Sujet : Re: DMV warns all drivers
De : mds (at) *nospam* bogus.nodomain.nowhere (Mike Spencer)
Groupes : misc.news.internet.discussDate : 18. Feb 2025, 06:58:27
Autres entêtes
Organisation : Bridgewater Institute for Advanced Study - Blacksmith Shop
Message-ID : <87seob6bgc.fsf@enoch.nodomain.nowhere>
References : 1
User-Agent : Gnus v5.7/Emacs 20.7
JAB <
here@is.invalid> writes:
DMV warns all drivers -- beware of this trendy behavior in the US --
they crash your car to collect on your insurance
The New York State Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) has issued a
warning to all drivers. Why? Because a new scam is affecting driving:
staged accidents. As you read, there are people who fake crashes on
purpose to scam insurance companies and get some money. How do they do
it? They can brake suddenly so that other cars hit them from behind,
drive recklessly or do anything reckless to make it look like another
driver was at fault. But... what if you get into one of these
accidents? You could end up paying even if it wasn't your fault. Below
we're going to tell you all the important details so that if you get
into one of these fake accidents, you know how to react
https://unionrayo.com/en/dmv-staged-car-crashes-ny/
I was nearly the victim of such a scam when I was a teenager 60 years
ago, driving the not very new family Chrysler. Hit from behind at a
stop light, very gentle bump on the bumper, exchanged info w/ a
middle-aged man. And observed that (a) there was substantial damage
to the hood of the other car in a place where it couldn't possibly
have contacted mine and (b) the the damaged area showed rust.
Recounted this to our insurance guy. When he heard about the rust, he
said, "Ah-ha! Don't worry about it." Didn't learn if they nailed the
guy for fraud or just blew him off.
-- Mike Spencer Nova Scotia, Canada