Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has filed a lawsuit seeking damages and, ultimately, a permanent injunction against the Austin-based company VA Claims Insider, alleging it engages in โfalse, misleading, and deceptive acts and practicesโ that have ensnared thousands of veterans in the Lone Star state, and beyond.
Paxtonโs complaint, filed in district court in Bexar County, specifically charges that VA Claims Insider inaccurately promotes certain services as โfreeโ before locking veterans into contracts that demand exorbitant sums โ including for potentially illegal services, or assistance it doesnโt provide. The company requires that veterans pay six times the amount of any disability increase they receive after signing up with VACI, the suit said.
โWhile veterans can terminate the contract at any time with a 30-day written notice, VACI still demands payment for any subsequent increases in disability benefits or $5,000 in damages if the customer fails to notify it of an increase within one week,โ the attorney generalโs office said in a statement. โFurther, consumer complaints reflect that the company specifically requested veterans to turn over their private information and VA account logins. Additionally, the companyโs advertisements failed to disclose to potential customers that VACI is not accredited by the VA, cannot provide claim preparation services, and that the VA previously sent a cease-and-desist letter to VACI for potentially violating the law.โ
The attorney generalโs charges echo allegations surfaced in anย investigationย The Texas Tribune published in July.
โIt is deeply disappointing that this business took advantage of men and women who have given so much to our country,โ Paxton said in a press release announcing hisย suit. โIโm proud to advocate for justice for our Texas veterans at every opportunity.โ
The company denied wrongdoing.
โWe respectfully disagree with the basis of the lawsuit filed by the Texas attorney generalโs office,โ said Jeff Eller, a VA Claims Insider spokesperson. โFounded by a veteran to serve veterans, VA Claims Insider is a mission-driven organization and stands behind that mission. We welcome the opportunity to present our case in court.โ
Founded in 2017, VA Claims Insider has become a particularly prominent and profitable firm in a burgeoning industry of companies that have sidestepped government accreditation and regulation as they seek to assist military veterans with the onerous work of preparing and filing benefits claims.
Days after Paxtonโs case was filed, a group of accredited claims agents filed their ownย class-action suitย against VA Claims Insider, seeking damages for perpetrating an allegedly โunfair and illegal scheme, which not only harms the business interests of properly accredited attorneys and agents but also hurts our veterans.โ (In response to the class-action case, Eller provided a statement that was nearly identical to the one issued in response to Paxtonโs suit.)
Federal law mandates that claims assistance is undertaken by accredited agents, who are trained, tested, overseen, and, when appropriate, punished by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairsโ Office of General Counsel. Traditionally, the federal office offersย accreditation to three types of claims representatives: agents, lawyers and veteran service organizations like theย Veterans of Foreign Warsย and theย American Legion. The lawyers and agents charge fees on a tightly regulated scale. The service organizations provide their services for free, as does theย Texas Veterans Commission, which also employs accredited agents.
Unaccredited representatives are explicitly banned from โpreparing, presenting or prosecutingโ claims, but all penalties for breaking this law were removed in 2006, setting the stage for unaccredited actors to flourish. While VA Claims Insiderโs website and written materials include disclaimers that the company doesnโt engage in this work, Paxtonโs suit deems such statements โinconsistentโ with the services the company advertises.
Over the last year or so, unaccredited actors have proliferated thanks to the Honoring Our PACT Act, passed by Congress to expand benefits for millions of veterans disabled byย military burn pitsย and other toxic exposures dating back to the Vietnam War. Since the law was signed last August,ย moreย than one million veterans have filed a claim. As of late July, Texasย led the nationย in number of PACT Act claims.
The Tribuneโs investigation into VA Claims Insider detailed a slew of consumer complaints against the company, alleging everything from โslimy car sales tacticsโ to benefits fraud. The story also revealed that veterans and government officials had complained to Paxtonโs office about VA Claims Insider dating as far as 2019. It also showed that company founder Brian Reese, an Air Force veteran, contacted the attorney generalโs office for guidance, after which he publicly asserted online that he had spoken with lawyers there to โmake sure that everything weโre doing is above board.โ
Major veterans groups, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, and 44 stateย attorneys generalย are now lobbying in Congress for passage ofย the GUARD VA Benefits Act, which would reimpose fines and criminal penalties for unaccredited claims companies. Leading this charge is the Veterans of Foreign War, which recentlyย deridedย some of the biggest unaccredited companies, including VA Claims Insider, as โclaims sharks.โ
Reese rejected this characterization in aย YouTubeย video, insisting that unaccredited and accredited actors share the same mission of helping veterans.
โI think this infighting โ this โus versus themโ mentality โ is hurting everybody,โ he said. โItโs hurting the veterans and itโs unproductive.โ
This article was written byย JASPER CRAVEN of The Texas Tribune. This article originally appeared at : https://www.texastribune.org/2023/12/12/texas-attorney-general-va-claims-insider-veterans/