626.989 Investigation by department or Division of
Insurance Fraud; compliance; immunity; confidential
information; reports to division; division investigator's
power of arrest.--
(1) For the purposes of this section, a person
commits a "fraudulent insurance act" if the person knowingly
and with intent to defraud presents, causes to be presented,
or prepares with knowledge or belief that it will be
presented, to or by an insurer, self-insurer, self-insurance
fund, servicing corporation, purported insurer, broker, or any
agent thereof, any written statement as part of, or in support
of, an application for the issuance of, or the rating of, any
insurance policy, or a claim for payment or other benefit
pursuant to any insurance policy, which the person knows to
contain materially false information concerning any fact
material thereto or if the person conceals, for the purpose of
misleading another, information concerning any fact material
thereto. For the purposes of this section, the term "insurer"
also includes any health maintenance organization and the term
"insurance policy" also includes a health maintenance
organization subscriber contract.
(2) If, by its own inquiries or as a result of
complaints, the department or its Division of Insurance Fraud
has reason to believe that a person has engaged in, or is
engaging in, a fraudulent insurance act, an act or practice
that violates s. 626.9541
or s. 817.234,
or an act or practice punishable under s. 624.15,
it may administer oaths and affirmations, request the
attendance of witnesses or proffering of matter, and collect
evidence. The department shall not compel the attendance of
any person or matter in any such investigation except pursuant
to subsection (4).
(3) If matter that the department or its
division seeks to obtain by request is located outside the
state, the person so requested may make it available to the
division or its representative to examine the matter at the
place where it is located. The division may designate
representatives, including officials of the state in which the
matter is located, to inspect the matter on its behalf, and it
may respond to similar requests from officials of other
states.
(4)(a) The department or its division may
request that an individual who refuses to comply with any such
request be ordered by the circuit court to provide the
testimony or matter. The court shall not order such compliance
unless the department or its division has demonstrated to the
satisfaction of the court that the testimony of the witness or
the matter under request has a direct bearing on the
commission of a fraudulent insurance act, on a violation of s.
626.9541
or s. 817.234,
or on an act or practice punishable under s. 624.15
or is pertinent and necessary to further such investigation.
(b) Except in a prosecution for perjury, an
individual who complies with a court order to provide
testimony or matter after asserting a privilege against
self-incrimination to which the individual is entitled by law
may not be subjected to a criminal proceeding or to a civil
penalty with respect to the act concerning which the
individual is required to testify or produce relevant matter.
(c) In the absence of fraud or bad faith, a
person is not subject to civil liability for libel, slander,
or any other relevant tort by virtue of filing reports,
without malice, or furnishing other information, without
malice, required by this section or required by the department
or division under the authority granted in this section, and
no civil cause of action of any nature shall arise against
such person:
1. For any information relating to suspected
fraudulent insurance acts or persons suspected of engaging in
such acts furnished to or received from law enforcement
officials, their agents, or employees;
2. For any information relating to suspected
fraudulent insurance acts or persons suspected of engaging in
such acts furnished to or received from other persons subject
to the provisions of this chapter;
3. For any such information furnished in reports
to the department, the division, the National Insurance Crime
Bureau, the National Association of Insurance Commissioners,
or any local, state, or federal enforcement officials or their
agents or employees; or
4. For other actions taken in cooperation with
any of the agencies or individuals specified in this paragraph
in the lawful investigation of suspected fraudulent insurance
acts.
(d) In addition to the immunity granted in
paragraph (c), persons identified as designated employees
whose responsibilities include the investigation and
disposition of claims relating to suspected fraudulent
insurance acts may share information relating to persons
suspected of committing fraudulent insurance acts with other
designated employees employed by the same or other insurers
whose responsibilities include the investigation and
disposition of claims relating to fraudulent insurance acts,
provided the department has been given written notice of the
names and job titles of such designated employees prior to
such designated employees sharing information. Unless the
designated employees of the insurer act in bad faith or in
reckless disregard for the rights of any insured, neither the
insurer nor its designated employees are civilly liable for
libel, slander, or any other relevant tort, and a civil action
does not arise against the insurer or its designated
employees:
1. For any information related to suspected
fraudulent insurance acts provided to an insurer; or
2. For any information relating to suspected
fraudulent insurance acts provided to the National Insurance
Crime Bureau or the National Association of Insurance
Commissioners.
