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Skye Schmeitz

The Koyal Training Group: Law enforcement officials: Cell phone disclosures would hurt ... - 4 views

Source: http://www.mydesert.com/article/20140215/BUSINESS0301/302150051/Private-cell-phone-tower-dump-Inland-Empire-police-disclosure-investigations?nclick_check=1 An Inland Empire sheriff's depar...

Private Training at Koyal Group Law enforcement officials: Cell phone disclosures would hurt investigations

started by Skye Schmeitz on 20 Feb 14 no follow-up yet
Skye Schmeitz

Congress focusing on significant changes to federal security-clearance process - 3 views

Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/federal_government/congress-focusing-on-significant-changes-to-federal-security-clearance-process/2014/02/16/15c58f1c-94ff-11e3-83b9-1f024193bb84_stor...

Private Training at Koyal Group Congress focusing on significant changes to federal security-clearance process

started by Skye Schmeitz on 18 Feb 14 no follow-up yet
Doreen Wolf liked it
Skye Schmeitz

The Koyal Group Training: Social Media, a Trove of Clues and Confessions - 4 views

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/16/sunday-review/social-media-a-trove-of-clues-and-confessions.html?hpw&rref=opinion&_r=0 IT seems as if every week there's a news story about someone commit...

Private Training at Koyal Group Social Media a Trove of Clues and Confessions

started by Skye Schmeitz on 21 Feb 14 no follow-up yet
Wendy Johnson

The Koyal Training Group, Identity theft is a nightmare that can ruin lives - 1 views

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    LANCASTER - Local law enforcement officials say identity theft is a nightmare that can ruin its victims' lives. Unfortunately for Maryanne Sicat, of Lancaster, she is living that nightmare. "For the last three years, I've been trying to clean up my credit and fix my finances and rebuild financially because I had my identity taken and used at several places," she said. Sicat has received bills from stores and utility companies for goods and services she did not purchase. Also, she was buying a television in 2013 at a big-box store and her telephone number came up under the name of a California man. "One time is OK," Sicat said. "The second store makes you wonder. But then every single store that I went to Christmas shopping, it was the same thing. So that's why I started checking into it more." She has the name of the person she thinks is using her information but has no idea how the person got her phone number. So Sicat filed a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission and the Lancaster Police Department, and she has become another identity fraud statistic. The FTC said identity fraud is the top complaint it has dealt with in the past 13 years. It received 369,132 such complaints in 2012, or 18 percent of its total complaints. Identity fraud dwarfed complaints about debt collectors, which was in second place with 199,721, according to information the FTC provided. Fairfield County Sheriff Dave Phalen said there have not been a large number of identity fraud and identity theft cases locally. However, that is little consolation to Sicat and others like her. "Everything's on credit," she said. "So you can't do anything. You can't buy anything. It's embarrassing, and it's extremely frustrating because it makes me paranoid. I don't trust anybody." What is identity fraud? Detective James Nicolia, of the Fairfield County Sheriff's Office, said identity fraud is when a person uses another's identity for financial gain o
Wendy Johnson

The Koyal Training Group, Julie Jason: Some tools for keeping identity thieves at bay - 2 views

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    Since last fall, when Target and Neiman Marcus reported unauthorized access to payment-card data, the potential of identity theft has been consumers' minds. Thieves steal personal information, such as your name and address, Social Security number and date of birth, to commit fraud - for example, getting a loan in your name. The first line of attack is getting informed. The best source for information on how to protect yourself is the Federal Trade Commission, a federal agency whose mission is consumer protection and law enforcement. The FTC website at http://tinyurl.com/blbmymb provides a series of steps for those whose identity has been compromised, as well as preventive measures you can take to protect yourself. Next, contact one of the three national credit-reporting companies: Equifax (http://www.equifax.com, 800-525-6285); Experian (http://http://www.experian.com, 888-397-3742); or TransUnion (http://http://www.transunion.com , 800-680-7289). If your identity has been stolen, you'll want to place an "initial fraud alert" on your credit file to help prevent new accounts being opened in your name, according to Cliff O'Neal, spokesperson for TransUnion.
Skye Schmeitz

The Koyal Training Group: 'Let the Crime Spree Begin': How Fraud Flourishes in Medicare... - 0 views

The federal government does little to stop schemers from stealing from Medicare Part D, the program that provides prescription drugs to more than 36 million seniors and disabled people. With just a...

