September 6, 2006 (Press Release) --
Jacksonville, FL Do you have insurance or looking for some? can we suggest you stay clear away from State Farm.
State Farm is not like other more reputable companies like ALLSTATE OR NATIONWIDE because State farm employees really dont care about you or your business but on cares about the $$$$.
The Attorney general’s office says there suing State farm for racketeering and many other fraudulent activity that they have been doing. State Farm has also tried to raise the Insurance policy rates in Florida by more than 40%...
A New ANTI State Farm Sucks website has been established to take your complaints online 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. To access this new anti state farm site please logon to the following:
http://www.StateFARMSTILLsucks.com
################# HERE IS ONE EXAMPLE OF HOW BAD STATE FARM IS ################
How the State Farm Case Arose: Tort Suits Against Curtis Campbell
State Farm itself began as a tragic car accident. In 1981 Curtis Campbell tried to pass six cars on a highway in Utah. His negligence caused the death of one driver, Todd Ospital, and disabled another driver, Robert Slusher.
Ospital's estate and Slusher sued Campbell, and Campbell's insurance company. State Farm hired a lawyer (per Campbell's car insurance policy) to defend Campbell in the case.
Ospital's estate and Slusher tried to settle with State Farm for the maximum Campbell's policy allowed: $50,000. Despite the fact that its own investigation indicated Campbell had been at fault, State Farm refused.
In 1983 a jury found that Campbell was responsible for the accident. It set damages at $185,000. State Farm appealed, but in 1989, the appellate court affirmed the verdict.
State Farm then paid Ospital's estate and Slusher both the $50,000 it owed and the remaining $135,000 - which Campbell would otherwise have had to pay himself.
Campbell's "Bad Faith" Suit Against State Farm
Nevertheless, Campbell afterwards sued State Farm for "bad faith." (In a "bad faith" action, an insured claims his insurer did not represent him honestly.) Campbell alleged that State Farm should have honored its investigator's report and settled the case - rather than , State Farm exposed Campbell to an almost unlimited risk, for no other reason than to take a roll of the dice that the jury would come back with a judgment of less than $50,000.
Furthermore, Campbell claimed that State Farm's bad faith was just one instance of a national scheme of fraud and deceit that it had been promoting for twenty years under the innocuous-sounding title "Performance, Planning and Review" ("PPR" for short). Campbell also asked for damages for this alleged longstanding, nationwide pattern of conduct.
What The Trial Judge Did in Campbell's Case - and The Issues It Raised
The trial judge divided Campbell's bad faith suit against State Farm into two parts.
In part one, the jury heard evidence only about the way State Farm handled Campbell's suit with Ospital's estat
State Farm is not like other more reputable companies like ALLSTATE OR NATIONWIDE because State farm employees really dont care about you or your business but on cares about the $$$$.
The Attorney general’s office says there suing State farm for racketeering and many other fraudulent activity that they have been doing. State Farm has also tried to raise the Insurance policy rates in Florida by more than 40%...
A New ANTI State Farm Sucks website has been established to take your complaints online 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. To access this new anti state farm site please logon to the following:
http://www.StateFARMSTILLsucks.com
################# HERE IS ONE EXAMPLE OF HOW BAD STATE FARM IS ################
How the State Farm Case Arose: Tort Suits Against Curtis Campbell
State Farm itself began as a tragic car accident. In 1981 Curtis Campbell tried to pass six cars on a highway in Utah. His negligence caused the death of one driver, Todd Ospital, and disabled another driver, Robert Slusher.
Ospital's estate and Slusher sued Campbell, and Campbell's insurance company. State Farm hired a lawyer (per Campbell's car insurance policy) to defend Campbell in the case.
Ospital's estate and Slusher tried to settle with State Farm for the maximum Campbell's policy allowed: $50,000. Despite the fact that its own investigation indicated Campbell had been at fault, State Farm refused.
In 1983 a jury found that Campbell was responsible for the accident. It set damages at $185,000. State Farm appealed, but in 1989, the appellate court affirmed the verdict.
State Farm then paid Ospital's estate and Slusher both the $50,000 it owed and the remaining $135,000 - which Campbell would otherwise have had to pay himself.
Campbell's "Bad Faith" Suit Against State Farm
Nevertheless, Campbell afterwards sued State Farm for "bad faith." (In a "bad faith" action, an insured claims his insurer did not represent him honestly.) Campbell alleged that State Farm should have honored its investigator's report and settled the case - rather than , State Farm exposed Campbell to an almost unlimited risk, for no other reason than to take a roll of the dice that the jury would come back with a judgment of less than $50,000.
Furthermore, Campbell claimed that State Farm's bad faith was just one instance of a national scheme of fraud and deceit that it had been promoting for twenty years under the innocuous-sounding title "Performance, Planning and Review" ("PPR" for short). Campbell also asked for damages for this alleged longstanding, nationwide pattern of conduct.
What The Trial Judge Did in Campbell's Case - and The Issues It Raised
The trial judge divided Campbell's bad faith suit against State Farm into two parts.
In part one, the jury heard evidence only about the way State Farm handled Campbell's suit with Ospital's estat

State Farm Sucks, a new website against how State farm is operating is online:
http://www.StateFARMSTILLSucks.com, logon and lets take action against this horrible Insurance company...
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