It is speculated the accused were seeking a six-figure insurance payday
- Cali-based criminals tried to commit insurance fraud
- How? By dressing up as a bear and wrecking their own car
- The plan didn’t work and four people were charged
It seems the latter is, in part, what gave the game away. Authorities said the ‘claw marks’ inside the vehicles were far too uniform to have been made by a panicked bear, not to mention the scratches seemed to indicate the presence of six claws. Bears have five claws. If only the perps had paid attention in elementary science class or at least watched a single episode of Yogi Bear.
Even if they had, it likely would have been for nought. Insurance investigators aren’t known for their humour, and the ones assigned to this case apparently sniffed out the fact that it was a human in a bear costume which was picked up on the video and not an actual bruin. The California Department of Insurance actually had a biologist from the Department of Fish and Wildlife review the alleged bear videos, at which time they also opined it was clearly a human in a bear suit. In other words, the theatre didn’t work and it was the film provided by the perps themselves which played a large role in sealing the fate of these fraudsters who were trying to make off with an estimated $142,000.
But wait, there’s more. Investigators continued down this dubious rabbit hole and eventually were able to determine these same people also filed claims alleging similar damage to a 2015 Mercedes-AMG G63 and a 2022 Mercedes-Benz E 350. In a stunning display of witless behaviour, cops say claims for those two rigs were made on the same day and the one for the Rolls. The biologist mentioned above was called in to examine the video ‘proof’ in those instances as well and came to the same conclusion.
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