Archive for October, 2008

Neptune Society charged with misleading consumers about pre-need cremations

Sunday, October 26th, 2008

seaesThe Neptune Society is one of the largest providers of cremation services in the country. The Neptune Society performs Florida cremations and in nine other states. In Colorado the cremation service is accused of misleading customers and overcharging them.
The head of the national cremation broker being investigated by the Colorado Division of Insurance denied any wrongdoing Wednesday.

Jim Ford, the chief operating officer of Neptune Management Corporation, said in a statement: “We are, and always have been, in full compliance with the rules and regulations in every state in which we do business.”

After a Colorado Springs funeral home owner complained about Neptune’s practices in April, and a Neptune customer complained in July, insurance division officials launched an investigation.

That investigation resulted in charges alleging Neptune “misled consumers and manipulated prepaid, preneed funeral accounts in order to skirt Colorado law and maximize profits,” according to a division release.

Colorado law states the company was supposed to put 75 percent of customer’s prepaid funeral services in a trust fund. The investigation revealed in some cases less than 35 percent of the money was put into a trust and that the company inflated charges for upfront merchandise such as urns by as much as 1,300 percent, according to the Division.

The company is a leader in the cremation business and has offices in 10 states.

“The Neptune Society takes this complaint very seriously because we care about our customers first and foremost,” Ford said.

Neptune officials have been ordered to appear before the division Oct. 24 to answer charges. The company could be fined up to $5 million and have its Colorado license suspended or revoked.

MyKey may prevent Jacksonville Automobile Accidents

Monday, October 20th, 2008

081006_mykeyFlorida parents may want to look at the new MyKey device to prevent Jacksonville automobile accidents involving teens. Ford Motor Co. is giving families a new way to limit how teenagers act behind the wheel.Starting with select 2010 models to be introduced next year, Ford will include a programmable ignition key as a no-cost, standard option that restricts maximum speeds and offers additional safety alerts.

The MyKey device allows parents to restrict certain drivers to no more than 80 miles per hour as well as allow the vehicle to shut off the radio’s volume automatically when the driver hasn’t buckled a seatbelt in.

The new device can also be configured to sound chimes at 45, 55 or 65 miles per hour depending on how much parents may want to warn — or bother — their children about excessive speed.

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Another Florida Funeral Home sued for fraud

Friday, October 10th, 2008

gufuneralA class action lawsuit has been filed in which potentially thousands of customers who purchased “pre-need” contracts for burial services at Rubin Memorial in West Palm Beach Florida have been defrauded by the Florida funeral home in its attempt to overcharge them for out-of-state costs related to burial services, an action that is prohibited by Florida law. The class action alleges that Rubin Memorial created entirely false invoices, often doubling the prices of estimated services, and passed them off to consumers, while pocketing the difference. The scheme involved Rubin Memorial scanning the invoices received from out-of-state funeral homes and altering the invoices on a computer.
If you or a family member have been the victim of funeral home abuse or funeral home fraud make sure to call an experienced funeral home lawyer.

Hope for Jacksonville accident victims with chronic pain

Saturday, October 4th, 2008

thumb160x_eon-miniUnfortunately many of my Jacksonville automobile accident clients have had to undergo surgery to have an obtrusive spinal cord stimulator placed in their backs. Adam Hammond, a former member of the U.S. Army’s “Golden Knights” Parachute Team, has become the first recipient of the Eon Mini—the world’s smallest spinal cord stimulator. After suffering a broken femur, a shattered pelvis and a severed spine in an epic parachute fail a few years ago, it seemed that Hammond would be condemned to a life of severe chronic pain. Doctors hoped that implanting the new Eon Mini would offer a solution by delivering repeated mild electrical impulses to the spinal cord. So far, Hammond claims that the device offers “significant pain relief” and that he was able to “walk twice as far” as he could previously.
Spinal cord simulators are nothing new, but the size of the Eon Mini combined with the fact that it is easily recharged make it a viable solution for people with severe back problems or other chronic conditions caused by automobile accidents and serious falls.

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