Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast - Exposing the Secrets of the Trillion-Dollar Scam Industry
Episode Date: January 11, 2025Forensic accounting expert Kelly Richmond Pope shows fraud in action, uncovering what makes perps tick, victims so gullible, and whistleblowers so morally righteous, while also encouraging us to look ...at our own behaviors and motivations in the hope of protecting ourselves and our companies. Kelly's Book https://www.amazon.com/Fool-Me-Once-Trillion-Dollar-Industry/dp/1647823919 Kelly's Website https://www.kellyrichmondpope.com Follow me on all socials! Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/insidetruecrime/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@mattcoxtruecrime Do you want to be a guest? Send me an email here: insidetruecrime@gmail.com Do you want a custom "con man" painting to shown up at your doorstep every month? Subscribe to my Patreon: https: //www.patreon.com/insidetruecrime Do you want a custom painting done by me? Check out my Etsy Store: https://www.etsy.com/shop/coxpopart Listen to my True Crime Podcasts anywhere: https://anchor.fm/mattcox Check out my true crime books! Shark in the Housing Pool: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0851KBYCF Bent: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BV4GC7TM It's Insanity: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08KFYXKK8 Devil Exposed: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08TH1WT5G Devil Exposed (The Abridgment): https://www.amazon.com/dp/1070682438 The Program: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0858W4G3K Bailout: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/bailout-matthew-cox/1142275402 Dude, Where's My Hand-Grenade?: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BXNFHBDF/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1678623676&sr=1-1 Checkout my disturbingly twisted satiric novel! Stranger Danger: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BSWQP3WX If you would like to support me directly, I accept donations here: Paypal: https://www.paypal.me/MattCox69 Cashapp: $coxcon69
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's known as a large municipal fraud in U.S. history.
So look at reading, you're sort of like, wow, you live like a queen for 20 years and served eight.
One may argue that crime does pay.
So the reason why he was diluting medication and making it spread further was two things.
He had a large bill from the IRS that he wanted to pay, and record show was around half a million dollars.
And then he wanted to make a million dollar donation to his church.
So he wanted to expand his gross margin.
He wanted to make a million dollar donation to the church.
This guy made millions.
But every two or three years, he would hit everybody across the board for like $39.
Just ran out.
This guy's a multimillionaire.
He's got like 20 gyms.
He's got, you know, he lives in a $4 million house.
Like he's filthy rich.
And this is just a narcissist in me, is that this one.
student said, this female student goes, do you feel like, she was, do you feel like you got away
with it for so long because you're so charming? And I mean, I started laughing so hard. I was like,
be honest with you. Like, how close are you with your wife? And I went, what do you mean? He said,
listen, he was because all the loans are in her name. Mr. Black's sister saying, my brother was
in a horrible accident. He's currently in a coma. The doctor said, this is, this is too much. I don't
believe you did this is too you did all this and i waited about a month and a half and then i called
the police and said i got broke into and then hey this is matt cox and i'm going to be interviewing
kelly pope and she is the author of a book about con men called fool me ones and we're going to
be talking about the book and talking about a few different con men and uh scams and that sort of thing
So check out the interview.
What's going on?
Tell me about yourself.
Well, I am an accounting professor.
I'm a filmmaker.
And now, well, not now.
I've been an author.
But I have a new book out, which is why we're talking.
And this is my sample copy, but this is it called Fool Me Once.
Scam Stories and Secrets from the trillion-dollar fraud industry.
So you can see all of my notes that I take every time I read it.
So that is my latest project.
super excited and I heard in your intro you said it's about con men it's about more than that though
what else is it about so the first part of the book is about perpetrators which is where you're
talking about but then the second part or the middle part is about victims and then the last part
is about whistleblowers so I don't know how you feel about whistleblowers you may hate them but
there's a whole I love whistleblowers I'm a big man there's a whole section I devoted to whistleblowers
And I created a game called The Fool Me Once Fraud Experience.
And so when you go through it, it'll tell you what type of perpetrator you would be if you were ever to be one.
And what type of whistleblower would you be if you were ever to be one?
So in the book, I talk about that there are three types of perpetrators.
All perpetrators are not the same.
Intentional perpetrators, accidental perpetrators, and righteous perpetrators.
Now, Matthew, I've read a lot about you and heard a lot about you.
