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Caramadre portrays himself as a modern-day Robin Hood. He's an Italian kid from Providence, R.I., who grew up modestly, became a certified public accountant and then put himself through night school to get a law degree. He has given millions to charities and the Catholic Church. As he tells his life story, his native ability helps him outsmart a phalanx of high-priced lawyers, actuaries and corporate suits. Number 18 came to fruition, he says, when a sizeable segment of the life insurance industry ignored centuries of experience and commonsense in a heated competition for market share.
Federal prosecutors in Rhode Island and insurance companies paint a very different picture of Caramadre: They say he's an unscrupulous con artist who engaged in identity theft, conspiracy and two different kinds of fraud. Prosecutors contend he deceived the terminally ill to make millions for himself and his clients. For them, Caramadre's can't-miss investment strategy was an illusion in which he preyed on the sick and vulnerable.
ProPublica has taken a close look at the Caramadre case because it offers a window into a larger issue: The transformation of the life insurance industry away from its traditional business of insuring lives to peddling complex financial products. This shift has not been a smooth one. Particularly during the lead up to the financial crisis, companies wrote billions worth of contracts that now imperil their financial health.
Full Article & Source:
Death Takes a Policy: How a Lawyer Exploited the Fine Print and Found Himself Facing Federal Charges
4 comments:
Peasant's insurance!
How does someone know if someone else has taken an insurance policy out on them?
I hope he goes to prison for a long, long time.
Reminds me of when a community suffers a tornado and the community pulls together to help each other out. And outsiders - profiteers - come charging three times the rate and doing shoddy work.
This guy doesn't do lawyers any good. I"m sure many think he's clever, but no, he's just greedy in my opinion.
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