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Home > Archive > Recovery aa > May 2006 > I see what you mean
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I see what you mean
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| Tim and Lisa 2006-05-19, 11:01 am |
| After both deaths, Golay and Rutterschmidt, who are "longtime friends",
claimed to be relatives or fiancees of the men, claiming the bodies and
filing life insurance claims, Jackson said.
http://www.nbc4.tv/news/9240573/detail.html
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| Joe Jared 2006-05-23, 11:00 am |
| On Fri, 19 May 2006 14:05:45 +0000, Tim and Lisa wrote:
> After both deaths, Golay and Rutterschmidt, who are "longtime friends",
> claimed to be relatives or fiancees of the men, claiming the bodies and
> filing life insurance claims, Jackson said.
>
> http://www.nbc4.tv/news/9240573/detail.html
Sounds like an excellent business model. Take the rejects of society,
insure them, and then wait for them to die. Wait, payback on investment
would be more immediate if they met with an untimely death... hmm.
--
Listed? You must be joking http://relays.osirusoft.com
Pallorium V. Jared ruling http://www.oretek.com/lawsuite/ruling.pdf
http://www.oretek.com/lawsuite/
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| F. H. 2006-05-23, 11:00 am |
| Joe Jared wrote:
> On Fri, 19 May 2006 14:05:45 +0000, Tim and Lisa wrote:
>
>
> Sounds like an excellent business model. Take the rejects of society,
> insure them, and then wait for them to die. Wait, payback on investment
> would be more immediate if they met with an untimely death... hmm.
Ah...., looks like these two grannies made an end run around the "wait"
part of the model.
(((<<< Where's the Beef >>> ))) (in the alley)
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| Fred Exley 2006-05-23, 11:00 am |
|
"F. H." <connectu2@verizon.net> wrote in message
news:JEpbg.61$Ar6.47@trnddc02...
> Joe Jared wrote:
>
> Ah...., looks like these two grannies made an end run around the "wait"
> part of the model.
>
> (((<<< Where's the Beef >>> ))) (in the alley)
NEFF
Sure. I've got good eyesight. You
want him to have the policy without
him knowing it. And that means without
the insurance company knowing that
he doesn't know. That's the set-up,
isn't it?
PHYLLIS
Is there anything wrong with it?
NEFF
I think it's lovely. And then, some
dark wet night, if that crown block
fell on him --
PHYLLIS
What crown block?
NEFF
Only sometimes they have to have a
little help. They can't quite make
it on their own.
PHYLLIS
I don't know what you're talking
about.
NEFF
Of course, it doesn't have to be a
crown block. It can be a car backing
over him, or he can fall out of an
upstairs window. Any little thing
like that, as long as it's a morgue
job.
PHYLLIS
Are you crazy?
NEFF
Not that crazy. Goodbye, Mrs.
Dietrichson. ....
PHYLLIS
She takes a long drink.
PHYLLIS
The other night we drove home from a
party. He was drunk again. When we
got into the garage he just sat there
with his head on the steering wheel
and the motor still running. And I
thought what it would be like if I
didn't switch it off, just closed
the garage door and left him there.
NEFF
I'll tell you what it would be like,
if you had that accident policy, and
tried to pull a monoxide job. We
have a guy in our office named Keyes.
For him a set-up like that would be
just like a slice of rare roast beef.
In three minutes he'd know it wasn't
an accident. In ten minutes you'd be
sitting under the hot lights. In
half an hour you'd be signing your
name to a confession.
PHYLLIS
But Walter, I didn't do it. I'm not
going to do it.
NEFF
Not if there's an insurance company
in the picture, baby. So long as
you're honest they'll pay you with a
smile, but you just try to pull
something like that and you'll find
out. They know more tricks than a
carload of monkeys. And if there's a
death mixed up in it, you haven't
got a prayer. They'll hang you as
sure as ten dimes will buy a dollar,
baby.
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