Brooklyn Power Broker Files Raft of Lawsuits for Doctor Tied to Alleged Fraud

Frank Seddio is representing Jules Parisien in over 500 cases — despite the physician’s history of insurance fraud allegations.

Chris Bragg   ·   August 18, 2025
Frank Seddio has filed over 900 “no-fault” auto insurance cases. | Photo: Chris Bragg | Illustration: Leor Stylar

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A notable New York politico has filed hundreds of lawsuits on behalf of a doctor repeatedly accused of being a key cog in a sprawling auto insurance fraud ring, according to records reviewed by New York Focus.

Between May 2024 and July 2025, Frank Seddio, Brooklyn’s Democratic commissioner on the New York City Board of Elections, filed more than 500 “no-fault” auto insurance lawsuits on behalf of a Brooklyn-based physician. The cases were filed under the state law meant to expedite drivers’ reimbursements for medical expenses stemming from accidents — regardless of who is at fault.

Before becoming Seddio’s client, Dr. Jules F. Parisien had been accused across multiple lawsuits of participating in schemes to obtain money from insurance companies by submitting thousands of fraudulent, unlawful, and non-reimbursable claims for purported medical services.

Seddio is a former state assemblymember, Surrogate’s Court judge, and chair of the Brooklyn Democratic Party whose recent campaign spending as a Brooklyn Democratic Party district leader has faced media scrutiny. He has not been charged with any wrongdoing and did not respond to questions about how he became involved with filing the cases.

Law enforcement has sought to crack down on alleged schemes with similar contours, including in a recent case that involved one of Seddio’s closest associates, Frank Carone. For a decade, Seddio and Carone ran the Brooklyn Democratic Party together, and the duo were once partners in a boutique law firm, which was absorbed in 2011 by the firm Abrams Fensterman.

A Staten Island man pleaded guilty in July to engaging in a vast insurance fraud scheme that, according to a civil lawsuit, involved a company co-founded by Carone.

Carone, who is also a former chief of staff for Mayor Eric Adams, is now “of counsel” at Abrams Fensterman, and emails have shown other members of the firm were also looped in on Carone’s discussions about the mechanics of the investment operation and its specific billing practices. Carone has not been charged with any criminal wrongdoing, and the Carone-founded company’s principals reportedly have argued that they were duped into involvement in an illegitimate venture.

Seddio left Abrams Fensterman in 2012 but continued to receive substantial payments from them, even as he helped select Brooklyn judges that gave the firm’s attorneys lucrative case appointments — raising questions about the law firm’s adherence with state court rules. Seddio has recently received office space at the firm’s downtown Brooklyn headquarters.

He began filing no-fault insurance lawsuits en masse in May 2024 on behalf of Parisien, alleging auto insurers failed to pay bills for medical services the doctor had provided to accident victims. Notably, Parisien appears to be entirely unaffiliated with the people involved in the Carone-related case.

Parisien owns a number of companies through which he submits enormous volumes of no-fault auto insurance claims — and associated lawsuits — against insurance companies. The lawsuits seek reimbursement for medical treatments at 1786 Flatbush Ave in Brooklyn.

The medical providers at the Brooklyn address, including Parisien, have repeatedly been sued for alleged fraud: By Liberty Mutual, GEICO, State Farm, The General Insurance, and Allstate.

The General Insurance company’s attorney alleged that Parisien, along with other healthcare providers, sought payments from the company for alleged injuries that were either never sustained or resulted from staged “accidents” and fraudulently procured policies.

Parisien is described in the 2022 Liberty Mutual lawsuit as a “retired obstetrician-gynecologist” who, according to the insurer, “never rendered any of the Fraudulent Services” and was believed to be “home-bound and unable to physically perform the services.”

Parisien could not be reached for comment. He and the other defendants have denied wrongdoing and have framed the lawsuits as attempts by insurers to avoid their obligations to provide coverage.

Parisien has not been charged in any criminal case. Most of the civil cases against him have been resolved by settlements between the insurance companies and the defendants, whose terms have not been disclosed.

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Chris Bragg is the Albany bureau chief at New York Focus. He has done investigative reporting on New York government and politics since 2009, most recently at The Buffalo News and Albany Times Union.
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