Hi all,
After some advice.
I've just been contacted by my insurer to say someone had lodged an at fault claim against me from Feb this year?
When I asked the details it was for an accident in Glasgow and that I pulled out of a side street into the side of another car. The extent of damage has not been given.
Now I know for sure that I've never been to Glasgow and have no idea where this road is. At the time of the incident I was working in West Bromwich some 285 miles and 5 hours away.
Here is the thing though.... Apparently I need to prove that it wasn't me involved in the crash?
How do I do that then? The place I worked at the time has closed down otherwise I could have shown my clocking in/out details.
My ring door camera doesn't go that far back?
Any ideas?
Innocent until proven guilty? I'd tell them to jog on unless they have any evidence...
Some one or more than one person at work to say you were at work. The more people the better.
What about debit/credit card bills? Often gives the location of shops.
I left the company in West Bromwich in March and the site has since shut down.
What details do they actually have? Have they confirmed the reg given matches the make, model and colour? As above though, a statement from anyone who saw you or something like proof you paid for something not in Glasgow (obviously not mail order) should help
out of interest.....what street?
I’ve just been contacted by my insurer
First thing - are you sure? Call your insurer back, using their publicly-available number, and see if they know anything about it.
I'm with dashed, not your problem (yet). Ask your insurer what proof the other party has presented to bring about a claim.
Location services on your mobile? Assuming you have that switched on.
Is the complainant a wheelie bin?
Do you have a built in Sat Nav? If that programme on C4 is anything to go by they can store destinations/dates.
Also any location data on your mobile.
But mainly, I'm with dashed. Tell them they are mistaken. After all, why would anyone make up going to West Brom?
(and I say that as an Albion season ticket holder)
Have your plates been cloned?
But anything from former colleagues, bank/credit card statements etc to show you were anywhere other than Glasgow that day/week? Anything on social media? Is there a post on here about somewhere to ride near West Bromwich?
I have had this twice.
Both only came to light when I had a massive renewal quote on the insurance.
Both times, it was a case of a wrong digit on the claim made by the other party.
Quite how a Toffee Brown T5 kombi can be mistaken for a black Fiesta is beyond me.
( I asked my insurers to confirm what vehicle had hit them)
The second time it happened , I was not given any reason when I asked.
I did however have to pay an increased premium until the matter was resolved ( after all there was a claim against me and I had to declare it even though it was bollox).
Got the additional back minus admin fee ( which I also got back when I threatened to take them to the insurance ombudsman)
I'm with IHN smells scammy to me
Firstly was it definitely your insurance company? Not an attempted fraud.
Have you phoned back your insurance company from a number you know is definitely them?
Secondly if its not a scam and someone is genuinely alleging you hit them then i would show them bank statements around the time of the accident.
If you bought something from the local shop then it will show you weren't in Glasgow.
For example i spent a tenner in tesco yesterday on my bank statement it tells you it was Tesco Store 2164, which when googled gives you Tesco Extra in Bournemouth.
Whilst not completely foolproof it all helps especially if you combine with other evidence like witnesses suggested above.
**Edit beaten to it above**
First thing – are you sure? Call your insurer back, using their publicly-available number.
This, somewhat suspicious that the accident was months ago in a location you were nowhere near.
Is the complainant a wheelie bin?
Sounds like he's wheelie bin had!
I supposedly had a crash in a red Renault estate in Yorkshire, while living in the Highlands and owning a blue VW people carrier....It was mistaken number plate reported to insurers.
Are you sure it's your insurer +1
How do I do that then?
Google timeline.
The only time I've had one of these calls and it was legit, I'd apparently had a crash the day before. I just took a picture of my car with the days' paper and emailed it off.
Never heard anything again.
I reckon though that they had a digit wrong, as there were 5 blue BMW's, including mine, with consecutive number plates.
Cheers all, to answer a few questions:
Ive logged into my insurance account and the claim is logged on there.
Ive also contacted my insurers via the number on the website and they confirmed. Apparently they have been given my reg and make and model but no colour.
The street is Hawthorn street in Springborn Glasgow. I supposedly pulled out of a side street into another car.
Bank statement/ credit card no joy. no purchases on that date.
Front door cam doesn't go that far back either.
Bloke from my insurance was really bloody rude and basically insinuated I need to prove that I wasnt there not the other way round.
