

Death Benefits Not Mandatory for PA Car Insurance
Armenia mulls banning ATVs on roads
CNN: What To Do After A Car Accident
Fla. Jury Awards $6 Million to Man Injured in Ford Rollover
ERISA Bars Medical Expense Lien Against Child's Trust
Evidence of seatbelt non-use permitted in products liability case involving airbags
Man severely injured in car accident awarded $7.6 million by Delco jury
From InsuranceJournal.com:
A Jackson County judge agreed on Wednesday, July 23 to throw out a contempt order against Allstate Insurance after determining the company had finally complied with his directions to release confidential documents.
The Kansas City Star reported on its Web site that the decision negates more than $7 million in fines that Allstate had accrued after Judge Michael Manners last year began levying penalties of $25,000 a day against the company in a bad-faith case.
The two sides agreed to settle the case on confidential terms last week, avoiding a Monday trial date. During a hearing Wednesday, Manners agreed that the company was no longer out of compliance with his order to release the confidential records and lifted the contempt order.
Attorneys for both Aldridge and the accident victim, Dale Deer, of Warrensburg, requested a set of records prepared by consultant McKinsey & Co. on behalf of the insurance company that showed how it set up a claims payment system in the 1990s aimed at generating big earnings while keeping claims payments low.
Post a Comment to "Allstate Finally Gives Up McKinsey Documents in Florida"
To reply to this message, enter your reply in the box labeled "Message", hit "Post Message."