I'm sorry to say, you are definitely.
or your past life, you were definitely an intentional perpetrator.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That was your whole goal.
Wasn't an accident.
Wasn't an accident.
Oops.
I deposited that check into my own account.
Wasn't that.
No.
So, but, and what I wanted to do was to offer a new way of thinking because there are
people that are following the boss's orders or people that are utilizing their
internal resources to help someone, help someone outside of the company. And so what I wanted people
to understand is everyone is not in it for just personal gain. And so I don't think that we should
loop everybody together. And so that's what the whole perpetrator section is about. So the game
tells you, based on going through these various scenarios, what type of perpetrator are you actually?
So it'd be interesting to see have you play it and see if you actually are an intentional perpetrator. Maybe
Just maybe. You might be a righteous perpetrator.
Something tells me you could easily end up right.
I'm sure I could manipulate my, you know, my answers to make it look that way.
But yeah, I don't think so.
What I wanted to do was to stop, allow people to think that, yeah, you know, you might do something too.
Because a lot of times we're so quick to say, oh, look at them.
That's what they do.
But actually, when we start talking about fraud, it's what we all do.
You know, just the other day, you did a presentation with my students, and it was interesting to see how they were mesmerized and in agreement with a lot of the things that you did.
And so I asked them, you know, if somebody would you say, you were a little upset when they were saying, yeah, that makes sense.
I would do that.
You were like, I wasn't expecting them to say that.
But, you know, when you were talking about how you would change.
or increase someone's income or change someone's credit or put them in a job to make them
look like they had longer employment that they did. And when I turned it to them and I said,
so if Matt could increase your exam score on the CPA exam and you just needed three points
and he could make it so that you just had the points to pass, would you do it? And they all were
like, yeah, I'd do that. So, you know, it's what I wanted to do with the book is allow people to
look at, be a little bit more self-reflective, you know, because a lot of us agree to a lot of
things as long as we think we won't get caught and we'll do it. So that was, so that was the perpetrator
chapter. So there's three chapters devoted to them. And then, you know, just because of your
background, I'm really curious, what do you think about whistleblowers? You do like them?
Yeah, I don't have a problem. Like, typically whistleblowers do stuff like some companies overbilling
the government or some companies.
company is cheating its customers in some way or lying to the public or something.
It's like, why would someone have a problem with those people doing the right thing?
For instance, look at the guy with, gosh, he did the Ponzi scheme, Bernie Madoff, with Bernie Madoff.
That guy spent four or five years begging the authorities to invest in him.
I mean, I'm sorry?
To listen to him and no really did for a long time.
He went in and had presentations and they just shrugged it off and laughed.
And it was like, now you can say, oh, well, you should have minded his own business.
He, there were thousands of people that lost their life savings that could have been saved.
If they'd listened to him the very first time or done even a cursory investigation and looked into it,
they could have saved thousands of people who are now living with their kids or had to sell
their house who lost everything because this guy was just trying to do the right thing.
So it's in what tends to happen is when someone comes forward, you know, you turn the spotlight on
them and sort of pick their life apart to realize to try to figure out why they shouldn't be credible
and that shouldn't happen.
So in the section of the book about whistleblowers, I come up with three types.
There is an accidental whistleblower.
You can either be a noble whistleblower, or you could be a vigilante whistleblower.
Now, vigilante whistleblowers, they don't mind their business at all.
You know, they're just sort of the person.
Imagine the older lady that's sitting in front of the window watching to see if anybody's speeding down the street.
And she'll take down your license plate number and call the police and say, this person was speeding.
You need to contact them.
That's sort of the vigilante whistleblower.
But we need all of them.
Kind of like a Karen?
Huh?
Kind of like a Karen?
you're parked in the wrong
you can't part like my man what are you doing
but you know sometimes sometimes there's a place for Karen
sometimes I mean not all carrants are bad
not all of them so um so anyhow
what I wanted to do with the book was really
help people figure out where they fit
in this sort of the industrial fraud complex
and so in the middle section of the book
is about victims and so I break
those into innocent bystanders and organizational targets. And all of this was inspired. I don't even
know if we talked about my documentary, but I have a documentary. And so all of this was inspired by
my documentary, which is called All the Queen's Horses, which chronicles the largest municipal
fraud in U.S. history. Oh my gosh. I totally. The woman who was doing the books
for that county and she had the horses? Yes. Oh, wow.
