Ex-Insurance Company Executives Indicted for Fraud in New Orleans

November 20, 2005

Separate emails using a comma.

A federal grand jury recently indicted three former insurance executives with The Oath for Louisiana on conspiracy and fraud charges resulting from their alleged attempt to hide the health insurance company’s crippled financial condition, according to the Associated Press.

Named in the indictment were Barry Scheur, 54, of Newton, Mass., Robert McMillan, 56, of Garland, Texas, and Rodney Moyer, 59, of Doylestown, Penn., U.S. Attorney Jim Letten said.

The Oath for Louisiana was one of the state’s largest health insurers until it collapsed two years ago.

“The indictment is a tremendous injustice,” Shaun Clark, the New Orleans-based attorney for Scheur, said Friday. “He fully intends to defend himself.”

Bruce Ashley, Moyer’s lawyer, said he had no comment because he had not seen the indictment. “We may have some comment after the arraignment,” he said.

Herb Larson, attorney for McMillan, did not return a telephone call for comment.

According to the indictment, between September 2000 and December of that year, the three men “devised a scheme to defraud and mislead the Louisiana Department of Insurance into believing that The Oath for Louisiana was meeting the required (net worth) minimum of $3 million, and thereby unlawfully enriching themselves through continued operation of The Oath, during a time when the company did not have the adequate net worth required by state regulators.”

The minimum net worth requirement is designed to ensure that insurance companies and health providers have adequate capital with which to pay insurance claims.

Separate emails using a comma.
Subscribe Like this article?
Subscribe to our free email newsletter.

Latest Comments

  • October 10, 2006 at 11:25 am
    LYMAN GL DELIGUORI, SR. says:
    Does anyone know the resolution of this? Did any of them end up in Prison?
  • November 21, 2005 at 4:12 am
    Maurice Mouton says:
    I read the article about the indited executives. Please note that none of these men were from New Orleans or Louisianna. Louisiana has a very fine insurance department that ... read more
  • November 21, 2005 at 2:13 am
    FMKELLER says:
    IS THIS ANOTHER FAILURE BY THE STATE?
See all comments

Add a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

More News
More News Features