NJ Judge Throws Out RICO Case

On Friday, a New Jersey federal judge threw out the remaining racketeering claims pending against several dozen insurers and brokers in a class action lawsuit stemming from industry-wide investigations into bid-rigging and client-steering allegations.

Published on October 1, 2007

The decision, which follows a recent ruling dismissing antitrust claims against the brokers and insurers, resolves the major claims in the consolidated litigation brought on behalf of commercial property/casualty insurance policyholders and employee benefit plan sponsors, who sued the firms following the investigations initiated by then-New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer.

According to plaintiffs, the carriers engaged in a conspiracy in which they allocated clients, fixed prices and restrained trade in violation of Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act and the Sherman Antitrust Act. In earlier rulings, Judge Brown and a previously assigned judge rejected antitrust and RICO allegations against the insurers and brokers. Judge Brown earlier this year gave plaintiffs a final chance to amend their filings and bolster their case with supplemental pleadings.

After ruling in late August that the consolidated suit lacked factual support for claims of a widespread antitrust conspiracy, U.S. District Judge Garrett E. Brown Jr. said Friday the suit also lacked factual evidence of a RICO enterprise.

“Plaintiffs’ allegations offer nothing more than a kaleidoscope of acts executed by a kaleidoscope of actors, and combine broker-defendants and insurer-defendants in such a fashion that the court is unable to discern any systemic permutation,” Judge Brown wrote in his 73-page decision. “While discussing dozens of transactions and hundreds of actors, plaintiffs fail to outline even a single set of actors that interacted with each other and executed their transactions systemically.”

The plaintiffs alleged the brokers and insurers participated in the operation or management of a RICO enterprise by, among other things, reaching agreements with each of the insurers regarding the amount of contingent commissions to be paid to the broker and the level of business to be steered to each insurer defendant and then coordinated the concealment of the scheme, according to court papers.

The judge noted that certain charges against insurers alleging violations of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act still must be resolved.

“We are very pleased with Judge Brown’s decision. It is a complete victory for the defendants,” said Mitchell J. Auslander, an attorney for defendant Marsh & McLennan Cos. Inc. and a partner at New York law firm of Willkie, Farr & Gallagher.