Texas Mutual Insurance Co. reported that a Travis County district court sentenced Terrance Hopkins of Tyler on workers’ compensation fraud-related charges. The court sentenced Hopkins to one year of deferred adjudication and ordered him to pay $3,673 in restitution to Texas Mutual.
Hopkins reported a job-related injury while working as a teacher for Bayes Achievement Center in Huntsville. He claimed he was unable to work as a result of the injury, and Texas Mutual began paying income benefits to him.
Meanwhile, Texas Mutual uncovered evidence that Hopkins was working as a junior college coach while receiving income benefits due to his alleged disability.
Investigators call this type of scam double-dipping because the claimant collects benefits for being too injured to work when he or she is, in fact, gainfully employed. Texas law requires claimants to contact their workers’ comp carrier when they return to work.
Left unchecked, double-dipping and other workers’ comp fraud can lead to higher premiums for all Texas employers.
Texas Mutual Insurance Co.
Topics Texas Fraud Workers' Compensation
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
One of Highest Property Claims Severity Recorded in Q3 on Low Volume, Says Verisk
Truckers Who Fail English Tests Are Pulled Off Roads in Crackdown
Trump to Issue Order Creating National AI Rule
Chubb, The Hartford, Liberty and Travelers Team Up on Surety Tech Launch 

