Claim Denied? Put Em Outta Business!!!

Oct 6, 2011 by

People before Profit! Goodbye Liberty Mutual. We’re about to cure Corporate Cancer…

Many of us former Liberty Mutual employees were fired for using our first amendments rights when attempting to get Liberty Mutual to honor their written agreements (Also called policies) with their customers. Liberty Mutual took your premiums, invested them with Goldman Sachs, then lost your premium money, and now deny your claims.

Is it your fault Liberty Mutual Management are such dopes? Drop them!

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2 Comments

  1. Anonymous

    Below are companies that have ERISA plans with Liberty Mutual. Liberty Mutual is currently denying the disabled their benefits for LTD. The employee denied benefits must fight for them and the disability attorneys take 33.33% of the claim plus expenses leaving the claimant in proverty for the entire length of their disability payments. Employees disabled under an ERISA plan should not have to fight like this for their benefits. The below employers use Liberty Mutual as their plan administrator and claims processor; this is an inherent conflict of interest. Liberty Mutual takes your premiums and refuses to pay your claim. They harass your doctors and hire insurance doctors that profit from denying valid claims. This behavior must stop. It’s time for the people to rise up and help the disabled. It could be your mother, brother, sister or spouse that is losing their benefits so Liberty Mutual can illegally pocket the money. And these employers should know that when a valid claim is denied they lose another customer in an already bad economy.

    Call these companies and ask them to drop Liberty Mutual as their LTD carrier.

    Comcast
    DIRECTV
    UC Davis
    Wells Fargo
    Heinz
    Otis Elevator
    Chico’s FAS, Inc.
    Advance America Cash Advance Center
    PNC Financial Services Group
    Yellow Book

  2. Cathieman

    Soaring greed at Liberty Mutual
    April 18, 2012|By Brian McGrory

    Of all the places I might have found myself on a Saturday morning, a breezy sidewalk at Hanscom Field was probably the most enlightening. There, I found myself gawking at a golden-hued building so richly landscaped with azaleas and evergreens, so impeccably maintained with a princely portico and a flag flapping from above, that it looked like the regal headquarters of a Fortune 500 company.

    It wasn’t, though. It was just the jet hangar for a Fortune 500 company, that company being Liberty Mutual.

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