Provided, however, that the qualified
immunity against civil liability conferred on any insurer or
its designated employees shall be forfeited with respect to
the exchange or publication of any defamatory information with
third persons not expressly authorized by this paragraph to
share in such information.
(e) The Chief Financial Officer and any employee
or agent of the department, commission, office, or division,
when acting without malice and in the absence of fraud or bad
faith, is not subject to civil liability for libel, slander,
or any other relevant tort, and no civil cause of action of
any nature exists against such person by virtue of the
execution of official activities or duties of the department,
commission, or office under this section or by virtue of the
publication of any report or bulletin related to the official
activities or duties of the department, division, commission,
or office under this section.
(f) This section does not abrogate or modify in
any way any common-law or statutory privilege or immunity
heretofore enjoyed by any person.
(5) The office's and the department's papers,
documents, reports, or evidence relative to the subject of an
investigation under this section are confidential and exempt
from the provisions of s. 119.07(1)
until such investigation is completed or ceases to be active.
For purposes of this subsection, an investigation is
considered "active" while the investigation is being conducted
by the office or department with a reasonable, good faith
belief that it could lead to the filing of administrative,
civil, or criminal proceedings. An investigation does not
cease to be active if the office or department is proceeding
with reasonable dispatch and has a good faith belief that
action could be initiated by the office or department or other
administrative or law enforcement agency. After an
investigation is completed or ceases to be active, portions of
records relating to the investigation shall remain exempt from
the provisions of s. 119.07(1)
if disclosure would:
(a) Jeopardize the integrity of another active
investigation;
(b) Impair the safety and soundness of an
insurer;
(c) Reveal personal financial information;
(d) Reveal the identity of a confidential
source;
(e) Defame or cause unwarranted damage to the
good name or reputation of an individual or jeopardize the
safety of an individual; or
(f) Reveal investigative techniques or
procedures. Further, such papers, documents, reports, or
evidence relative to the subject of an investigation under
this section shall not be subject to discovery until the
investigation is completed or ceases to be active. Office,
department, or division investigators shall not be subject to
subpoena in civil actions by any court of this state to
testify concerning any matter of which they have knowledge
pursuant to a pending insurance fraud investigation by the
division.
(6) Any person, other than an insurer, agent, or
other person licensed under the code, or an employee thereof,
having knowledge or who believes that a fraudulent insurance
act or any other act or practice which, upon conviction,
constitutes a felony or a misdemeanor under the code, or under
s. 817.234,
is being or has been committed may send to the Division of
Insurance Fraud a report or information pertinent to such
knowledge or belief and such additional information relative
thereto as the department may request. Any professional
practitioner licensed or regulated by the Department of
Business and Professional Regulation, except as otherwise
provided by law, any medical review committee as defined in s.
766.101,
any private medical review committee, and any insurer, agent,
or other person licensed under the code, or an employee
thereof, having knowledge or who believes that a fraudulent
insurance act or any other act or practice which, upon
conviction, constitutes a felony or a misdemeanor under the
code, or under s. 817.234,
is being or has been committed shall send to the Division of
Insurance Fraud a report or information pertinent to such
knowledge or belief and such additional information relative
thereto as the department may require. The Division of
Insurance Fraud shall review such information or reports and
select such information or reports as, in its judgment, may
require further investigation. It shall then cause an
independent examination of the facts surrounding such
information or report to be made to determine the extent, if
any, to which a fraudulent insurance act or any other act or
practice which, upon conviction, constitutes a felony or a
misdemeanor under the code, or under s. 817.234,
is being committed. The Division of Insurance Fraud shall
report any alleged violations of law which its investigations
disclose to the appropriate licensing agency and state
attorney or other prosecuting agency having jurisdiction with
respect to any such violation, as provided in s. 624.310.
