An American Express subsidiary is suing a Maryland man who was jailed for months in Aruba in the suspected death of his traveling companion.
The subsidiary, AMEX Assurance Company, seeks to void a travel insurance policy that Gary Giordano, of Gaithersburg, took out in Robyn Gardner’s name before their Caribbean vacation last year. The lawsuit, filed last week in federal court in Maryland, says the policy isn’t legally enforceable because Mr. Giordano and Ms. Gardner aren’t married or otherwise related, weren’t business partners and didn’t own property together.
It also accuses him of lying on insurance forms by identifying Ms. Gardner as his “partner” when the two actually had what the company calls a “casual and non-exclusive” relationship.
“You have to have an economic interest in the person” when taking out a policy, American Express spokeswoman Gail Wasserman said Monday.
The suit also says that Ms. Gardner remains a missing person, and that aside from Mr. Giordano’s public statements suggesting she is dead, “there is no other direct evidence that she is no longer alive.”
Mr. Giordano, 51, was arrested at the Aruba airport in August 2011, several days after reporting her missing. He has said Ms. Gardner, a Frederick woman he met on an adult social networking site, was swept out to sea as the two were snorkeling off the southern tip of Aruba – a claim contested by her family. Mr. Giordano was jailed until late November, when a judge said prosecutors didn’t have enough evidence to continue holding him. He has since returned home to Gaithersburg, in suburban Washington.
The travel insurance policy, which covered both Mr. Giordano and Ms. Gardner, caught the attention of Aruban investigators trying to build a criminal case. Ms. Gardner’s policy listed Mr. Giordano as her sole beneficiary; Mr. Giordano designated his mother as his sole beneficiary. Two days after reporting her missing, Mr. Giordano began “to make inquiries about the accidental death and dismemberment portion of the policy on the life of Ms. Gardner,” according to the lawsuit. He asked a representative whether the company had received forms that he had earlier mailed and faxed in, and asked whether the original copies he had would also be acceptable, the lawsuit says.
Mr. Giordano has said he routinely takes out insurance when he travels and that he inquired about the insurance on the advice of his former lawyer.
His lawyer, Scott Blumenshine, said Monday that Mr. Giordano remains entitled to collect the insurance sum. In June, Mr. Giordano sued AMEX Assurance Company in Illinois, where the company is incorporated, seeking to collect $3.5 million under the terms of the policy. Mr. Blumenshine said travelers are entitled to file claims on insurance policies they take out, and added that the claims in Mr. Giordano’s lawsuit that would allow him to collect on the policy remain true.
The company says in its lawsuit that Ms. Gardner “had no role in the decision to purchase insurance.” Mr. Giordano took out the policy, made himself the beneficiary and sent in the forms, said Mr. Wasserman, the American Express spokeswoman. However, Mr. Blumenshine said Ms. Gardner herself signed the form.
Ms. Wasserman said policyholders generally can’t make a claim until one year after an insured person has disappeared. The company decided to sue now that the “waiting time period has expired.”
“It was kind of the appropriate time for us to move so that we could evaluate the facts of the case and come to our conclusions,” Ms. Wasserman said.
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