A small trucking company you have never heard of is probably insured right now by an entity you have never heard of, financed through a trust and surviving on cash advances from a factoring company that holds a blanket lien on everything it will ever earn. That carrier may have a safety score in the gutter. The officer listed on the FMCSA registration may control a dozen, even hundreds of other companies with the same profile. When it crashes, the person on the other end of that collision may discover there is nothing left to collect. This is what the data shows.

Cross-referencing FMCSA safety records, California Secretary of State UCC and other State UCC filings, and a dataset of more than 6,100 carrier records tied to 51 risk retention groups, I spent several weeks mapping the financial and safety architecture underneath a corner of the trucking market that almost nobody watches. What I found goes well beyond bad carriers. It goes into the solvency of the insurers putting them on the road, the stability of the lenders financing their trucks, and the legal exposure of crash victims who believe they have coverage protecting them.

What is a Risk Retention Group and why should you care

Most people in trucking understand commercial auto insurance at a basic level. You pay a premium, a licensed carrier stands behind the policy, the state regulates it and if the insurer collapses, the state guaranty fund covers the claims up to a limit.

A risk retention group, or RRG, works differently on every one of those points.

An RRG is a member-owned liability insurer formed under the federal Liability Risk Retention Act of 1986. The law was written to help industries with limited insurance access, medical providers, architects, and other professionals pool their risks and self-insure collectively. The structure lets an RRG form in a single state and operate across all 50 states without individual state licensing. That means lighter regulatory oversight, lower capital requirements and less transparency than a traditional insurer.

The trucking industry adopted the RRG model because traditional commercial auto insurers pulled back from small carriers or priced them out of coverage. RRGs filled the gap. Some are well-run and adequately capitalized. Others are not.

Here is what every crash victim, plaintiff attorney and settlement claimant needs to know. In most states, if an RRG goes broke, the state guaranty fund will not cover the claims. The same fund that protects policyholders when a traditional insurer fails explicitly excludes RRGs in most jurisdictions. Your settlement pending against an insolvent RRG makes you an unsecured creditor in a liquidation proceeding. You may collect nothing.

In 2003, Reciprocal of America, a Virginia-domiciled RRG that insured professional services, collapsed under claims it could not pay, leaving more than $1 billion in uncovered obligations and thousands of claimants without recourse. It was the largest RRG failure in history at that time. The trucking segment has had its own smaller collapses since, each one leaving injured parties scrambling for recoveries that often do not exist.

The RRG is also different from a risk purchasing group, or RPG, which is a buying cooperative that negotiates better rates from a traditional admitted insurer. The RPG keeps all of the regulatory and guaranty fund protections of traditional insurance. The RRG replaces both with member capital and the assumption that claims do not cluster. When they do cluster, the math falls apart quickly.

Someone else has to absorb that somewhere.

What the data shows

The dataset analyzed for this investigation contained 6,167 records covering 4,561 unique carriers across 51 RRGs. Using a 0-to-100 carrier risk score, which incorporates crash rates, out-of-service rates, violations, revocations, authority age and insurer quality, the carriers were classified against FMCSA safety records.

Of the 4,561 unique carriers, 1,703 scored CRITICAL. That is 37% of a dataset that already skews toward smaller, newer operators.

The single largest RRG in the dataset insures 740 unique carriers. Of those, 354 score CRITICAL. That is a 48% CRITICAL rate within one insurer’s portfolio. At standard $750,000 BIPD coverage, the theoretical exposure across those 354 CRITICAL carriers alone is $265 million, before a single nuclear verdict multiplier is applied.

The data also shows 288 carriers under two years old, with zero reported crashes, zero out-of-service violations, and $750,000 or more in active coverage. They exist in the FMCSA system. They have insurance. They have never been inspected. They are completely unknown-risk entities absorbing premium capacity inside RRGs that are already stretched.

If 20 percent of the 1,703 CRITICAL-scoring carriers across all RRGs have a major crash in the same policy year, that is 340 claims at $750,000 each, or $255 million in direct BIPD exposure. If 10 percent of those reach nuclear verdict territory, and the American Transportation Research Institute documents these verdicts averaging well over $20 million in recent litigation where gross negligence is found, the gap between what the RRG pays and what the court awards runs into the hundreds of millions. The carrier LLC has no assets. The plaintiff gets the policy limit and an uncollectible judgment for the rest.

The three-legged financing system that keeps all of this moving

Every new carrier needs three things to operate: a truck, fuel, and insurance. The formal banking system provides none of these to a one-truck operator with no credit history. The industry built its own alternative finance system to fill that gap.

Factoring companies buy carrier invoices at a 2 to 5 percent discount and hand the carrier cash today instead of waiting 45 days for the shipper to pay. That solves a real cash flow problem but when a factoring company writes that agreement, it files a UCC-1 blanket lien on every dollar the carrier will ever earn. First position. Senior to nearly everything else.

