Oklahoma Code § 36-4055.13

Title 36. Insurance: Prohibited acts - Warning statement - Provision of
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information on fraudulent acts - Liability - Antifraud initiatives.
A.  1.  A person shall not commit a fraudulent viatical
settlement act.
2.  A person shall not knowingly or intentionally interfere with
the enforcement of the provisions of the Viatical Settlements Act of
2008 or investigations of suspected or actual violations of the
Viatical Settlements Act of 2008.
3.  A person in the business of viatical settlements shall not
knowingly or intentionally permit any person convicted of a felony
involving dishonesty or breach of trust to participate in the
business of viatical settlements.
B.  1.  Viatical settlements contracts and applications for
viatical settlements, regardless of the form of transmission, shall
contain the following statement or a substantially similar
statement:
“Any person who knowingly presents false information in an
application for insurance or viatical settlement contract is guilty
of a crime and may be subject to fines and confinement in prison.”
2.  The lack of a statement as required in paragraph 1 of this
subsection does not constitute a defense in any prosecution for a
fraudulent viatical settlement act.
C.  1.  Any person engaged in the business of viatical
settlements having knowledge or a reasonable suspicion that a

fraudulent viatical settlement act is being, will be or has been
committed shall provide to the Insurance Commissioner such
information as required by, and in a manner prescribed by, the
Commissioner.
2.  Any other person having knowledge or a reasonable belief
that a fraudulent viatical settlement act is being, will be or has
been committed may provide to the Commissioner the information
required by, and in a manner prescribed by, the Commissioner.
D.  1.  No civil liability shall be imposed on and no cause of
action shall arise from a person’s furnishing information concerning
suspected, anticipated or completed fraudulent viatical settlement
acts or suspected or completed fraudulent insurance acts, if the
information is provided to or received from:
a. the Commissioner or the Commissioner’s employees,
agents or representatives,
b. federal, state or local law enforcement or regulatory
officials or their employees, agents or
representatives,
c. a person involved in the prevention and detection of
fraudulent viatical settlement acts or that person’s
agents, employees or representatives,
d. the National Association of Insurance Commissioners
(NAIC), National Association of Securities Dealers
(NASD), the North American Securities Administrators
Association (NASAA), or their employees, agents or
representatives, or other regulatory body overseeing
life insurance, viatical settlements, securities or
investment fraud, or
e. the life insurer that issued the life insurance policy
covering the life of the insured.
2.  Paragraph 1 of this subsection shall not apply to statements
made with actual malice.  In an action brought against a person for
filing a report or furnishing other information concerning a
fraudulent viatical settlement act, the party bringing the action
shall plead specifically any allegation that paragraph 1 of this
subsection does not apply because the person filing the report or
furnishing the information did so with actual malice.
3.  A person furnishing information as identified in paragraph 1
of this subsection shall be entitled to an award of attorney fees
and costs if he or she is the prevailing party in a civil cause of
action for libel, slander or any other relevant tort arising out of
activities in carrying out the provisions of the Viatical
Settlements Act of 2008 and the party bringing the action was not
substantially justified in doing so.  For purposes of this section a
proceeding is “substantially justified” if it had a reasonable basis
in law or fact at the time that it was initiated.  However, such an

award does not apply to any person furnishing information concerning
his or her own fraudulent viatical settlement acts.
4.  This section does not abrogate or modify common law or
statutory privileges or immunities enjoyed by a person described in
paragraph 1 of this subsection.
E.  1.  The documents and evidence provided pursuant to
subsection D of this section or obtained by the Commissioner in an
investigation of suspected or actual fraudulent viatical settlement
acts shall be privileged and confidential and shall not be a public
record and shall not be subject to discovery or subpoena in a civil
or criminal action.
2.  Paragraph 1 of this subsection does not prohibit release by
the Commissioner of documents and evidence obtained in an
investigation of suspected or actual fraudulent viatical settlement
acts:
a. in administrative or judicial proceedings to enforce
laws administered by the Commissioner,
b. to federal, state or local law enforcement or
regulatory agencies, to an organization established
for the purpose of detecting and preventing fraudulent
viatical settlement acts or to the NAIC, or
c. at the discretion of the Commissioner, to a person in
the business of viatical settlements that is aggrieved
by a fraudulent viatical settlement act.
3.  Release of documents and evidence under paragraph 2 of this
subsection does not abrogate or modify the privilege granted in
paragraph 1 of this subsection.
F.  This act shall not:
1.  Preempt the authority or relieve the duty of other law
enforcement or regulatory agencies to investigate, examine and
prosecute suspected violations of law;
2.  Prevent or prohibit a person from disclosing voluntarily
information concerning viatical settlement fraud to a law
enforcement or regulatory agency other than the Insurance
Department;
3.  Preempt, supersede, or limit any provision of any state
securities law or any rule, order, or notice issued thereunder; or
4.  Limit the powers granted elsewhere by the laws of this state
to the Commissioner or an insurance fraud unit to investigate and
examine possible violations of law and to take appropriate action
against wrongdoers.
G.  1.  Viatical settlement providers and viatical settlement
brokers shall have in place antifraud initiatives reasonably
calculated to detect, prosecute and prevent fraudulent viatical
settlement acts.  At the discretion of the Commissioner, the
Commissioner may order, or a licensee may request and the
Commissioner may grant, such modifications of the following required

initiatives as necessary to ensure an effective antifraud program.
The modifications may be more or less restrictive than the required
initiatives so long as the modifications may reasonably be expected
to accomplish the purpose of this section.
2.  Antifraud initiatives shall include:
a. fraud investigators, who may be viatical settlement
provider or viatical settlement broker employees or
independent contractors, and
b. an antifraud plan, which shall be submitted to the
Commissioner.  The antifraud plan shall include, but
not be limited to:
(1) a description of the procedures for detecting and
investigating possible fraudulent viatical
settlement acts and procedures for resolving
material inconsistencies between medical records
and insurance applications,
(2) a description of the procedures for reporting
possible fraudulent viatical settlement acts to
the Commissioner,
(3) a description of the plan for antifraud education
and training of underwriters and other personnel,
and
(4) a description or chart outlining the
organizational arrangement of the antifraud
personnel who are responsible for the
investigation and reporting of possible
fraudulent viatical settlement acts and
investigating unresolved material inconsistencies
between medical records and insurance
applications.
3.  Antifraud plans submitted to the Commissioner shall be
privileged and confidential and shall not be a public record and
shall not be subject to discovery or subpoena in a civil or criminal
action.

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