Thursday, June 3, 2021

Fraud in L&I Claims and Workers' Compensation Claims in Washington State

L&I scam


Recently, there was a story about a who pleaded guilty to a first-degree theft felony, in Renton, Washington. The man used his wife's name and social security number to obtain work. He worked in multiple delivery jobs as a driver while collecting L&I time-loss and pension benefits. To receive pension benefits means he contended that he was incapable of working on a permanent basis. Moreover, in addition to the criminal sentence, he must repay $340K in benefits. Ultimately, this is one of the largest L&I scams in history. This story received a lot of media coverage.


Receiving time-loss or pension benefits under a workers' compensation claim


A work injury claimant may not be able to work while recovering from an industrial injury or occupational disease. Therefore, to support injured workers during their recovery, they should get time-loss compensation. Here, to be paid, the time-loss compensation must be "certified". Under a state-funded L&I claim, basic time-loss certification requires:


(1) Chart notes and forms from the attending provider, or the treating or consulting provider;


(2) An accompanying Activity Prescription Form (APF) from the examining provider; and


(3) A Work Status Form (WSF) completed by the workplace injury claimant.


Generally, L&I makes every injured worker complete a WSF approximately every 30 days. If the work injury claimant fails to complete a WSF, then L&I might stop time-loss payments. The WSF is the best tool that L&I employs to prove willful misrepresentation. Explicitly, the WSF specifically asks the work injury claimant if they are working. It is not ambiguous. In fact, the bottom of the form must be signed by the injured worker. Signing serves as confirmation that the form contains truthful information.


L&I claim fraud while on pension


If you receive pension payments because of your workplace injury, you must complete and file a form once a year. The name of this annual form is Declaration of Entitlement. Remember, when completing this form, it must also be notarized. The form clearly asks whether the work injury claimant worked since submitting their last declaration. If the form is not complete within 30 days of its due date, L&I may suspend pension payment.


Final remarks


To summarize, dishonest people can hide work activity while collecting time-loss compensation or pension payments. Consequently, they are causing real and measurable damage to the workers' compensation system. This behavior is unspeakable and is not tolerated. As L&I said in a recent announcement, this kind of willful misrepresentation is not a victimless crime.


Fraud in workers' compensation claims and L&I claims hurts honest people trying to get better after a work injury. Recall, employees (and employers) pay L&I insurance premiums out of their pocket. They (and other stakeholders) are obvious victims. And, with that in mind, it's important that victims of workplace accidents must be honest about their work status. That way, the system can continue to help those who really need help and assistance.


This article was first published on https://tarareck.com/workers-compensation-claim-fraud/





Source by Tara Reck