Wednesday, August 12, 2015

Hartford Insurer Earl O'Garro (a black man) Charged With Insurance Fraud: accused of bilking the city and others of insurance premiums.



Insurance Executive O'Garro Denies Guilt In New Fraud Indictment



Hartford insurance broker Earl O'Garro, left, pictured next to the former Hybrid Insurance Group headquarters at 30 Lewis St. in Hartford. (Courant File Photo)
 

By Edmund H. Mahony 
 
Hartford insurance broker Earl O'Garro denies guilt in new indictment


Hartford insurance broker Earl O'Garro was back in federal court Tuesday, where he pleaded not guilty to fraud charges in a new and expanded indictment accusing him of bilking the city and others of insurance premiums.


O'Garro previously pleaded not guilty to similar charges. Federal prosecutors enhanced the charges last week in a superseding indictment after he turned down a plea bargain and cooperation agreement and said he would take his case to a trial,

A trial could begin in October.

 
O'Garro is accused in the new indictment of stealing insurance premiums from the city, lying on a state loan application and defrauding other insurance companies.

The superseding indictment charges O'Garro, former owner and president of wholesale broker Hybrid Insurance, with two counts of wire fraud and one of mail fraud. He is accused of overstating his business income in an application for a $500,000 state business assistance loan and defrauding a variety of other insurers and clients — including the city of Hartford — of about $1.3 million in insurance premiums.

Until his personal and business finances began unraveling about two years, O'Garro was viewed as up-and-coming insurance executive in a city built on insurance. Hybrid had been growing rapidly, and he claimed to be collecting a salary in the high six-figure range.

But records publicly available from state insurance regulators show that, by late spring 2013, Hybrid — and O'Garro — were dangerously overextended. The insurance records and the indictment suggest that O'Garro was frantically trying to raise new money in an effort to salvage policies that were arranged by Hybrid and in danger of cancellation because of his failure to make premium payments.
 

Specifically, he is accused of defrauding the state by overstating the value of Hybrid's assets when applying for a $500,000 low-interest loan from the Department of Economic and Community Development. At the time, O'Garro was in danger of defaulting — and ultimately did default — on a $126,000 state loan and grant package.

O'Garro also is accused of concocting an elaborate ruse in which he used a phony Internet address and four dummy companies to trick a company that finances insurance premiums into lending him hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Although the alleged scheme is not detailed in the federal indictment, publicly available records collected by state insurance regulators — as well as other court records — show that O'Garro hired an Internet design company to create a phony email address that purported to belong to an underwriter for the insurer AmTrust North America.