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Felony charges for looming for hole in one welcher...


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#1 Vindog

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Posted 17 May 2012 - 07:03 AM

http://finance.yahoo...0--finance.html

HELENA, Mont. (AP) — Troy Peissig's surprise at acing an $18,000 hole-in-one contest at a charity tournament has been replaced by bitter disappointment now that he hasn't been paid a dime nearly two years after making the 170-yard shot.

Now state authorities are intervening, and issued an arrest warrant last week against the operator of an insurance company they say failed to pay up on a policy purchased by the Missoula tournament.

Peissig, a scratch golfer, said it is a case of "how a good situation can go bad quickly."

The Montana commissioner of securities and insurance said Kevin Kolenda of hole-in-won.com has been unresponsive in the case and now faces felony charges. The agency said Kolenda  also has failed to pay in other cases around the country, and continues  to operate the scam without a license to sell insurance even though he  has been sanctioned by regulators in Alabama, Connecticut,  Massachusetts, Nevada, North Carolina, and Washington.

Montana commissioner Monica Lindeen's  office said it is highly uncommon to file felony charges — with an  arrest warrant — against an insurance company. Usually disputes on  unpaid claims are handled with fines or other administrative actions.

But  the Montana regulators said they moved aggressively in order to stop  Kolenda from selling the insurance all over the country, despite not  holding a license to do so.

"We want to make sure these companies  aren't getting a gimme when it comes to paying these claims," said  Lindeen, who suggested people check first with regulators that sellers  of such insurance are licensed and registered with state authorities.

Kolenda did not return a call Tuesday from The Associated Press seeking comment.

In  a letter Kolenda sent to the tournament sponsor denying the claim, he  claimed the hole was too short and violated the 165-yard minimum in the  policy contract. Kolenda referenced the 130-yard length noted on the Missoula Country Club's standard score card.

But  state investigators and local police determined the Missoula Country  Club had indeed lengthened the hole for the tournament. Investigators  said Kolenda ignored the witness statements and evidence provided by the  tournament host.

Peissig had previously hit three hole-in-ones  prior to stepping to the tee box on the 12th hole at the Missoula  Country Club in August 2010. He had even nailed one on that exact hole.

The  30-year-old former golf teacher said there were "some ace rumblings" in  his group before he hit the 7-iron shot — which landed a couple feet in  front of the hole, checked up and rolled in.

"When I made that  ace, I was stoked. I was pumped. That was really cool to have that  happen," said Peissig. "Then it all went south."

The company  failed to call the impartial judges to the shot for months, and then  misrepresented their statements, Peissig said. The new father said the  company even called him in early 2011 to say the money was on the way,  only to send a rejection letter several months later.

"The money  would be fantastic. My wife and I, we are a young family," said Peissig,  who isn't counting on getting the money at this point. "At the same  time, if there was a way for this hole-in-one company to not do this  again to someone else,  that would be just awesome."


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#2 highergr0und

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Posted 17 May 2012 - 04:09 PM

Crazy..... there was another scam artist a while back that did a similar thing with a teenager who hit the hole in one, didn't get his money, and became ineligible for his senior year of HS golf because he paid $10 at the shot for the prize.

If you don't have the money to pay out a prize, maybe you shouldn't sell insurance.
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#3 strungoutt1

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Posted 20 May 2012 - 06:50 PM

Well at least this guy is facing felony charges.

#4 tbomb

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Posted 21 May 2012 - 08:20 PM

Wow. That's friggin dirty!!!

We had a guy make an ace on a 140 yard hole for like $100,000 and it was the second hole of the day. Anyway, he was a big wig at a lottery company and hands over the credit cards, buys everyone a drink. Cost him like 2k.

Anyway, the insurance company came out to re-measure the hole FOUR time. With range finders and everything. The even tried to pace it off, which is dumb because it's a HUGE drop off. Anyway, not sure if he ever did get paid but I would think so or I would have heard about it...
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