Alfred Gallinelli, 36, of Barnet, who took out over 81 home insurance policies from November 2017 to July 2018 using fictitious names was sentenced to 12 months imprisonment, suspended for 18 months, at the same court on 25 January 2024. He was also ordered to complete 80 hours of unpaid work and a 30 day rehabilitation activity requirement, and pay a victim surcharge.
Mr Gallinelli made 45 claims, all for accidental damage to a flat-screen TV’s. Of the 45 claims, 26 were settled with payouts worth over £30,000
Detective Constable Chris Kench, from the City of London Police's Insurance Fraud Enforcement Department (IFED), said:
“Although each claim made by Gallinelli was relatively low in value, the large volume of claims he made meant that he pocketed a whopping £31,000. Losses through fraudulent activity like this increase premiums for law-abiding policyholders.
"Thankfully, the crossovers between the phone numbers, email addresses and IP addresses that Gallinelli used to take out the policies meant that we had solid evidence to link them to him.
“We hope this result acts as a warning to anyone considering exploiting their insurance policy for financial gain: this type of fraud is taken very seriously by IFED and the insurance industry, and will leave perpetrators with a criminal record.”
Gallinelli took out a home insurance policy in November 2017. He contacted the insurer in January 2018 to report that he had dropped a television, and received a voucher to buy a replacement.
After further claims were made, Gallinelli was investigated by a company that the insurer used to validate claims and arrange replacement items since he had already claimed for the same item.
A company that the insurer used to validate claims and arrange replacement items to be sent to policyholders identified that Gallinelli had already made a claim for damage to a television, prompting an investigation.
Gallinelli had taken out a total of 82 policies under various names and made 45 claims against them. The same bank account and IP address were linked to multiple policies, and the televisions in many of the photos submitted as evidence of the damage had the same serial number. After the fraudulent claims were identified, 19 were denied before they could be paid out.
Cross-industry checks led staff at another insurer to suspect that it had also been exposed to similar claims. They launched a separate investigation, which found that Gallinelli had taken out five home insurance policies using various names, and £6,829 had been paid out against them. It also found that Gallinelli had made five further claims worth a total of £16,000, which were subsequently denied before they were paid out.
The case was referred to IFED in August 2018. During a voluntary attendance interview with IFED officers, Gallinelli answered “no comment” to all questions asked.