Man Charged With Worker’s Comp Fraud In Escambia, Santa Rosa
September 23, 2009
A man has been charged with workers’ compensation fraud after allegedly not correctly reporting the number or workers on job sites across Escambia and Santa Rosa counties.
Florida CFO Alex Sink today announced that her Division of Insurance Fraud has arrested an Escambia County man on charges of falsifying employment numbers with the intent of avoiding higher workers’ compensation premium payments.
Mauricio Martinez Soto, 33, of Mauricio Soto Concrete Construction Inc., has been charged with Workers’ Compensation Fraud, a first-degree felony. If convicted, Soto faces up to 30 years behind bars and a $10,000 fine. He remains in the Escambia County Jail on $25,000 bond.
“Injured workers can face devastating medical bills and serious financial hardship if their employers aren’t properly covered,” said CFO Sink. “I commend our Insurance Fraud investigators for exposing this criminal activity, and will continue to enforce compliance to make sure that all Floridians are protected on the job.”
Following site inspections over the past year on job sites in Escambia and Santa Rosa County, it was discovered that 32 individuals worked for Mauricio Soto Construction Inc.; however, audits and state records revealed Mauricio Soto was reporting less. When tipped off to the inconsistent number of employees reported, investigators also discovered that Soto owed nearly $660,000 in premiums for workers’ comp coverage for the over $4 million he was paid in subcontracting fees in the past three years.
As Florida’s CFO, Sink oversees the Department of Financial Services’ Division of Workers’ Compensation, which conducted nearly 30,000 onsite investigations of worksites to determine employer compliance for the 2008-2009 fiscal year.
The division also recently launched a new whistleblower web site, which makes it easier for citizens to submit complaints online about suspected non-compliance and provides real-time feedback to complainants. Examples of non-compliant workers’ compensation coverage include working without workers’ compensation, under-reporting payroll such as paying employees in cash instead of from checks from payroll, and misclassifying employees in order to receive a lower workers’ compensation rate.
For more information about CFO Sink’s Division of Workers Compensation or to submit a complaint, visit MyFloridaCFO.com.
Comments
3 Responses to “Man Charged With Worker’s Comp Fraud In Escambia, Santa Rosa”
YEH!…NOW 32 workers are UNEMPLOYEED….
Kid without, and they can’t get unemplyment benefits, and the County has a back log of food stamps that could take several weeks to get help, so there goes the crime rate.
NOW… isn’t everybody happy:-(
slick scam!!!
Good