Insurance companies have a stronger incentive to see justice done than cops or elected prosecutors, who will often be satisfied as long as *someone* goes to jail.https://twitter.com/davidminpdx/status/1163550488102440960 …
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Recovering losses and fraud prevention are major balance sheet items in many lines of business.
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These are operations that insurance companies would (and often do) fund privately. Some jurisdictions contract them out to the state. The work has to be done regardless, and it has to interface with the state at some point. A lot of it is just about not stepping on toes.
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I mean, think about malpractice insurance. In that line, insurance companies frequently fund the customer's legal defense. Is that nefarious?
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It's not random people. It's their customers. You're also assuming a crime is being committed. I don't imagine most claims are crimes.
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The lead anecdote in the story is a guy whose truck was stolen. Investigators fucked up. Boy, that sure never happens with regular cops!
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. Banned in Sweden. SubGenius, Zhuangist, white-hat troll. Defrocked mathematician. Brain problems.