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Liar, Liar, Pants on Fire


Barry Zalma, Esq., CFE presents videos so you can learn how insurance  fraud is perpetrated and what is necessary to deter or defeat insurance  fraud.


If Louie has been born fifty years earlier, he would be called a gigolo.  Louie was a classically handsome man. He stood 6’2” tall, combed his  black hair straight back in a style that would do a Madison Avenue  advertising executive proud. His eyes were an unblinking, watery blue  that seemed to caress any woman at whom he looked. He ran three miles  every morning and maintained a 180-pound, lithe physique.  Louie had a pleasant personality. Everyone he met liked him. He could  drink beer with the boys and sip wine with distinguished and well-bred  women. He wore a tuxedo as if Calvin Klein had his body in mind when it  was designed.  Louie was not smart. Louie graduated from Thomas Jefferson High School  in San Jose with a solid D- average. After leaving high school Louie  worked at various menial jobs from janitor to fry-cook. He seldom held a  job for more than six months. 


Louie loved to dance. On weekends he would drive up to San Francisco and  spend every night dancing in the clubs. It was on one of these dancing  adventures in San Francisco that changed Louie’s life. Louie met Toni Di  Battaglia. They danced every dance until the club closed at 4:00 a.m.  They danced disco, waltzes and even country and western line dances.  Toni told him she worked for the Teamsters Union out of New Jersey and  visited San Francisco monthly.  When Toni learned that Louie lived in San Jose, she invited him to her  hotel and their relationship blossomed. Toni was a wealthy and powerful  woman in her own right. She had a husband twenty years her senior who  did not understand her. Louie was her release. They were in love. Toni  did not love Louie for his intelligence. She did not love Louie for his  ability to communicate. Toni loved Louie because he was beautiful, a  good dancer and made her look good whenever they were out together.


The lawyer was instructed to examine Louie under oath. The insurance  company hoped the lawyer would gain more detailed descriptions of the  items stolen. They expected, with professional questioning, Louie would  establish the true amount of his loss. They could not pay because their  appraiser told them the loss could be in a range from $40,000 to $1  million.  Louie testified for two days. He was frightened. The lawyer, although  always friendly caused Louie to break out in cold sweats he hoped was  not visible. He did not tell the truth about anything to the lawyer.  Louie limited his descriptions of the property stolen to the list he had  written before he called the insurance company. Despite how detailed  the lawyer’s probing, Louie stuck to the description he had written.  When the lawyer questioned Louie’s ability to earn money to keep up the  condo, he created a story to show that he had a source of income. Louie  told the lawyer that Toni’s “family” sent him, after her death, an  annuity of $10,000 cash every month. The money came each month in a  plain brown baggage via UPS.  Carla took Toni’s place. Louie still lives in his condo surrounded by  antiques. Whenever Carla visits, Louie receives a new bauble. Carla pays  his expenses.  Louie will never again try insurance fraud. Honest people will pay more  for insurance than they should.  


(c) 2022 Barry Zalma & ClaimSchool, Inc.


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