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--whom police say were preyed upon for more than a year by a band of con
artists working with truck drivers.
Police arrested Michael Garner, 39, Kendrick Moore, 53, and four others
last week and charged them with a range of crimes in connection with the
battering of six homeless people to commit insurance fraud. Since the
arrests, two other victims, including the 45-year-old man, have come
forward and police suspect the brutal scam was carried out several more
times.
Police caught on to the scam in April, robbery Detective Michael Cummins
said, when one of the homeless men had his arm crushed so severely that he
could not go through with the staged accident. He had to be hospitalized
and afterward went to police because he feared retribution for not going
through with the scam.
While the ringleaders allegedly stole hundreds of thousands of dollars
from insurance companies, the homeless men never received more than a few
thousand dollars. In many cases they received just a few dollars and small
amounts of drugs or a case of beer, police said.
Garner, whom police called the ringleader, was charged with six counts of
aggravated battery for wielding the ax.
"I wince every time I hear it," said Cummins, who worked the case with his
partner, Ken Bigg. Technically, the injured homeless people are not
victims because they participated in crimes. But authorities decided to
treat them as witnesses because they were so vulnerable and, in the end,
were swindled out of promised payoffs.
"These guys have nothing to live for but the hope that their payday's
coming," Cummins said.
The man interviewed by the Tribune came forward to police after learning
of the arrests of Garner and Moore. Garner posted $30,000 bail, but Moore
remains in jail.
Taking `an arm shot'
It was Valentine's Day when two of the suspects pulled up to the curb
outside Franciscan House, a homeless shelter in the 2700 block of West
Harrison Street. The men identified themselves as "Kenny and Mike" and
called the 45-year-old man over to their car.
"Kenny asked me if I wanted to make some money," the man said. "I said I
did. And then he said, `I need somebody to take an arm shot and somebody
to take a leg shot."
The man said he asked what exactly they meant by a "shot," and was told
that would be explained after a second person was recruited to be injured.
Police said the scheme always involved staged wrecks with two victims, to
increase the settlements, some of which exceeded $100,000. The key,
Cummins said, was that commercial truck drivers were in on the scam
because their employers were sure to have insurance.
The man said he would "take the arm shot," and once a second homeless man,
named James, agreed to go along, the suspects said they planned to hit
them in the arm and leg to cause realistic injuries.
After his arm was broken, the homeless man said he was handed some
newspapers to wrap up his bloody, crushed limb. He was helped back into
the car, and then James was taken into the garage, the man said.
"I was sitting in the car and I heard a bump, and then a moan. Then
another bump, and a yell," he said. Police have not been able to locate
James, Cummins said.
At Franciscan House, officials remember seeing men with casts on their
arms or legs several months ago. Director of operations Barry Steele said
he has not encountered anyone who acknowledges being used in the scam, but
he's looking for them.
"I want to make sure that any of those people who were involved get
medical care," Steele said. "They can have lifelong injuries from that if
they don't get the right care."
The accident
After their bones were smashed, it was night when the two men were driven
to a street corner that had been chosen as the accident site. The
45-year-old homeless man didn't remember the location.
"I could walk so I got out of the car and lay down. Then Kenny and Mike
helped [the other man] out," he said. "Then they called the truck and the
truck came and drove up on the sidewalk."
People started to gather around the staged accident scene, he said, and
911 was called. Usually, the drivers would say they had swerved to avoid
hitting another car and then hit the victims, police said.
While James was taken to Mt. Sinai Hospital, the man with the broken arm
was taken to Stroger Hospital, where he stayed for eight days and
underwent surgery to put pins in his shattered arm.
After he was released, the man said "Kenny and Mike" began to string him
along when he asked about the money. They had him meet with a
representative of the company that owned the truck, and then with an
insurance agent. They would occasionally give him a little money--$12 or
$13. When he asked for more, they would become combative and threatening,
he said. But they always promised the insurance settlement was on its way,
and he'd get his $3,500.
Then came the news June 6 that Garner and Moore and several others had
been arrested and charged in six incidents just like his.
Two days later, the man went to the police.
The truck driver, Khaled M. Saleh, 31, of Justice, was charged late Friday
with insurance fraud in the case.
Sitting in a break room at the community mental health center where he
spends his days, the man leaned his elbows on the sticky dark veneer of
the table as he recounted his ordeal. As much as he had suffered, his
greatest sadness is about opportunities the money represented to him. He
had hoped to find a place of his own to live and perhaps reunite with an
old girlfriend who lives on the South Side.
"Now, I feel like--I'm kind of hurt now," he said. "I had a lot of plans.
I had a plan for what I was going to do when I got that money."
The 45-year-old homeless man said he was outside Franciscan House one day
while his arm was still in a cast when another homeless man asked how his
arm had been broken.
"I got hit by a truck," he told him.
The other man smiled, said he once had a broken arm, and said: "What did
the truck say on the side? Kenny and Mike's?"
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