Rear-Ended
By Auto Repair Fraud
MURIETTA, Calif.,
Feb. 11, 2004
(CBS) Jim Asay was rear-ended on California's I-15.
"All of a sudden I got
hit from behind, then I passed out for a few seconds," says
Asay.
Then, as CBS News Correspondent
Mika Brzezinski reports, he was clobbered by the Caliber Collision
Centers.
"They didn't fix it the
way they were supposed to," says Asay. "They had not repaired
the frame of the car correctly. It made the car unsafe."
His car was examined by California's
Bureau of Auto Repair, which found the work was "grossly negligent."
The California Attorney General has accused Caliber of ripping off
customers at locations across the state.
Worse still, is what critics
like Ron Pyle say is a colossal conflict of interest, that the repair
shop chain is owned by a group of insurance companies.
"The folks in that facility
actually work for the insurance company," says Pyle, the president
of the Automotive Service Association. "I think the consumer
is not served by that.
"It's a third party influence
that dictates how I conduct business."
It's an influence so powerful,
this independent auto mechanic did not want to reveal his identity.
"They can come right out
and tell you, 'If you want to play by the rules great and if not,
we'll pull the car and all the work,'" he told CBS News. "All
the time, the bottom line is they want to save money."
Caliber denied CBS' request
for an interview but issued a statement attacking the attorney general's
charges, saying, "Caliber has not and does not commit fraud."
CBS visited the shop where the
authorities say at least four customers, including Asay, were ripped
off.
The undercover cameras show
a manager assuring us of Caliber's good name.
"I won't let a car go out
of here that's unsafe," he says. "I haven't heard any
bad things about our reputation."
Later he admitted Caliber had
had a problem but denied it was at his shop.
"Basically, what happened
was one of our other stores had a problem," he says.
And it's not just Caliber, insurance
giant Allstate owns Sterling Auto Body centers in at least 14 states.
So how is not a conflict of
interest?
"Well it's not a conflict
of interest because the company and the insured have the same interest,"
says Carl Parks, who represents the insurance industry.
Parks says the insurance company
wants both good car repairs and to save money.
"The insurance company
wants both," says Parks. "The insurance company wants
really good repairs because that's how they keep their customers
happy."
Fed up, Asay sold it to the
state as evidence.
"I was sort of the unlucky
consumer who didn't know any better," says Asay.
And 10 states are now looking
at whether insurance companies should legally be allowed to own
the auto repair industry.
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