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    GTA raids target alleged vehicle fraud

    Toronto police say they have smashed a fraud ring that allegedly reported dozens of fake and staged collisions to authorities.

    Thirty-seven people have been arrested, after police undertook a series of raids across the Greater Toronto Area on Thursday morning. Dozens of charges have been laid.

    Police say the arrests resulted from an investigation that began when two vehicles were brought into a collision reporting centre in 2009.

    The supposed collision drew the attention of officers who deduced that “something just didn’t seem right with it,” Insp. Gord Jones told reporters during a Thursday press conference.

    It turned out that the collision had been staged.

    Charges were laid, and the case eventually led police and insurers in the direction of other fake collisions, which were subsequently investigated.

    That joint investigation, called Project Whiplash, eventually identified 77 fake and staged collisions.

    Chief Bill Blair said Thursday that insurance companies ended up paying millions of dollars in claims as a result.

    “This is a multimillion-dollar fraud that was being perpetuated here in the GTA and certainly there was a small number of people who have been exploiting a large number of people,” Blair said.

    Police allege that paralegals and rehabilitation clinic owners were part of the fraud, helping to provide and submit paperwork that was submitted to insurers.

    Det. Mike McCulloch said collisions can be very lucrative fraud opportunities, because of the amount of money that each person in a vehicle can claim from an insurer.

    “You can make about $50,000 per person in a vehicle,” he said.

    McCulloch said people are often offered money to file false injury claims from accidents that were faked or staged.

    In the collisions under investigation in Project Whiplash, members of the South Asian community were frequently approached by people organizing the fraud.

    And for that reason, police are warning the community to be on guard for such propositions in the future.

    “We want to offer support and advice to those who might be tempted to get involved in this behaviour,” said Blair.

    “We want them to know, first of all, it’s dangerous. And secondly, they open themselves up to criminal prosecution for their involvement.”

    What do you feel about this article?

     

    4 comments

    • arizona  •  3 months ago
      Blair when you going clen up towing gangsters mafia so you afreid of them or they pay under table on time
    • Good Cdn  •  Mississauga, Ontario  •  3 months ago
      I'm curious to know the citizenship status?. If recent immigrants, say under 3 yrs, then immigration made a mistake and let in criminals and they should be sent back, after making full restitution plus punitative damages. If citizens for over 3 yrs, our mistake, make them pay back the money x 10. Fraud against the government/ public should carry stiff enough financial penalties that people see the risk too great to commit the crime.
    • terry  •  3 months ago
      Go to canoe.ca and see the names of the people involved.
    • Yahoo user  •  3 months ago
      very few details? is dis Anonymous (kill-Bill)?
    [ [ [['xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx', 11]], '27013743', '0' ], [ [['keyword', 9999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999]], 'videoID', '1', 'overwrite-pre-description', 'overwrite-link-string', 'overwrite-link-url' ] ]
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