I'm sure they've read it in the newspaper by right now. Without an independent investigation I'm sure they won't be getting far. Will they?
I really don't think you understand the first thing about insurance, do you? Insurance companies pay out to compensate for actual loss incurred. You're claiming that it's possible to prove, from publically available sources, that Silverstein Properties has received more in insurance payments than it lost as a result of 9/11. If you're right, then all the insurance companies need to do is read your sources and reduce the payouts accordingly. No need to look into how or why the buildings collapsed; the simple fact that the payout is too big will be enough. If you have any confidence in your analysis, all you have to do is make the call and collect the reward.
But, of course, as others have pointed out, these are insurance companies, with experience in carrying out fraud investigations. If they think they've been defrauded out of billions, they'll be happy to spend tens of millions on a new investigation, and it'll be the truly independent investigation truthers want. Again, if you have the slightest confidence in the argument you've been making, you have no reason not to make the call.
You might want to mail John-Paul Leonard and see what the response was to his request.
I don't need to. You see, my position here is that Leonard's claim was without merit. You, however, are the one who might want to mail him, because you're the one saying he was right.
Right Silverstein was paid twice for what appears as the same incident. Through a loophole he was awarded twice the amount. I don't think you'd be that lucky to claim twice the insured amount.
You really,
really don't understand the most basic facts about this case, do you? Silverstein's losses exceeded the maximum payout specified in his insurance policies for a single incident. In order to receive compensation for a greater proportion of his losses, he argued that the WTC attacks were two separate incidents, so the maximum payout should be doubled. That's nothing to do with getting paid for twice the financial loss he suffered; the insurance companies will only ever pay him up to the amount he lost, whatever value the courts may set on the maximum amount payable.
Oh I know, but see insurance companies are not "in their parents basement" truthers. I'm sure they'd dig deeper.
Sorry, but didn't you just say they wouldn't get far without an independent investigation? Oh, yes, you did, just up there. So now you think they'd actually investigate it all themselves? Well, then, make that call, and get them started. After all...
I'm sure there wasn't, but isn't in the insurance companies best interest and as part of it due diligence to suspect fraud anyway.
So, pick up the phone, be the hero, and if you're right then the insurance companies will be very grateful, for values of "grateful" running to at least seven digits. And the worst thing that will happen is that they'll tell you you're wrong; since some of them have 800 numbers, you won't even be down by the price of a phone call. It's perfectly clear that there's absolutely no reason for you not to make those calls, except for one:
you don't actually believe anything you've been saying here.
It's that simple. Call the insurance companies, or admit you haven't got an argument.
Dave