That's my documentary.
Okay.
I did not yet.
She was, she was telling everybody, they got to cut back.
They have to cut back.
She's stealing the whole time.
Yes.
You don't have enough money?
Yes.
So that was really the inspiration.
So I did the documentary.
How much did you steal?
$53.7 million.
Over what?
20 years.
Oh, over 20?
Mm-hmm.
They had to raise the taxes over,
borrow more money, you know, yeah, yeah, yeah. So that, so Rita Cronwell was my
inspiration because she was an intentional perpetrator. The whistleblower was a woman by the
name of Kathy Swanson. And Kathy was what I categorized as an accidental whistleblower. She
never suspected her boss doing anything. She just sort of stumbled upon it. And then the
residents of Dixon, Illinois are innocent bystanders. And then the town of Dixon is an
organizational target. So that's sort of how the documentary really inspired the work in the book.
And so throughout the whole book, you learn more about the documentary. And so that story of
what I learned doing the film is sort of throughout the entire book. So watch the film,
then read the book. Where is the film or where? It lives on Amazon Prime. So it's there now.
So you can find it. Okay. They bought the rights or they? It streamed on.
Netflix for a year from 2018 to 2019 and then after my streaming period was up and went over to
Amazon. I think I must. I don't know where I saw. I saw it trying to think of where I must have
seen it on on on on on Netflix because I just got Amazon. So I must have seen it on Netflix when it
came out. Yeah. And I actually had spoken the only reason I knew about it was someone contacted me and that
person was in communication with her in federal prison and was trying to get her to write like
a memoir and she wouldn't right no she wouldn't do it she was not doing but you know this is a thing
you know i think um unlike you i think um you've found you've found a calling and a voice for
yourself in all of this and so a lot of people don't do that um a lot of
of people, I mean, Rita has value if she would recognize her value. She does. I mean, think about all of
the municipalities she could speak at or do consultant services for, and who would listen to her.
I mean, they really would. So I think she's missing a huge opportunity. You know, once you get through
the hate, because you're going to have hate, but everybody has hate. I mean, even if you don't
commit a crime, you have hate, people hate me, you know, for whatever reason. So you're always going
to have that. So I think that she's missing, she's missed a golden opportunity to actually help other
municipalities in towns because they would listen to her. You know, they really would. So.
So here's the thing. She got 19 years and seven months in federal prison. But get this,
something called COVID happened. And when COVID happened, she got out early. She got out early.
She only served about eight years. So she got out in 2021 because of COVID. If there were no COVID,
she would be still in federal prison right now, but she got out.
And she's, by the way, when they, you know, that, that ends at the end of this month,
the mandate.
But they don't have to go back.
But they're not going back.
I was going to say, I was always like, oh, well, they're going to pull them all back.
No.
And so that's the thing.
I think under the Trump administration, they might have had to go back.
But the Biden administration decided no, they could stay.
But maybe Trump would have sent them back.
I don't know.
you know, and I can like, so here's the problem, even though, first of all, the offenders that got out were not, you know, horribly violent offenders. They need to be watched. So I get letting these people out because they're just not that much a huge danger to society, as long as they're monitored. But, you know, like if you've got 10 years to do, but usually some of these sentences are outrageous to begin with. So it's, so it's,
I'm kind of conflicted.
Yeah, for sure, for sure.
And, you know, the interesting thing about Rita's case is because she was, she's, she's
an icon because she's the largest municipal fraudster in U.S. history.
So I think it sends a bad message when the icon does less time.
That's the problem.
If she had just been an embezzler and let's say she walked off of 20 million or 15 million
and she got off, maybe people wouldn't have even known about it.
But when she got released, that made news because.
even still to this date she's the largest it's known as a large municipal fraud in
U.S. history.
So that person can't get out, even if she was over-sentenced, which is what I talk about
towards the end of the book, because I talk to some people that do research and sentencing.
It's a sentencing guidelines expert.
And I interviewed him for the book and looking at Rita's case and looking at other people
that were sentenced in her same class during.
around the same time with the same amount of money stolen, it looks as though she was over-sentenced.
So if that being said, she actually served even still more than though other people in her
sentencing class.
