Coroner Fraud
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Coroner fraud started at an unknown location and at an unknown time. I can say, "Coroner department employment became a gold mine for those employees in the know." What they knew was that bloodborne pathogen training became mandated by congress. As a result, the crime scene cleanup industry manipulated the meaning of "training" and "certification" while helping to create bloodborne pathogen hysteria.

With their face-to-face contact with bereaved families, they cashed in. We do know exactly what they do. They tell bereaved families that their loved one's non-bodily remains must have a professional biohazard cleaning company to remove them. After all, this is law, according to OSHA

Then these civil servants direct grieving families to a crime scene cleanup company owned by the coroner's employee, or to a crime scene cleanup company that pays a referral fee for the client, the grieving family.

There's much more here. Because homeowners' insurance must pick up the "cleaning" tab in many cases, crime scene cleanup companies scalp the insurance company. Claiming to have subject matter expertise in the removal of bloodborne pathogens, these employees often do more demolition than cleaning. Where blood once resided on wood floors, they needlessly destroy floors. A professional cleaner will easily save such floors, but not employees in the line of local governments' coroner fraud. They make tons of money by cheating insurance companies by destroying and inflating prices.

I've been told by insurance adjusters that companies have charged $350 per box of "biohazard material." Anywhere from 3 to 18 such boxes may have been charged. What makes these materials "biohazardous" remains a mystery .

What .

 

 

 

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