Quantcast
National Underwriter Property And Casualty Insurance News.

Breaking News
NU Exclusives

 Liberty Mutual Settles Kickback Allegations 

 
Published 1/3/2011 

Print This Article
Return To Article
Normal Text
Large Text

NU Online News Service, Jan. 3, 1:15 p.m. EST

Liberty Mutual reached an agreement with two state attorneys general to pay a total of $7.5 million to settle allegations it engaged in a bid-rigging and kickback scheme with insurance brokers.

A spokeswoman for the Boston-based insurer confirmed the settlements, saying that the company would pay the state of Connecticut $2 million and New York a total of $5.5 million. Under the agreement, reached last week, the company neither admits nor denies any wrongdoing.

In a statement, the insurer said, “We’ve always maintained Liberty had done nothing wrong. At this stage we think it better to pay these relatively small amounts and put the matter behind us.”

For his part, Connecticut's attorney general throughout the investigation, Richard Blumenthal, called Liberty’s “conduct reprehensible, illegally increasing insurance premiums for consumers and businesses and undermining the free market. The company brazenly broke the law, using underhanded, unethical and illegal methods to rip off its customers.”

Mr. Blumenthal becomes a Connecticut U.S. Senator this week.

He added that this was the last suit from his investigation of the insurance industry that began back in 2005

The suit goes back to a kickback scheme unearthed at insurance broker Marsh, when it was discovered that executives at one of its units worked with insurers to produce phony bids and steer insurance contracts to certain insurers in exchange for lucrative contingent commissions.

The 2005 investigation by then-New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer resulted in the banning of contingent commission payments to Marsh, Aon, Willis and Arthur J. Gallagher for a period of several years. The ban was just lifted in 2010.

The brokers also paid millions of dollars to compensate consumers harmed by the alleged practice, with Marsh paying the largest agreement of $850 million.

Insurers were not spared, paying significant settlement dollars over the years. Among the most significant: American International Group paid $1.64 billion to state and federal authorities in 2006; Zurich paid $171.7 million that same year; and The Hartford paid $115 million in 2007.

Liberty Mutual did win one victory in 2008, fighting charges stemming from the bid-rigging scandal. A New York State Judge found in a civil trial that the company was not obligated to inform customers about the payment of contingent commissions to producers.

In New York, the Attorney General’s Office also announced an agreement where four insurers would pay close to $120 million in excess funds to the state for excess fees charged to policyholders covering workers’ compensation insurance.

The companies are ACE, Zurich, Pennsylvania Manufacturers and CNA.

The Attorney General’s Office said the companies fully cooperated with the investigation.



Comment on This Article

Name:
Email (will not be published):
Subject:
Comment:

    • 1/3/2011 3:59:59 PM
    • Marge Colvin
    • Insurance Kick-back
    • I commend the Attorny Generals for going after the Insurance Co that rip-off the consumers. The fines should be much more than what they were required to pay.
    • 1/3/2011 6:42:52 PM
    • Steve Sipos
    • NYS Fines
    • As a life time citizen of New York, I am sick of the run away government. NYS is broke. The politicians are less than ethical. Where does all the money go from these corporate investigations and fines? Millions and millions of dollars in levied fines. Where is the money gentlemen?
    • 1/4/2011 11:21:02 AM
    • ALBERT EVANGELISTA
    • Liberty Mutual Settles KickbackAllegations Article
    • Is'nt iw wonderful how the Attorney General got these very Large insurance companies to pay millions in fines? I did not read about any restitution to the Insured's that they hurt financially, nor any jail time for the big wigs who let this happen. Would'nt be nice if a Bank robber could give some or all of the money back as a fine and walk away.... instead of serving 5 to 10 years in jail. I always thought breaking the law required punishment but if you take millions and your a white collar ... fines will do just as well.... how nice is that? Albert Evangelista

Recent Issues


Archived Issues

Most Read Articles


Related Articles


From Our Partners
Provides practical, authoritative sales and management information for indepent retail and wholesale producers of P&C insurance.
Online training, course development, live events, CE program management and processing services for financial, tax and insurance professionals.
Highline Data’s Insurance Analyst PRO is the market’s premier source for insurance industry statutory and GAAP financial filings. Our suite of online advanced search and analytical tools serves the industry’s need for timely data on more than 8,000 companies.


www.summitbusinessmedia.com © Copyright National Underwriter Property & Casualty. A Summit Business Media publication. All Rights Reserved.