It may not have been the insurers themselves, it could be an investigation company employed by the insurers - my wife does the job of contacting/visiting people to chase up spurious claims identified by insurers. Sometimes she investigates the people who have made the spurious claim, sometimes the people who have been claimed against.
Quite common to be a cloned plate on a similar car at other end of country (as far as scams go)
At the time of the incident I was working in West Bromwich some 285 miles and 5 hours away.
Access controlled building by any chance? If so, access log will have you covered
Any activities logged on Strava, Garmin etc?
...Albion season ticket holder
Hope you're not putting the kids through that?
can you ask them why its taken the best part of a year to contact you? Or why the claimant has taken so long to come forward?
Who are you insurers out of interest?
I had this years ago, although it was for unpaid parking in London. Fortunately for me, my Ma worked for a solicitor at the time so she just got the boss to write an official looking letter on headed paper stating they were mistaken and I never heard from them again.
Could you do an FOI request for ANPR records or something along those lines? There must be data out there somewhere that proves your car was where it actually was!
Any witnesses on record? Anyone could just pick a random car / number plate and claim an accident. I'm sure it wouldn't get to it, but also surely any competent repair shop could validate whether your car has had repairs in line with the supposed damage caused as I am sure new panels would be involved.
Bloke from my insurance was really bloody rude and basically insinuated I need to prove that I wasnt there not the other way round.
I'd be asking to speak to his manager, you're their customer and I'd be stating that I'd be taking my business elsewhere next renewal and be providing this call date and time as the reason.
At the time I working in West Bromwich for a company that I left in March and has since shut down so no joy there either.
Thinking about it If I had hit a car then surely the front of my car would have signs of being repaired. It still has the original supplying dealer number plate on and Ive managed to photo the dates on the headlights too.
Bank statement/ credit card no joy. no purchases on that date.
Did you take any photos on/around that date on your phone? They'll be stored in the cloud with date and location info.
Google Maps should have a timeline of your location if you have that switched on?
Anything on Strava? If you were riding anywhere on that day, it'll prove you weren't in Glasgow.
Check credit and bank statements again if there's anything that can be used - if you bought something the day before and/or the day after, it might not be definitive proof that you weren't in Glasgow but it makes it quite unlikely if your spending pattern is all in shops local to you and nothing anyywhere in Scotland - no fuel purchases would be the obvious one! I know it's not foolproof (you could have paid cash) but it'll all help.
renton
Free MemberAt the time I working in West Bromwich for a company that I left in March and has since shut down so no joy there either
Ah sorry, mis-read earlier and thought you meant that they just closed the building (COVID style)
Hope you’re not putting the kids through that?
Just the younger one. I'm too scared of the older one to make him do anything!
Hawthorne street?
Have you secretly been moonlighting as a speedway star?
perchypanther
Free Member
Is the complainant a wheelie bin?
Posted 46 minutes ago
And Perchy is back in the room!
Your insurance guy is wrong, it's not on you to disprove the claim it just makes their life easier. I'd not bother supplying any proof of where I was unless they could first show the claimants proof that an accident happened. Surely they can't make a claim without any evidence at all that you or your car were involved?
Is there not something with car insurance that you give them permission to act on your behalf when you take out the policy. IIRC they can accept responsibility for accidents that you wouldn't. I'd be telling them clearly that it wasn't you and if you could provide evidence I would. If you can't, I'd be asking for photos of the accident and how your details were provided.
Agree you should check it's really coming from the insurance company - but I have had a few weird ones
A few years ago I was away for work - out drinking too much with a mate - and got a call from my wife saying the polis were at the door, asking if I had been driving my beamer through Manchester city centre at 60+ mph. I hadn't - but someone had cloned the plates.
Same car got a parking ticket when in possession of a car dealer who was selling it for me - with no evidence whatsoever it was actually parked illegally. The car dealer, who I trust, swore blind that he hadn't parked it where it was alleged, but the authorities ruled it had to be paid, despite the fact it was purely a traffic warden's word against his, and he had to pay up!
