Insurance Scam Plotted by Mich. Prison Inmates Takes Fatal Twist
According to the Coalition Against Insurance Fraud, what started as a life-insurance fraud scheme ended up as an execution.
Michigan inmates Cameron Wade Sanders and Kevin Mykolaitis hatched a con while in prison to create a fake business, take out life insurance on each other as business partners, then fake one of their deaths and split the insurance money, officials allege. They set up the suspected scheme after getting out of jail—except for one fatal twist. Mykolaitis shot Sanders for real so he could keep the money himself, prosecutors say. His body was found in a field near a Detroit-area mall.
Mykolaitis called the insurance agency a week before Sanders’ body was found to ask if all of the premiums had been paid. If convicted, he faces life in state prison.
Source: Coalition Against Insurance Fraud
- Openly’s Tech-Forward Approach Includes AI in Claims
- The Big Dog Is Off the Tech Porch: State Farm as ‘Next Gen Good Neighbor’
- California Fire Spread Slows But Dangerous Conditions Linger
- CommScope Sued by Lenders for at Least $150 Million Over Alleged Breach
- Bayer Banking on US Supreme Court’s Help to Rein in Roundup Lawsuits
- Hail to High Variance: Rethinking Test Squares and Roof Damage Assessment
- ‘Big Tobacco’ Moment for Cannabis: What Insurers Need to Know About Murray v. Cresco
- Ransom Attacks up, but Payments Headed Down as Cyber Becomes Top of Mind