Four truly outlandish cases

Oscillating fraud

A man acknowledged his guilt after being exposed as the acting head of a traveling rock band while collecting disability from the association where he once worked. The shyster had cashed more than $ 30,000 in disability checks for an alleged arm injury he claimed to have incurred while in association business. The man’s ‘injured arm’ did not prevent him from performing across the country with his group.

Crooked deals

The man was the CEO of a corporation. Later, it was discovered that he had been behind a multi-million dollar insurance plot involving workers’ compensation patients. Along with 15 others, he created a lotion and subsequently paid doctors approximately $ 25 million to prescribe the cream to those receiving workers’ compensation. Tragically, there were also losses of life. A mother who used the cream had placed a finger that had residues of the cream she had been using in her baby’s mouth, resulting in the death of the child. In addition to fraud, the man behind it all was charged with manslaughter.

Imprisoned pain

Maybe being in jail never hurt as much as this case. One owner in Washington state made fifty-one car stops at various hospital emergency rooms and emergency care health centers to illegally obtain pain relievers. The guy would come to the health care facility and say he got hurt at a job he never worked at. At the same time, he was assuming someone else’s identity while providing a false social security number, leaving medical centers with nearly $ 150,000 of unpaid workers’ compensation bills. The man was sent to prison for more than two years.

Dancing to jail?

An artist collected more than $ 51,000 in disability insurance checks due to an injury while working as a dancer. The partner continually accepted the benefits as he climbed the ladder of success, culminating in a lead dance role. Additionally, he assumed false names while working as a supporting dancer in a popular performance.

Bike and fall

A former employee was convicted of workers’ compensation fraud because it embellished the actual extent of his injury. The man said he sustained an injury while riding a bicycle while patrolling the college campus where he worked. First, he said that he fell off his bicycle when he hit a rolling melon and injured his right leg. She then changed her story after speaking with her attorney, relaying a version about additional injuries to her back, hips, and other leg. Medical data confirmed that he was lying.