NEWS RELEASE

Commissioner Poizner Announces Four Arrested, Charged
with Conspiracy and $1.5 Million Grand Theft W.C. Surgery Centers and W.C.S.C. & Associates

Insurance Commissioner Steve Poizner announced today that four suspects were arrested and charged
in connection with a $1.5 million insurance fraud scam. Rene Montes, 41, of Riverside; Hector Porrata, 45,
of Moreno Valley; George Martinez, 42, of Apple Valley; and Cara Cruz Thompson, 46, of Victorville were
arrested today. The felony charges include conspiracy to commit grand theft, embezzlement, and
insurance fraud.

The defendants are each being held on $1 million bail and must prove that the money is from a legal
source before posting bail. Arraignment is set for May 7, 2009 at the Central Justice Center in Santa Ana.

It is alleged that between August 2003 and January 2006, Rene Montes, who operated W.C. Surgery
Centers and W.C.S.C. & Associates fraudulently solicited funds from AIG Claims Services and Matrix
Absence Management Inc. for outstanding medical liens on workers compensation claims for services
rendered by medical providers. Montes issued letters to AIG Insurance Company and Matrix Absence
Management Inc., indicating that his two companies had been authorized by the medical providers to
negotiate, settle and collect monies to resolve unpaid liens. It is alleged that Montes did not have authority
to resolve the unpaid liens.  

Porrata, Cruz-Thompson and Martinez were employed by AIG as workers' compensation insurance
adjusters. As AIG employees, the three people allegedly made payments of nearly $1.2 million to W.C.
Surgery Centers and W.C.S.C. & Associates.

On February 2, 2007, AIG received a demand on behalf of Coast Plaza Doctors Hospital for payment of
almost $100,000 in outstanding medical liens. AIG discovered that they had paid W.C.S.C. & Associates
for resolution of the lien. They also learned that they made 49 additional payments totaling almost $1.1
million to W.C.S.C, believing that the company was authorized to handle unresolved liens for various
medical providers. AIG confirmed that all fifty payments to W.C.S.C. were caused to be paid by only three
adjusters: Martinez, Cruz-Thompson and Porrata.

California Department of Insurance and Orange County District Attorney's Office investigators discovered
that the adjusters had worked together previously at another workers' compensation claims administrator,
Matrix Absence Management, where they allegedly defrauded the company out of more than $310,000.

The Orange County District Attorney's Office is prosecuting this case.  

Commissioner Poizner oversees sixteen CDI Enforcement Branch regional offices throughout the state.
Close to 1900 insurance fraud-related arrests have been made by the Department of Insurance's
Enforcement Branch since Commissioner Poizner took office in 2007 - more arrests than have been made
during any other two year period, under any previous insurance commissioner.     

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