Kera Haugen - Fact-Checker & Research Analyst
Education
- Associate's Degree, Legal Assistant/Paralegal - Rasmussen University
- Associate's Degree, Business - Minnesota State University, Mankato
Professional Background
- Legal Investigator & Paralegal – VanNorman Investigations (7+ years)
- Legal Research Specialist – Freelance (3+ years)
- Insurance Sales & Office Manager – 21 years
Quick Facts
- 📅 30+ Years Experience
- ⚖ Legal Investigator & Paralegal
- ✅ Verifies content against CFPB Consumer Financial Protection Bureau & state regulations
- 🛡 21 Years in Insurance
- 🔍 Compliance & Asset Research
Expertise:
Fact-Checked | Compliance Research | Legal Investigation | Asset Research
- 30+ years in research, investigation, and compliance
- 21 years in insurance (claims, compliance, policy administration)
- Paralegal background with legal research training
Bio and Experience
Kera Haugen is a Fact-Checker and Research Analyst at Montana Capital Car Title Loans®. She reviews our content to make sure the information we publish is accurate, properly sourced, and actually helpful for people trying to understand their options.
Kera has spent over 30 years doing research and investigation work. Most of that time was in insurance and legal settings, where getting the details right isn’t optional. She spent 21 years in the insurance industry handling claims, compliance, and policy administration. When someone’s claim depends on the facts being correct, you learn to verify everything.
She also works as a legal investigator and paralegal, supporting law firms on litigation, asset research, and compliance matters. That means tracking down information across multiple sources, checking it against official records, and presenting it in a way that holds up to scrutiny. It’s the same approach she brings to fact-checking finance content.
At Montana Capital, Kera verifies that our articles reflect current lending practices and align with sources like the CFPB and state lending regulations. She checks claims, confirms facts, and flags anything that doesn’t add up. Her job is to catch mistakes before readers see them.