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Former RSA Ireland CFO says was afraid to blow whistle on under-reserving

Published 12/03/2015, 16:01
© Reuters. A sign of RSA insurance company is pictured outside its office in London
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By Carmel Crimmins

DUBLIN (Reuters) - A former senior executive at RSA Ireland (L:RSA) said on Thursday he did not feel the insurer's top bosses in London would have supported him if he had tried to blow the whistle on the Irish unit under-reserving for claims.

Rory O'Connor, a former chief financial officer at RSA Ireland, said the former chief executive of the unit, Philip Smith, persistently under-reserved for large claims in violation of company policy to make the Irish business look good.

"I thought about whistleblowing to the group but I decided against that on the grounds that I would not be supported given the strong relationship Philip Smith had with senior figures in the RSA Group, with [former group chief executive] Simon Lee, with [former chief accountant] Chris Rash," O'Connor told an Employment Appeals tribunal in Dublin.

"I felt that if I had whistleblown and been unsuccessful my life could have been made very difficult," he said, adding that he had asked Smith a number of times to inform his superiors.

Smith is suing RSA for constructive dismissal saying he was effectively forced out of the company in late 2013 and made the "fall guy" by the company after an increase in claims meant its reserving policy came in for scrutiny by the Irish central bank.

The company denies Smith's allegations.

Earlier this week, Smith told the tribunal there was no "wholesale" under-reserving at the firm and has said his subordinates held the primary responsibility for setting reserves. He described accusations from former colleagues that he oversaw a culture of fear at the firm as a "character assassination."

Lee has not responded to Reuters' efforts to contact him. He quit RSA in December 2013 after it emerged the group had been overstating its profits in Ireland, requiring it to inject 200 million pounds into the subsidiary.

Rash, who was appointed chief financial officer of the National House Building Council (NHBC) in Britain in July 2014, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

An RSA spokesperson said the company had a comprehensive whistle blowing policy in place and would have dealt with any issue appropriately.

O'Connor was dismissed by RSA in early 2014 for accounting irregularities that led to the group overstating its profits in Ireland. He is taking his own unfair dismissal case against the insurer.

He told the tribunal on Thursday that he had been afraid of Smith, who he described as being "quite an intimidating figure."

In cross-examination, O'Connor said that aggressive accounting policies and accounting errors were implemented under O'Connor's watch.

An internal RSA probe found that reserves meant to cover large claims at its Irish business were consistently less than required by about 10 million euros between 2008 and 2013.

Earlier this week, Smith's resignation letter was read out at the tribunal in which he said that senior executives from the group were aware of the reserving issue.

© Reuters. A sign of RSA insurance company is pictured outside its office in London

RSA is still awaiting the results of an Irish regulatory probe following the accounting scandal.

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