So it's the publicity, though.
Uh-huh.
You know, they want to make an example.
Mm-hmm.
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Her getting out sent a very mixed message.
you know that that age old question does crime pay and you look at reading you're sort of like
wow you live like a queen for 20 years and served eight one may argue that crime does pay
yeah she'll probably end up she'll probably end her you know end up spending the rest of her life
living in someone's spare room you know so it's she's with family i mean so you think about to think
about how this ends so you live when you're live with her she lives with her brother and she may age
her brother may, I think he's older, so he might pass on.
When he passes on, he might leave whatever he has to her.
Who knows?
It may be enough to live off of, you know, you can make it.
I mean, one of the things is she's not living in New York City, where the cost
to living is crazy.
She's in Dixon.
So maybe the brother owns his house or, you know, you can keep your, depending on
where you live, you can keep your expenses relatively low.
Yeah.
Yeah, she's clever.
Obviously, she's clever.
She's already thinking of ways to get around, you know, her restitution.
And once it's final that she's not going back, which it probably obviously is.
And she gets a regular job.
Somebody will hire her.
Yeah.
I mean, somebody will hire her.
I mean, you know, someone.
I mean, she can do.
There are things she can still do.
But just imagine if she were willing to create a platform, like a podcast.
I mean, she would be...
But I can tell you from being in prison with other guys that have committed fraud,
I was the only person that was in prison thinking when I get out,
like, I'm going to figure out a way to make this work for me, you know,
doing the things that I want to do in life.
I mean, I'm not going to hide...
Everybody else was...
These guys are talking about changing their name.
They're talking about spinning it.
They're talking about maybe, you know, getting an artist.
article written that says that makes it sound more like it's a mistake, that they were,
erroneously, you know, prosecuted and that it was, there was these other guys and they got
thrown in there, you know, whatever. And it was always just like, you know, man, you're going to be
running from this the rest of your life. Like, you can't. It's part of you. So, you know,
you can either embrace it and find out the good in it or you can run from. And it's hard to
run from, you know, it really is. Especially now. It wouldn't all this than 30 years ago. Yeah,
you could get out, move to another city, start over, and nobody ever has a clue.
But now.
Yeah.
I used to always, I used to always say, listen, everybody likes a comeback story.
Yeah, you do.
You know, what's the problem?
Like, you just turn it into a comeback story, turning it into a story of redemption.
People love that.
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So something sometimes people ask me is what's my favorite story?
And so I always start with all the Queen's Horses because I did the documentary about it,
it sort of goes with me and has been with me for such a long time.
But there's other stories that are throughout the book.
So one of the things that I like to tell people is, although I'm a professor, the book is not a textbook.
book is story-driven, character-driven, and it's a fun read. I wish I had met you a year ago because
you would have been in it. You would have been great. So, yeah, I have to figure out how to incorporate
an interview with you some kind of way. You're in Florida, right? Yeah. Tampa. Tampa, Florida.
Okay. All right. I might have to take a team down there and interview you one day.
Where are you located? Chicago. Oh. Um, yeah, you,
Well, I mean, are you thinking about doing another documentary like that one?
No, you know, what I'm doing right now is I want to do like a video series that goes with the book.
So I want to talk to some intentional perpetrators, some righteous perpetrators and some, I'm sorry, intentional perpetrators, accidental perpetrators and righteous perpetrators.
So I want to talk to those three and sort of show just snippets when I'm talking to people.
so yeah so that's it
I don't know if I'll ever do another documentary again
you actually have
that's kind of a documentary
yeah sort of a little short
you're just breaking it into episodes
yeah yeah it's a little shorts
but your story I find
you have so many layers
because what's what I
find fascinating
you are fascinating don't get me wrong
but what's also interesting about
your story
is the complacency that
people have when you share the details of what you were doing. Because when we want something,
we will forget all rules to get what we want. Right. So if I wanted a loan for my business or
if I wanted a house and I needed this loan and good grief, I fell in love with this house and it's
$600,000 and I only qualify for $400,000, but they're just person that could help me get what
I want. I know I can pay for it. That, you know, I might be like, hey,
Matt, you know, a lot of us would be that way.
I was just talking to a friend of mine yesterday.
