The Future of Fighting Insurance Crime

Wednesdays with Woodward® webinar series

April 20, 2022

Wednesday 1:00 p.m.-2:00 p.m. ET

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How do you catch an insurance criminal? David J. Glawe, President and CEO of the National Insurance Crime Bureau, and Nick Seminara, EVP and Chief Claim Officer at Travelers, joined Wednesdays with Woodward to provide a behind-the-scenes look at the latest methods their teams use to root out insurance fraud and protect consumers, with a spotlight on Travelers’ use of data and analytics to catch criminals.

Summary

What did we learn? Here are the top takeaways from The Future of Fighting Insurance Crime.

National crime rates are “unprecedented,” but “no surprise.” That’s how David J. Glawe, President and CEO of the National Insurance Crime Bureau (NICB) sees it, noting that anxiety and anger over the pandemic, geopolitical unrest, unemployment, depleted social resources and public distrust in law enforcement have created “a perfect storm that has led to increased crime that we’ve never seen before in the history of keeping statistics.”

Insurance carriers are targeted with fraud more than ever. Optimization of the claims process is one reason. Nick Seminara, EVP and Chief Claim Officer at Travelers mentioned how “we operate more efficiently, and we’ve shortened the length of the time from notice of a loss to payment. Handling a claim in hours or minutes challenges us to make sure we’re not opening ourselves up to insurance crimes and new schemes.” Allocation of law enforcement for perceived “victimless” crimes is another. “Because [violent] crime is so high in many areas of the United States, there is a lack of resources to address these sophisticated criminal networks committing financial crimes,” added Glawe.

Insurance fraud accounts for $85+ billion in annual losses. “These are crimes of power, it’s about how to make money,” said Glawe. The percentage of P&C claims involving fraud may be underestimated. The common belief is about 10%, but it’s a very tough thing to measure,” remarked Seminara. “I think if you broaden that definition a little bit, and the way the industry has defined it, I think it would actually be quite higher.” According to Seminara, one way Travelers works to keep potential criminals from seeing green is to exercise “payout discipline” — paying what we owe, no more and no less, and paying promptly.

As insurance crimes become more sophisticated, so do the tools used to fight it. “The best fraudulent claim is the one that never happens. The use of data and technology in the fight against insurance crime allows us to be much more proactive, as opposed to reactive,” said Seminara, while describing how Travelers Investigative Services (TIS) — a multidisciplinary team of trained investigators with diverse backgrounds — works to deter, detect and investigate fraud at every stage by leveraging:

  • Big data and analytics
  • Artificial intelligence
  • State-of-the-art digital forensics
  • A hybrid technology model
  • Prosecution and fraud awareness

Collaboration is essential. From education and crime prevention to sharing data and insights, Travelers takes a holistic, interdisciplinary approach and cooperates with the NICB and industry partners. “This is a joint fight that we all have to be together on,” Seminara concluded. Glawe agreed, noting that “the NICB has never been more important or relevant to the public and our insurance carrier partners because we bring unique expertise and intelligence-driven operations to fight insurance fraud and crime, to pass information on to our partners, and also help our state and federal local law enforcement to put the bad actors in jail.”

Presented by the Travelers Institute, the American Property Casualty Insurance Association, the Master's in Financial Technology (FinTech) Program at the University of Connecticut School of Business, the Risk and Uncertainty Management Center at the University of South Carolina’s Darla Moore School of Business, the Young Risk Professionals Twin Cities Chapter and the MetroHartford Alliance.

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Speakers

David J. Glawe

David J. Glawe
President and CEO, National Insurance Crime Bureau; former Under Secretary & Chief Intelligence Officer, U.S. Department of Homeland Security

Nick Seminara

Nick Seminara
Executive Vice President and Chief Claim Officer, Travelers

Host

Joan Woodward headshot
Joan Woodward
President, Travelers Institute; Executive Vice President, Public Policy, Travelers


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