If prosecution by the state attorney or other prosecuting
agency having jurisdiction with respect to such violation is
not begun within 60 days of the division's report, the state
attorney or other prosecuting agency having jurisdiction with
respect to such violation shall inform the division of the
reasons for the lack of prosecution.
(7) Division investigators shall have the power
to make arrests for criminal violations established as a
result of investigations. Such investigators shall also be
considered state law enforcement officers for all purposes and
shall have the power to execute arrest warrants and search
warrants; to serve subpoenas issued for the examination,
investigation, and trial of all offenses; and to arrest upon
probable cause without warrant any person found in the act of
violating any of the provisions of applicable laws.
Investigators empowered to make arrests under this section
shall be empowered to bear arms in the performance of their
duties. In such a situation, the investigator must be
certified in compliance with the provisions of s. 943.1395
or must meet the temporary employment or appointment exemption
requirements of s. 943.131
until certified.
(8) It is unlawful for any person to resist an
arrest authorized by this section or in any manner to
interfere, either by abetting or assisting such resistance or
otherwise interfering, with division investigators in the
duties imposed upon them by law or department rule.
(9) In recognition of the complementary roles of
investigating instances of workers' compensation fraud and
enforcing compliance with the workers' compensation coverage
requirements under chapter 440, the Department of Financial
Services shall prepare and submit a joint performance report
to the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of
Representatives by November 1, 2003, and then by January 1 of
each year. The annual report must include, but need not be
limited to:
(a) The total number of initial referrals
received, cases opened, cases presented for prosecution, cases
closed, and convictions resulting from cases presented for
prosecution by the Bureau of Workers' Compensation Insurance
Fraud by type of workers' compensation fraud and circuit.
(b) The number of referrals received from
insurers and the Division of Workers' Compensation and the
outcome of those referrals.
(c) The number of investigations undertaken by
the Bureau of Workers' Compensation Insurance Fraud which were
not the result of a referral from an insurer or the Division
of Workers' Compensation.
(d) The number of investigations that resulted
in a referral to a regulatory agency and the disposition of
those referrals.
(e) The number and reasons provided by local
prosecutors or the statewide prosecutor for declining
prosecution of a case presented by the Bureau of Workers'
Compensation Insurance Fraud by circuit.
(f) The total number of employees assigned to
the Bureau of Workers' Compensation Insurance Fraud and the
Division of Workers' Compensation Bureau of Compliance
delineated by location of staff assigned; and the number and
location of employees assigned to the Bureau of Workers'
Compensation Insurance Fraud who were assigned to work other
types of fraud cases.
(g) The average caseload and turnaround time by
type of case for each investigator and division compliance
employee.
(h) The training provided during the year to
workers' compensation fraud investigators and the division's
compliance employees.
History.--s. 9, ch. 76-266; s. 211, ch. 77-104; s.
20, ch. 77-468; s. 2, ch. 78-258; s. 2, ch. 79-81; s. 237, ch.
79-400; s. 3, ch. 81-48; ss. 807, 810, ch. 82-243; s. 92, ch.
83-216; s. 30, ch. 83-288; s. 1, ch. 87-334; s. 1, ch. 89-42;
ss. 189, 206, 207, ch. 90-363; s. 4, ch. 91-429; s. 11, ch.
92-324; s. 10, ch. 93-80; s. 8, ch. 93-252; s. 224, ch.
94-218; s. 5, ch. 95-340; s. 378, ch. 96-406; s. 1729, ch.
97-102; s. 15, ch. 98-174; s. 2, ch. 99-204; s. 4, ch.
2001-271; s. 87, ch. 2001-277; s. 66, ch. 2002-194; s. 5, ch.
2003-148; s. 1041, ch. 2003-261; s. 43, ch. 2003-412; s. 77,
ch. 2004-390.