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Town hall meetings to assist Floridians who are still recovering from last year’s hurricanes have been scheduled during the next two weeks. The first meeting will be held Wednesday, March 2nd, in Pensacola at the Pensacola Civic Center at 201 East Gregory Street, with additional meetings scheduled in Sebastian, Punta Gorda and Orlando. Hurricane victims who are still struggling to settle insurance claims are urged to attend one of these meetings. The Department of Financial Services wants to direct all available resources to getting storm victims’ lives back to normal. Consumer specialists will be available to work with policyholders individually. Thursday, March 10, 2005, 5 p.m. - 9 p.m. For more information, call the Department of Financial Services’ storm hotline at 1-800-22-STORM or log on to www.MyFloridaCFO.com. My best,
The Old Hernando County Courthouse, surrounded by grand old oak trees, was built in 1912 in the county seat of Brooksville. |
| NORTHWEST FLORIDA LEGISLATIVE DAY AT THE CAPITOL Tallahassee is a meeting place for visitors from all over the state when state legislators are in town. Last Wednesday was Northwest Florida Legislative Day with many counties, cities, chambers of commerce, educational institutions, Native Americans and a long list of private industry groups presenting their visions to the legislature and the community. An urban warrior robot sat ready in the rotunda, exo-skeletal underwater dive gear stood like medieval armor and an OZ flight simulator/cockpit display invited a test. These creations are a part of the Florida Institute for Human and Machine Cognition, a university-affiliated research organization whose innovative scientists were on hand to discuss their work. CFO Tom Gallagher was introduced to cutting-edge human/machine collaboration. Anil K. Raj, M.D., a reasearch scientist with IHMC, took him into a sensory awareness of direction and mass using nerves in the tongue. CONTINUED |
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| JACKSONVILLE MAN INDICTED IN EMPLOYEE LEASING SCAM Florida’s Chief Financial Officer Tom Gallagher and United States Attorney Paul I. Perez announced a 23-count indictment against the former owner and operator of a now-defunct professional employee organization that left thousands of workers in several states without workers compensation coverage despite collecting millions in premiums. Tom King, 41, of Jacksonville, allegedly collected $5.8 million in worker’s compensation coverage for illegal, fraudulent and unauthorized coverage. The indictment is the result of a lengthy investigation by the Department of Financial Services, Division of Insurance Fraud, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Assistant U.S. Attorney Mark B. Devereaux is prosecuting the charges. If convicted on all 23 counts, King faces up to 160 years in prison and a fine of $5.7 million. "Worker's compensation fraud puts workers at serious risk and wreaks havoc with our economy. Injured workers and their families pay the ultimate price, but we all pay through higher premiums and higher costs for goods and services, including costs for emergency rooms where uninsured injured workers end up," said Gallagher, who oversees the Department of Financial Services. "The department is pleased that we were able to help the U.S. Attorney's office get this indictment. These allegations, if true, must be dealt with swiftly and severely." CONTINUED |
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| TAMPA MAN SENTENCED IN SECURITIES, INSURANCE AND MAIL FRAUD CASE FLORIDA OFFICE OF FINANCIAL REGULATION INVESTIGATION LEADS TO $7 MILLION RESTITUTION ORDER FOR VICTIMS A Tampa man has been sentenced on charges he sold phony bonds, claiming the bonds carried a financial guarantee. The bonds were sold to over 200 people, primarily in the Tampa Bay area. The Florida Office of Financial Regulation (OFR) announced that Ralph B. Plummer, 63, has been sentenced to 24 months in prison to be followed by 24 months of supervised release. He must also pay $7.7 million in restitution to the victims of the scam. Florida’s Chief Financial Officer Tom Gallagher praised the work of the OFR investigators who worked the case in conjunction with a variety of federal agencies. “We cannot allow those who perpetrate these scams to escape justice. Floridians who are lured into these phony investments need to know we will aggressively prosecute those who sold the bogus products.” CONTINUED |
![]() Palm Bay is located on Florida's east coast just below Melbourne in Brevard County. | GALLAGHER TO PALM BAY TORNADO VICTIMS: STATE’S STORM HOTLINE READY TO ASSIST |