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For
Immediate Release
June 28, 2005 |
Media
Contact:
Kevin Enright
410-576-6357
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BALTIMORE CITY POLICE OFFICER CONVICTED OF INSURANCE
FRAUD
Attorney General J. Joseph Curran, Jr., announced today that
Tamira Thompson of the 5300 block of Deale Churchton Road
in Anne Arundel
County was convicted of felony insurance fraud in the Circuit
Court for Baltimore County. The conviction follows a joint
investigation
conducted by the Insurance Fraud Division of the Maryland Insurance
Administration and the Office of the Attorney General. The Baltimore
City Police Department employs Thompson as a police officer.
She had been charged with engaging in a continuing course
of conduct
between October 15, 2003 and November 20, 2003 in which she knowingly
presented false information to Progressive Insurance Company
in an attempt to support a false claim for $3,014.20.
Evidence presented by the prosecutor included that on October
15, 2003, Thompson reported to Progressive Insurance Company
that on
that date she had struck a light pole and damaged the front of
her 1991 Acura Legend which, she said, she had purchased five
days earlier. An inspection of Thompson’s vehicle by a Progressive
Insurance Company adjuster on October 15, 2003 found damage to
the vehicle that was inconsistent with Thompson’s description
of the accident. In a statement Thompson gave to Progressive Insurance
Company Thompson claimed to have purchased the automobile from
a car company in Washington, D.C. She presented documents to the
insurance company that included a “Dealer’s Special
Certificate” purporting to be issued by the District of Columbia,
a receipt for a down payment and a vehicle title showing the name
of the registered owner to be a person other than Thompson. Investigation
revealed that the District of Columbia temporary tag attached to
Thompson’s vehicle, as well as the “Dealer’s
Special Certificate” had not been issued by the District
of Columbia, and that Thompson could not be identified as the registered
owner of the vehicle after a search of the records for the motor
vehicle administrations in Maryland and the District of Columbia.
Further, the seller of the automobile could not produce records
to document the sale of the automobile to Thompson.
Thompson was asked by the insurance company to present herself
for a taped statement and did so on November 20, 2003. During
the interview she was asked her employment status. She responded
that
she was unemployed at the time of taped statement and denied
specific questions of whether she was employed as a police officer
in Baltimore
City. Investigation revealed that she was in fact employed as
a sworn officer of the Baltimore City Police Department and had
been
since 2001.
The Honorable Kathleen Gallogly Cox scheduled sentencing for
July 11, 2005.
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