Court: Insurance fraud is public but records can be withheld

LANSING (AP) — A new court decision will keep the public’s eyes from records of an auto insurance fund.

The Michigan Court of Appeals ruled recently the state Catastrophic Claims Association is a public body, but lawmakers legally carved out an exemption from public records disclosure.

The insurance fund was created to reimburse insurers for catastrophic claims that exceed $545,000. Owners pay $160 per vehicle per year on top of regular insurance.

A coalition of health care, labor and consumer organizations wants to know how the fund calculates rates.

In dissent, Judge Elizabeth Gleicher says lawmakers violated the constitution when they threw a cloak over the fund’s records without amending Michigan’s Freedom of Information Act.