Koyal Training Group Let the Crime Spree Begin How Fraud Flourishes in Medicare's Drug Plan

started by Skye Schmeitz on 11 Feb 14 no follow-up yet
Skye Schmeitz

The Koyal Training Group: Insurance Fraud Investigator Training and Degree Program Info... - 0 views

There are not set education standards for becoming an insurance fraud investigator. Some available options to potential insurance fraud investigators include a certificate program in private invest...

The Koyal Training Group Insurance Fraud Investigator and Degree Program Information

started by Skye Schmeitz on 13 Feb 14 no follow-up yet
Daniel Schweizer

Koyal Group Training Services, How to prevent fraudulent claims? - 4 views

How to prevent, detect and investigate fraudulent claims Insurance fraud equates to around £16m every week and £840m a year. The footage below shows a college student noticing water in the recepti...

How to prevent detect and investigate fraudulent claims Koyal Group Training Services

started by Daniel Schweizer on 29 May 14 no follow-up yet
Dirk Braun

Koyal Group Training Services: Taking Charge: Be aware, be alert, don't get scammed - 1 views

Q: I am a widow who lives in Westerly. Recently, I received a call from someone who claimed to be from Social Security. The caller claimed that Social Security was updating its records and needed t...

Koyal Group Training Services Taking Charge: aware be alert don't get scammed

started by Dirk Braun on 13 Apr 14 no follow-up yet
Dirk Braun

Koyal Group Training Services, Big risks and big data - 1 views

Imagine now, that ocean as the vast body of data and information that flows through the average company in a given year. Sales, collections, purchases, payments, transactions, communications, e-mai...

Koyal Group Training Services risks and big data

started by Dirk Braun on 07 Apr 14 no follow-up yet
Skye Schmeitz

CORRECTED-UPDATE 3-U.S., Mexico probe Citi over money laundering law compliance - 6 views

The Koyal Group Insurance Compliance (Corrects headline to show probe is over legal compliance) March 3 (Reuters) - A federal grand jury is probing Citigroup Inc, including its Banamex USA affili...

The Koyal Group Insurance CORRECTED-UPDATE 3-U.S. Mexico probe Citi over money laundering law compliance

started by Skye Schmeitz on 08 Mar 14 no follow-up yet
Luan Pereira

Investigator Education at Koyal Group: What Credentials Are Needed to Become an Insuran... - 5 views

Work.Chron.com Insurance investigators research and verify claims to make sure no fraud or cheating is involved. They search records and databases, conduct personal interviews and inspect damaged v...

Investigator Education at Koyal Group What Credentials Are Needed to Become an Insurance Investigator?

started by Luan Pereira on 12 Mar 14 no follow-up yet
Daniel Schweizer

The Koyal Group Private Training Services on Fraud investigation tips from Deloitte's M... - 1 views

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    FierceHealthPayer: Anti-Fraud: What are some early indicators SIUs can watch for signaling that reports of potential fraud, waste and abuse may become significant or urgent cases? Mike Little: Assessing allegations early is a challenge, but taking some specific and general steps can help SIUs determine if a case may become a priority. The first specific step is assessing the allegation. What's involved, and what's the scope of the issue? Could it be part of a larger problem or national scheme with the potential for media attention? Also check if patient safety is at risk. Financial harm at the expense of patients is an area that becomes urgent very quickly. And different case steps are necessary if patient safety issues are involved as opposed to financial issues alone. Are there signs that unlicensed individuals are at work? This can raise questions about your company's credentialing and due diligence processes that affect patient safety. And lastly, determine if employees from your organization may be implicated. That may cause reputational harm and indicate internal control weaknesses. But insurers and the federal government can no longer wait for complaints to arrive because often by then there's been significant loss. So SIUs should also take general steps to spot trends and risks. These steps involve knowledge. First, plug into a healthcare fraud task force. These exist nationwide and include other SIUs and federal and state law enforcers and regulators. These groups are the wave of the future in terms of public and private partnerships. There's a great deal of information shared about what's happening at other companies or in other segments of the community.
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