Do you know the difference between arson and fraud? In this clip, Carly Firestein provides a very clear distinction between these two concepts. At Advanced Analysis, we're committed to shedding light on critical aspects of #Fire investigation, helping you better understand the nuances in this field. #Claims
Could you differentiate between fraud and arson for the audience? Oh, sure. I mean, in insurance fraud, you know, it's committed by property owners usually would deliberately destroy or damage their own property by fire in order basically to collect from their insurance companies. So looking to defraud insurance companies or arson. Here in California. The Penal Code says that you know persons guilty of arson when they willfully and maliciously set fire to structure or some property. And someone asked willfully when they do it on purpose. And it's malicious when they do it, when they do it intentionally wrong act, or when you injure someone with the intent to defraud or injure or annoy another person. So they all carry with it criminal and civil time. But what's interesting is the interplay between fraud and arson so you can set your own. Property on fire just to watch it burn and while that's an intentionally set fire. That's not an arson. You're It's once you do it maliciously with the intent to defraud someone, such as making a false claim to your insurance company claiming that the fire was an accidental fire. That's when it transfers from being just intentionally set fire into an arson. And then fraud as well. It's kind of fun.
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