And she's always talking about how she doesn't have enough money, doesn't have enough
money, what she complains about all the time.
But yet, she qualified for a $700,000 house.
And I said, how?
How did you qualify for a $700,000 house?
If you're struggling to pay your rent now.
Right.
How are you going to double that and not struggle?
she's like, I don't know, but I qualify for it.
So I thought about you because I was thinking, yeah, something's not right.
Like usually you qualify for for less than you think.
You know what I'm saying?
Usually it's like you're looking for $200,000.
And like something that you explained in my students is even with your debt to
equity debt to income ratio, right, that is a real thing.
I mean, between your credit score and those two things, you know, they have to
talk and make sense. So even if she has superb credit and low debt, she still has to have
the cash flow. So when she told me she qualified for that much, I'm like, hmm, yeah, is there something
shady going on here? That's what I thought about because I knew your case. Yeah, you got to, yeah.
Well, the big problem is a lot of people, oh, I qualify for it or I want, I'll figure a way out.
Figuring a way out doesn't mean you qualify like that. I can afford it. You think you can afford it.
If one or two things go wrong and you're going into the hole, then you don't qualify for it because all that's taken into consideration.
Yeah.
And the tough thing about what you're seeing in our economy is with all these layoffs is that package isn't doesn't get you that far.
So when you think about these types of ethical scenarios, people find themselves in or what they're willing to agree to, a lot more of us are willing to agree to doing some shady stuff than we think.
because of just tension, life tension and pressure.
All your students were, yeah, it's a few points.
What about, like, did you say, like, if you could qualify,
but, you know, you couldn't quite qualify,
you didn't have enough money, but the guy you were working with
was willing to alter some things, and they were kind of like,
yeah, I don't see that.
It's a big deal.
Well, I mean, all of that's fraud.
Yeah, but they saw nothing wrong with it.
because when we want something, all bets are off, all rules go out of the window.
I want this. How can I get it? And so I think that that's why stories and cases like yours are so
powerful because at least right now, it gave them something to think about. Like they'll never forget
hearing you. They never will forget that. I mean, that second class that you spoke to, they,
I mean, they rarely, they don't stay after class. They were after class talking about you, just how
wow like they were just 15 minutes after class they were just like I mean he was he was
amazing and they were like listen if I'm going to commit fraud I'm not going to do it but if I were
that's how I'm going to do it I'm going to live my life that's what they heard from you well yeah
I know I know that wasn't what you were that wasn't your intention it wasn't my intention
however it was it was interesting that was very interesting but the first class had a
lot more questions. Right. Well, once they started getting going, the second one, once you
prodded them a little bit, they started, you know, the problem is that, you know, you can always kind of
tell what someone's thinking by the questions. That's a good point. Absolutely. When they start to,
well, how did you get caught? Well, is this still possible? Well, it's like, hey, hey, hey, hey.
Slow down, slow your roll. What are you doing? How'd you do this? I don't like that. But you know,
what was also fascinating when you talked about how you learned. Because, you know, one student
asked, were you just a genius? And you were like, well, you know, I learned from people. So like,
you would find, okay, how'd you figure this out? My client did this? How'd you figure this out?
And so that was interesting, too, because you don't realize how much you disclose about your
process, which is an internal control weakness in itself. And a lot of people don't think about
that they don't think about when you call a bank or you call any place and you're like tell me about
the process again how did that happen and people are willing to share right that's an internal
control weakness as well well I was going to say um for instance me being the broker between
the customer and underwriting you know when I was like how did you even catch this and they go well
like they think we're on the same team listen to what we did what did you do and that's
they're telling me how they caught my customer.
They're actually telling me how to beat their system.
And you know, something else that is to our detriment is we're all very trusting.
And so they initially, because you have an armor of trust.
And something we didn't talk about in class yesterday was privilege.
And I think there's a privilege that you have, that you were able to move through the
system being a Caucasian male. You know, people automatically trust you.
