of her road from the Ferraro home to this moment is really a story of a classic American dream. She's earned her way here today." The convention was still four days away, but it was all over but the shouting. Mondale had locked up the nomination and chosen a running mate who will be the first woman in U.S. history to run for the second-highest of- fice in the land on a major-party ticket. Subscribe to The Michigan Daily nuy..emneiW4 DI . 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