he says, "this is the report i wrote." >> alfonsi: bob kaible got out his phone and took a picture ofe's original report. it plainly said there was "structural damage" to the house. but this is the report the insurance company sent to kaible when they denied his claim. "not structurally damaged." they said the damage was "long term," meaning it existed before hurricane sandy. the kaibles' insurance company wright flood, the largest provider of flood insurance in the country, paid him just $79,000 of his $250,000 policy. >> kaible: we had a i've had estimates of $300,000 to $350,000 to rebuild the house. what am i going to do? >> alfonsi: bob kaible's house was torn down after he sold it for a loss, and he believes it was because of a falsified engineering report. the photo kaible took was solid proof for many other sandy victims who were struggling with similar situations. how many houses do you see that are empty? >> kaible: on this block? probably half of them. >> alfonsi: the kaibles pleaded to a vice president at their insurance company and passed on their evidence. but the compan