I used to say, I have the three Cs going for me that I was. I said, I'm Caucasian,
I'm confident, and I'm clean cut. They would, and, you know, it's like, so you don't,
you just don't expect it. Like, especially when I know what they're looking for,
they're looking for me to get nervous and try and leave. They're looking, like, there's all these things
I know like as I'd be at the teller and they'd say oh well I have to call oh there's something's up
with the account I've got to call and get authorization and I go all right and I just lean there
and I look around I look at the you know look I'm looking at the cameras and looking around and
like they're expecting me to leave or be nervous I'm not nervous I open the account I know what you're
going to find I know it's a new account I know I'm removing over $3,000 any account open within the last
12 months is going to get that they have to make a phone call i know they're going to review it
they've reviewed it before at all the other banks they do it so i'm okay with that there were no surprises
there were no surprises right but most people why didn't you run why would i run i know what's happening
right now and the worst listen if something happens and they say something is absolutely wrong do you know
what they're going to do i'm sorry we can't help you that's it everybody thinks they're going to call the
police, they're going to have you arrested. They're not doing any of that. They don't know what the
issue is. I've actually had accounts shut down where you go online and I went to go transfer money
and the account has been, it's inactive. And it's like I've got like $150,000, $200,000 in that
account. And then you called them and the bank says, yeah, we need you to come in so we can talk about
this. Because think about it. If it's fraud, you're not coming in. Of course. I jumped in my car.
I'm driving down there. You got $150,000 of my money because I know that I opened the account.
I know where that money came from. I know that the person's identity, you didn't go talk to
this guy because he lives under a bridge somewhere. So you didn't track him down. You knew the
process. Right. So I walk in. I sit down. I'm like, somebody doesn't make some phone calls.
We need to get this thing taken care of. This is the thing, Matt. The thing about that is
that privilege allows you and you know that that allows you to walk in i mean if you put on a suit
or a sports coat we're done like no one's going to question you right you know so that's something
we didn't talk about and um you know given that i don't have a lot of diversity well i have a little
bit of diversity in my class but not a ton so i don't know that they get that but but you that's
something that's sort of the foundation of a lot
of how this happens for some.
Right.
I don't know, even for me,
I don't know that I could walk in and do that and not.
I mean, they might call the police on me, maybe,
where they won't call the police on you.
Right.
Well, if you threw a little ghetto in there,
did your head did that head thing?
You know, you might get the cops called.
Like, but.
Yeah.
But even if I didn't, I might, you know, I might.
So, I was going to say, what is another one of the scams that you go over in the book?
Oh, man.
I'll tell you one.
And this one's a disturbing one.
A lot of times the health care fraud scams are the ones that are a little bit more disturbing.
But there's a story in the book.
It's also, it's in the intentional perpetrator chapter and it's in the victim chapter.
And it's the story of Dr. Robert Courtney.
And Dr. Robert Courtney was a compound pharmacist.
So he's the one that's working in the lab that is making the medicine that then gets shipped to the CVS or the doctor's office.
So he's the pharmacist we never even think about or ever see.
Okay.
So this guy, what he started to do was he started to dilute medication.
Oh, is this for like cancer patients?
Yes.
Oh, I thought about this.
Yeah.
Yeah. So we put him in the intentional perpetrator category, but we also interviewed some of the victims of those cases. Now, when I talk about this is a perfect fraud, I'm just saying air quotes around this because it's terrible what he did. But think about, when you think about how fraud is discovered, if you have a stage for 75-year-old pancreatic cancer patient that dies,
you're not really going to question it.
Right.
If you have a stage four breast cancer patient, 79 years old female, stage four, who dies?
They just didn't react well to the can't, they didn't take the medicine correctly.
They were already, it's a good chance he was going to die anyway.
Absolutely.
So, yes, so the likelihood of this being discovered was very, very slim.
And so the reason why he, why he was diluting medication and making it spread further was two things.
He had a large bill from the IRS that he wanted to pay, and record show was around half a million dollars, and then he wanted to make a million dollar donation to his church. So he wanted to expand his gross margin.
He wanted to make a million dollar donation to the church.
So he was a pastor, so he grew up in the church.
Wow.
So giving to the church was more important to him than helping save cancer.
This is a thing.
You know, this is a thing.
Like we already just talked about.
Like, were you going to save the life of a person that's stage four pancreatic cancer,
stage four breast cancer and you're 80 years old?
Probably not.
And so what happened, the way it was discovered, was really interesting because one of the nurses
that worked in the oncologist, oncology office of the doctor, started getting really
concerned because the patients weren't showing the traditional cancer patient signs.
So if you have cancer and you're going through chemo,
what do you think that you're going to see?