Also, I got rammed into from behind on Edinburgh city bypass (slowing for Sherifhall for those that know it) by some dozy ****t in an Audi, he avoided the person behind me, bounced off central reservation and hit me rear offside. Police attended, think they charged the guy and insurance all got sorted as many witnesses saw what hapenned. However a few months later I got contacted by Crown Properties asserting I was responsible for damage to the central reservation, it got sorted after a few letters but I was well hacked off at that one!
So weird things like this do happen!
Innocent until proven guilty? I’d tell them to jog on unless they have any evidence…
its a civil claim not a criminal allegation so innocence is irrelevant and it will be judged on the balance of probabilities. Ultimately I think your insurer can decide to settle even if you insist you were not there.
I would expect that IF you were involved the claimant would be able to provide:
1. A description of your vehicle [most typos are likely to fail this test]
2. A description of the driver - and anyone else who was in the car
3. If you stopped at the scene the details you provided (i.e. your name / address / etc)*
4. A description of damage caused to your vehicle
*IF they are alleging you didn't stop at the scene then it may be worth noting that Police Scotland are remarkably thorough at following up on Fail to Stop / Fail to Report claims.
As a bare minimum they would be able to tell the insurer about your skin colour, (outward appearance of) gender, hair colour and length, facial hair and or glasses. Even within a car its usually obvious if someone is small/tall and thin/fat. Your insurer will not know any of that so will not be able to leak it back to them so I would certainly ask them to confirm this. If they spoke to you they'll also be able to comment on accent, what you were wearing etc.
You should give a witness statement about where you were at the time. I'd expect you could provide even circumstantial corroboration that you were not likely to be in Glasgow. e.g. contract of employment elsewhere, proof where you were day before and day after if not that day, but it would be a far more convincing story with something to back you up - a statement from a colleague (manager even better), a friend you might have met the same day, or even a family member. Bear in mind that there was a lockdown on and so it could even have been illegal for your to travel to Scotland without a good excuse. As soon as the insurer starts to think (a) you are not covering something up and (b) you are not just mistaken then they should be thinking "we can avoid paying this claim" which usually makes them happy!
Should it go to court, your bank statements probably also provide some evidence by their silence - work out when and where you filled the car with fuel, does that correlate with a 500+ mile round trip? The fact you didn't buy food or accommodation also supports your claim not to have been on the road. I think such an analysis (which probably also involves analysing the statements of anyone else who would have access to the car) would be excessive as an initial response but one you are either mistaken or committing fraud - so if it gets that far I'd be keen to assert that it wasn't me!
Shouldn't you tell your insurer that you believe the claim is fraudulent - and then they'll hand it over to their fraud dept to take a closer look at who is making the claim. We had an odd one a few years ago, told them we suspected it was a fraudulent claim and the claimant got the grief and the claim went away.
Further to my statement about myself being mistaken for being involved in the accident.
I had a supermarket receipt in my wallet for that day, 300+ miles north and within the same hour of the accident.
I could also prove I drove (and they insured) a blue VW Touran, not a red Renault Laguna.
The insurance company were reluctant, but after a week did ask for description of car and driver, plus any photos from the scene. None were forthcoming other than the driver was elderly and forrin*
This was enough for the insurers to work out it really was not me and the other party could jog on.
.
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the other persons description, not mine.
First thing – are you sure? Call your insurer back, using their publicly-available number, and see if they know anything about it.
How does that scam work? if I call you up claiming to be your insurer with details of an accident your weren't involved in - most people will argue the toss, but even if they say - well we might have had a minor bump I didn't notice (a car park bump much more likely that a junction) - so go ahead and settle it - how does a "not actually your insurer" get money from anyone?
The time this happened to me I just told my insurers that I lived at the other end of the country and had never been to the place in question and they sorted it out. Seems your insurers are being a bit off.
Anyone could just pick a random car / number plate and claim an accident.
Yep , and the claims handler in my case agreed with me when I said exactly that to him.
There must be some sort of claims limit before any due diligence is used , as they had already paid out the second time it happened to me.
How does that scam work? if I call you up claiming to be your insurer with details of an accident your weren’t involved in – most people will argue the toss, but even if they say – well we might have had a minor bump I didn’t notice (a car park bump much more likely that a junction) – so go ahead and settle it – how does a “not actually your insurer” get money from anyone?
Because some people will panic and start sending personal details and documents to them to prove they were somewhere else, the scammer then uses the bank statements receipts names addresses etc to commit fraud.