No. In tortuous fraudthe element of malice must be proved to establish a case. In criminal fraud, the intent to do harm must also be proven for fraud to exist. If there is no intent to harm, all you have is an honest mistake. It might be just as harmful, but if it's not intended, it's not fraud.
Trying to get insurance to cover an accident that has already happened is Insurance Fraud, which is a Felony.
It's fraud that is done by the internet, through email or websites.
Then the people will be charged with insurance fraud.
I think so, though it shouldn't worry you unless you have been done for fraud..
Insurance fraud - have fun in jail + fines.
In general parlance, scam is done against a particular system while fraud is done against an individual. In case of scam the loopholes in systems are abused while in case of a fraud the ignorance of the victim is abused.
No. If someone is not an authorized signer or an account owner, they should not be permitted to withdraw money from your account. Is it sometimes done through accident (e.g., teller mistake) or fraud? Yes.
insurance fraud.
if you made the accident(specially if it prove you did it on purpose) it is almost certain you will lose the lawsuit and even get sued yourself for fraud
This type of fraud is mostly done by employees. It is the misuse of company computer resources such as computers to do personal business.
It certainly can be, IF it was done with criminal intent.
it is a place where people stay when they had done crime or a fraud