Insurance Fraud Accountability Act
HR 2079 tightens insurance-fraud penalties and oversight to deter fraud, expanding enforcement, reporting, and data-sharing for insurers, agents, and regulators.
HR 2079 tightens insurance-fraud penalties and oversight to deter fraud, expanding enforcement, reporting, and data-sharing for insurers, agents, and regulators.
HR 2079, titled the Insurance Fraud Accountability Act, is a bill introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives on March 11, 2025. The measure seeks to address insurance fraud and strengthen accountability in the insurance system. The companion Senate bill is S. 976.
The specific provisions of HR 2079 are not included in the materials provided. As a result, the precise changes to law, enforcement mechanisms, penalties, funding, or regulatory requirements cannot be enumerated here. If the full text becomes available, a section-by-section analysis could be prepared to detail:
- Definitions of what constitutes insurance fraud under the act
- Authorities granted to federal agencies or to improve coordination among agencies
- Criminal or civil penalties for insurance fraud
- Reporting and data-sharing requirements
- Compliance obligations for insurers, producers, and licensed individuals
- Funding and administrative provisions (e.g., authorization of appropriations, grant programs)
- Whistleblower protections or consumer-facing remedies
- Effective dates and phased implementation
If you can provide the bill’s text or a link to the official summary, I can deliver a detailed, section-by-section provisions analysis and a precise impact assessment.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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