After a massive fraud at the TTC, insurance companies are cracking down on organized crime

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It's just before 9 a.m. on a sunny morning in late July 2015, and a dozen police officers are gathered near the Healthy Fit chiropractic and pain management clinic in north Toronto. They have a search warrant, and they're about to seize evidence in what will eventually become one of the largest health insurance benefits fraud cases in the country. Together, they take the elevator to the fifth floor of a nondescript six-storey office building just off Highway 401 and enter through the glass door of unit 502. Detective Constable Kevin Williams is among the first to go in, followed by the rest of the officers, some in full uniform, others in plain clothes. He approaches the desk and explains their plans to the receptionist, who is quiet, if unhelpful. Williams is looking for something specific. He searches the clinic's office and an examining room, but doesn't find much. Then he decides to check the closet. Opening the door, Williams traces his eyes over shelves, boxes and bags full of orthotics, orthopedic shoes and braces for treating sore backs, knees and arms. "I think there was also one or two of those tension machines, like the Dr-Ho's kind of machine," Williams recalls, referring to the electrical muscle and pain therapy device made famous by infomercials.

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