Widow Denied:
When PTSD Doesn’t Count
Let me get this straight.
A police officer works nearly 25 years. Holds dying teenagers. Sees murder-suicides. Breathes in smoke on a call. Starts having nightmares. Gets hospitalized. Comes back to work. Then takes his own life… while on duty, at the police station, with his service weapon.
And his widow? *Denied.*
The court decided he didn’t really have PTSD. That he just had “depression” his whole life. That what he saw, what he lived through, wasn’t enough to trigger a benefit under workers’ comp.
👎 This is the problem with the system.
We’re told: “Thank you for your service.” We’re told: “We support first responders.” But when it comes time to *pay the claim*; Suddenly everyone’s a psychiatrist. Suddenly they can “distinguish” between long-term depression and job-related trauma like it’s black and white.
The administrative law judge found the town’s paid psychiatrist more “credible.” You know what that means: cheaper to deny than admit PTSD is part of the job.
🧠 Mental health claims are treated like fraud by default.
At Inssux, we’re building a new kind of AI, a system that sees the truth. One that understands that trauma has fingerprints. That PTSD is real. That suicide after a lifetime of service isn’t just “unrelated.”
We’re not just exposing the lies, we’re building tools to flip the whole thing on its head.
Join us. Because this widow deserved better.
👉 www.inssux.com
#Inssux #PTSD #ClaimDenied #MentalHealthMatters #makethempay #InsuranceJustice


