Dean
Submitted False Applications for Insurance Premium Financing
ATLANTA—An insurance broker who
submitted false applications for insurance premium financing was sentenced
today by United States District Judge Willis B. Hunt, Jr. to serve four years,
two months in federal prison for using fictitious names in the course of a mail
fraud scheme. Douglas Terry Dean, 61, of Jasper, Georgia, pleaded guilty to
these charges on August 25, 2011.
“Fraud in the insurance industry leads
to higher costs for everyone, including the ultimate consumer,” said United
States Attorney Sally Quillian Yates. “This defendant’s scheme impacted not
only his direct victims, but everyone who bears the burden of fraud by having
to pay higher prices for goods and services.”
Dean was sentenced to four years, two
months in prison, to be followed by three years of supervised release. He was
ordered to pay restitution totaling approximately $6,964,157. Dean was
convicted of these charges on August 25, 2011 upon his plea of guilty.
According to United States Attorney
Yates, the charges, and other information presented in court: Dean was an
insurance agent who owned his own firm, Dean & Moore Inc. Dean specialized
in assisting commercial clients obtain insurance policies, as well as financing
to pay for those policies. Dean submitted numerous false and fraudulent
applications for financing to premium finance companies. Some of these
applications were in the names of real people or companies, while others were
submitted for fictitious entities.
The false information was not the same
on every application, but examples include the amount to be financed or the
existence of an insurance policy when none existed. On some applications, Dean
neglected to inform the premium finance company that the insurance policy had
already been financed by another company. Dean defrauded the premium finance
companies of approximately $6,964,157, which he must now pay as restitution.
This case was investigated by special
agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Assistant United States Attorney Christopher
C. Bly prosecuted the case.
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