Equipment lenders finance the truck itself. In the carrier network analyzed here, a cluster of finance trusts operating out of Overland Park, Kansas, appeared repeatedly across multiple carriers and carrier groups. The trust names follow a pattern: Latin words paired with sequential numbers. Amplus 223 Trust. Dominari 224 Trust. Luceo 124 Trust. Fortis 126 Trust. These appear to be special-purpose vehicles from a single lender issuing sequentially numbered trusts to finance equipment. Multiple carriers in this network appear as co-debtors on the same UCC-1 filings. That is a public record verifiable through the California Secretary of State’s UCC search portal, as well as in other States and their UCC filings.

The structure plays out like this: the factoring company holds first position on cash flow, the equipment lender holds the truck title and the RRG holds the liability. When a carrier fails, the factoring company enforces its lien, the equipment lender repossesses the truck, and the RRG is left facing a claim with no solvent carrier behind it and whatever reserves it managed to accumulate.

The geographic pattern and what it means

This RRG dataset shows 108 carriers registered in Indiana. Of those, 55.6 percent list a Punjabi or Sikh surname as the listed officer. That concentration is real and it is not random.

The Punjabi-American trucking community built its U.S. footprint in California’s Central Valley starting in the 1980s. Indianapolis and its southern suburbs, particularly Greenwood, Whiteland and Brownsburg, became a secondary hub for straightforward economic reasons. Commercial vehicle registration costs less. Truck parking is accessible and affordable. Interstates 65, 70 and 74 converge in Indianapolis, putting a one-truck owner-operator within a day’s drive of 80 percent of U.S. freight demand.

This analysis does not suggest Punjabi or Sikh carriers are more dangerous than other groups. We simply do not have that data. The CRITICAL scoring rate for Punjabi and Sikh carriers in this dataset is 43 percent. For Hispanic and Latino carriers in the same data, it is also 43 percent. The overall dataset average is 37 percent. The concentration matters for what it means about correlated financial risk, not for what it says about any community’s fitness to operate.

Indiana Punjabi-surname carriers in this dataset have a median out-of-service rate of 46.1 percent. While it is bad, it isn’t causation. The same calculation for California Punjabi-surname carriers is 20 percent. When inspectors pull these trucks over in Indiana, they fail nearly half the time. Twenty-two officers in this dataset hold carriers registered in both California and Indiana simultaneously. While they may have the same name, we tied them together with UCC filings, addresses and data that cross over between entities.

If current enforcement trends result in CDL revocations or operating authority losses for a significant portion of these operators, the defaults do not arrive one at a time. They arrive in a cluster. Equipment lenders attempt repossession simultaneously. Factoring companies chase dead receivables. RRGs lose premium income while claim liability stays open. The people absorbing that damage are not primarily the operators who built it. They are the crash victims waiting on settlements, and the legitimate owner-operators whose truck values just dropped because a wave of repossession inventory hit the used market at once.

The public record

The most specific findings in this investigation come from public UCC filings that anyone can look up today, but processing large datasets takes significant time. Most people don’t even know what UCC filings are, but they’re very helpful when it comes to determining which 12 companies the same “Gurpreet Singh” or “John Brown” happens to own. These extremely common company official names make it difficult in most other search cases and while these officials often count on this confusion by commonality to hide themselves, one place they’re not going to claim to be someone else is when it comes to getting their money.

UCC file number U240091327427 appears in California Secretary of State records for two separate FMCSA-registered carriers with different DOT numbers. Both list the same officer’s name. Both carry coverage under different risk retention groups. Two companies. One lender agreement.

A separate filing ties a Bakersfield, California, carrier as a co-debtor with an individual listed at a New York address. The officer’s name on the FMCSA record is one name. The co-debtor on the UCC is a different name. In equipment financing, co-debtors are co-guarantors. Both parties signed for the same loan. Also, a public record.

These are documented financial relationships between entities and individuals that warrant review by the insurers, lenders, and regulators best positioned to act on them.

What happens when it breaks

There are three ways this plays out, and all three are already happening on a small scale in this market.

The first is the individual failure. A CRITICAL carrier crashes. The RRG pays the policy limit. If the verdict is $20 million and the policy is $750,000, the plaintiff collects the policy limit and holds an uncollectible judgment for the rest. That is the ordinary functioning of the current system. It happens every week.

The second is RRG insolvency. If enough CRITICAL carriers inside a single RRG’s portfolio generate major claims in the same policy year, reserves may not hold. When an RRG is declared insolvent, claimants with pending settlements become unsecured creditors in most states. The state guaranty fund does not step in.

The third is the cascade. Large-scale enforcement hitting a concentrated geographic cluster produces correlated defaults. Equipment floods the market. Factoring companies write off bad debt. RRG premium income collapses while claim liability stays open. The financial shock is concentrated among a small number of RRGs and lenders. The people who get hurt the worst are not the operators who exploited the system. They are the families waiting for crash settlements and the legitimate carriers who played by the rules.

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