Quality Should Be Your First Consideration

Houston Insurance Fraud Lawyer

Attorney Robert J. Kruckemeyer represents insurance companies, policyholders, business clients and other parties throughout the Houston area who are involved in an insurance fraud dispute. He is a business and commercial litigation lawyer with more than 28 years of experience, and is adept at handling complex and high-stakes cases.

To speak to a Houston insurance fraud attorney about your legal options, please schedule a consultation by calling our law firm.

Insurance Fraud Disputes: Areas of Focus

Attorney Robert J. Kruckemeyer represents clients involved in a wide variety of insurance fraud disputes:

  • Insurance application fraud
  • Inflating claims
  • Omitting facts on application
  • False claims
  • Insurance bad faith disputes
  • Insurance coverage disputes
  • Health insurance disputes

Attorney Kruckemeyer works closely with clients in an attempt to settle their insurance-related disputes outside of court. When this is not possible, he works aggressively to settle the matter through focused courtroom litigation. In any case, he works to help clients resolve their insurance fraud disputes efficiently and cost-effectively.

A respected and experienced lawyer: In 1999, Robert J. Kruckemeyer was awarded an “AV” rating* by the Martindale-Hubbell Legal Directory. In 2005, he was named to the Bar Register of Preeminent Lawyers. In 2012, he was named “Litigator of the Week” in the May 14 issue of the “Texas Lawyer.”

Contact a Health Care Fraud Attorney in Houston

To schedule a confidential consultation to discuss your insurance fraud matter, please contact our Houston, Texas, law office at 713-364-0148.

AV Preeminent and BV Distinguished are certification marks of Reed Elsevier Properties Inc., used in accordance with the Martindale-Hubbell certification procedures, standards and policies. Martindale-Hubbell is the facilitator of a peer review rating process. Ratings reflect the confidential opinions of members of the Bar and the judiciary. Martindale-Hubbell ratings fall into two categories – legal ability and general ethical standards.