Tuesday, October 10, 2017

Crop insurance agent Debra Muse of Wallingford in Fleming County, KY, defrauded taxpayers of $169,000 by helping farmers inflate tobacco crop losses and collect insurance money




Agent defrauded taxpayers of $169,000 through crop-insurance scheme, indictment alleges


By Greg Kocher


October 09, 2017 4:37 PM




A crop insurance agent defrauded taxpayers of $169,000 by helping farmers inflate tobacco crop losses and collect insurance money and then helping them sell their burley at market, according to a federal indictment.

Debra Muse of Wallingford in Fleming County was indicted Friday on one felony count of conspiracy to defraud the United States and 27 felony counts of making false statements on crop-insurance statements and reports. Muse’s lawyer, John Helmuth of Lexington, had no comment on Monday.

The indictment appears to be the first issued since a federal investigation into crop insurance fraud became public in December 2015. The alleged conspiracy at the heart of that investigation involved Central Kentucky tobacco farmers, crop insurance agents, crop insurance adjustors and tobacco warehouse owners/employees and others.


The investigation became public when federal agents raided tobacco warehouses and other locations in Montgomery County, including one Mount Sterling warehouse where Muse was a seasonal worker.

The fraud detailed in the indictment occurred in late 2014 and early 2015 when Muse caused insurance indemnity payments to be made in the amounts of $6,144 to one grower, $139,456 to a second, and $23,651 to a third. The false insurance claims were ultimately reimbursed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the indictment says.


The three co-conspiring farmers are identified only by initials and are not named or charged in the indictment.

In each case, Muse caused insurance payments to be paid on claims that “falsely inflated” the amount of tobacco losses the growers suffered, the indictment says.

In addition to her work as a crop insurance agent, Muse had been employed as a seasonal worker since 2001 at Clay’s Tobacco Warehouse in Mount Sterling, which accepts tobacco for purchase and resale.

As part of her responsibilities at the warehouse, Muse was responsible for entering information into a software program that tracks the purchase, sale and shipment of tobacco.

The purpose of the conspiracy was to profit through the filing of false and fictitious insurance claims and the sale of unreported tobacco, the indictment says.

In her capacity as crop insurance agent, Muse obtained crop insurance policies for her client farmers. Those farmers, “at the urging of and with help” from Muse, filed false claims in various ways, the indictment says.

“Co-conspiring farmers profited under the scheme because they were paid twice for each pound of tobacco: once through the false crop insurance claim, and also through the sale of the unreported hidden tobacco,” the indictment says.

Muse profited by collecting the original insurance commission and by retaining and expanding the business of her crop insurance clients and securing business for her employer, Clay’s Tobacco Warehouse, the indictment says.

The federal crop insurance program was created during the Depression in the 1930s as a way to keep farmers from going bankrupt because of a bad growing season.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture pays private insurers to sell and manage policies, but taxpayers are on the hook for most of the losses.

The USDA requires tobacco growers to take out crop insurance before the growing season, but payment on those policies is not due until after the harvest. If the crop is damaged by bad weather, the farmer is paid the difference between the value of his diminished harvest and the amount of the policy.

Muse is scheduled to appear in federal court Oct. 23 before U.S. District Judge Joseph M. Hood.


Agent Profile


Debra Muse is an independent insurance agent with Tristate Crop Insurance agency based in Wallingford, Kentucky. She is licensed to write Auto, Home, Life, Health, and Renters insurance policies in Kentucky.


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