News
Fraudsters faking accidents to rip off insurers
STEPHENE MUDIARI | NATION Nairobi businessman Paul Ogola narrates how he fell victim to the latest insurance fraud during an interview at Nation Centre in Nairobi.
Posted Saturday, July 31 2010 at 21:00
In Summary
- Syndicate involves police officers, unscrupulous garage owners and corrupt insurance officials
A new breed of criminals is fleecing insurance companies by faking road accidents, then lodging claims.
The syndicate involves police officers who issue abstracts for phantom accidents as well as unscrupulous garage owners who bill for imaginary vehicle repairs. Corrupt insurance officials then make false reports to facilitate payments.
The architects of the crime don’t own the “accident” vehicles but use cars hired from companies or individuals.
Nairobi businessman Paul Ogola rented out his Toyota saloon car on April 19, 2010 to a client.
“It was around 5 p.m. He (client) signed a contract, I took copies of his driving licence and national identity card then gave him the keys,” he said.
Mr Ogola has his vehicle installed with a hi-tech tracking system to safeguard it against theft.
“I engaged the system at my office the following day and the monitor screen traced my car to Industrial Area. For hours, the signal indicated the vehicle had remained at the same spot. I got anxious because I could not understand why somebody would pay for a vehicle then not use it,” he told the Sunday Nation.
Mr Ogola grew more concerned when he tried to contact the client on his cell phone, but the number was out of reach. When he tracked the car down to a garage in Industrial Area, mechanics there said it had been towed from an accident scene somewhere between Doonholm and Embakasi.
The car had a dent on the front bumper, suggesting the accident was minor, and that it would cost about Sh30,000 to repair. Mr Ogola did not suspect anything fishy until the following day when he returned to the garage to take pictures, as they would be helpful in insurance claims.
“The vehicle was completely different. The bonnet was bent, the dashboard damaged with airbags out, the headlights were broken,” he said.
What he did not know is that the defaced parts belonged to another vehicle and had been fixed on his car, to create the impression the accident was serious.
At the garage, the mechanics had issued an invoice of Sh300,000 to his insurance company.
An assessor appointed by the insurer had filed a report reflecting the extensive damage on his vehicle warranting the money charged by the mechanic.
Mr Ogola reported the findings to Buru Buru police station. He obtained a copy of the abstract and was surprised to find that the driver of his car at the time of the accident was not his client.
Traffic officers told him that after ramming his car, the other driver had sped off. The abstract listed two witnesses – the driver and a police constable attached to Buru Buru station.
Mr Ogola filed a formal complaint to Police Commissioner Mathew Iteere against the officers. The complaint is being handled on orders of the police boss.
Amos Oketch faced a similar experience last September.
“My client sent an SMS informing me of an accident. He asked me to check the vehicle at the garage,” he said. He found his car had its rear bumper damaged.




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