Yeah, they're going to be sick.
They're going to get tired afterwards.
They're going to.
But you were saying he just diluted it.
So think about this.
Some of the medication had no medicine in it.
It was just a alien solution.
That's not saluting.
So what she started to notice was they didn't have nausea.
They weren't losing their hair.
They weren't getting thinner.
You know, there are some things that you expect.
And just like you said, the chemo responds differently to all people.
And that's something that we always say.
And that is generally true.
But my father passed away from non-Hodskins lymphoma.
And when he went through chemo, he got sick immediately.
So there are some things that are sort of standard.
So the nurse started to get concerned that why aren't my patients showing some of the signs?
Like they're not losing their hair.
They're not nauseous.
They're not extremely fatigued.
Now, they had other signs because they were deathly sick.
And so what she decided to do was she took a bag of the medication and sent it to the FDA
because she was so concerned about it.
That was one thing she did.
Let me back up a second.
Something else that she had a good relationship with the pharmaceutical sales rep that came
to their doctor's office.
And she was talking about how busy she had been with all the patients.
And the sales rep said, hmm, that's odd.
because Dr. Courtney hasn't purchased enough medication for you all to be as busy as you're saying.
So those two things between, you're making faces.
You understand what I'm saying?
No, I understand.
It is amazing that those two people were so in sync with.
Well, not really, because I have a couple of friends that work in pharmaceutical sales,
work and pharmaceutical sales jobs.
And some of them are friends with the doctors.
And some of them are friends with the nurses staff because they go weekly because when they have samples of drugs, they are going to say, hey, give these to your patients. Let's run some tests. Let's get some feedback. So they can have a relationship. I'm not surprised by that.
No, I'm not talking to the relationship, but that you just happen to get like the nurse, I understand the nurse catching. I've got 30 patients. And in the last two weeks, almost none of them have gotten sick.
like that's odd.
Like I've been doing this for 10 years.
And the sales rep, the sales rep is like, why do you have 30 patients?
Because that doctor has only, we've only sold for five.
Right.
So the fact that the fact that like what a, like a perfect storm, the fact that both of them were aware enough to connect that and both of them go, something's not right.
Like most people just don't do that.
Most people go through their jobs.
and they're just clicking the buttons.
They're just clicking the okay, okay.
They're not even thinking.
But think about this.
Think about this.
She's thinking about how busy she is
and he's thinking about his money
because he's a sales breath.
So his bonuses are being impacted
by the lack of sales.
So when she said that to him like,
oh gosh, we are slam.
We are so busy.
He was probably like,
that doesn't match my records.
Why are you so busy?
Are you using somebody else?
Well, I understand.
It's just that either one of them, that it's, it's, it's lucky, lucky for the patients that they were both, that they, you know, they both had that conversation.
They both, she happened to mention it.
And he happened to pick up on it.
Right.
That whole thing like that's a quince.
That's, that's, um.
And you know, there's some, there's some months in time through this.
But, you know, you think about that couple with the fact that you have these patients that are not getting sick as they should.
You know, so all of these little pieces floating.
out there. So she took this sample, got it tested, got this particular bag. And this particular bag had,
I think, a drop of medication. And so that's how the investigation started. I mean, people, just
imagine, there were 98,000 prescriptions that he manipulated. So there were some people that are
staged three cancer patients that never even got any medication. So that cancer tumor just grew
and grew and grew, eventually they died. So horrible. That's a total scumbag. Like, move.
And not just that, like, that's not even, like, that's straight, well, that's, that's, that's just, you know, that's just fucking vicious.
Like, like, like, think about that, that's not saying, hey, I'm going to take $40 from a hundred thousand people.
Like, they're not, nobody's hurt.
Like, 40 bucks.
Come on.
You, you, you overcharge somebody's visa, $40 or something, you know, that, that's not, you know.
This is, this is killing people.
Yeah.
That's, this is serious.
Because we do know that.
chemotherapy does work, you know. So we do know that you can. It was questionable anyway. Well, but
depending on your question. But like if you're early stage three, you might be able to stop it.
Yeah, you got like a night probably, it depends on the cancer, obviously, but you might have between a 70 to a
95% chance that it's, it's going to work. Not with this guy. No, not with this guy. No.
Gosh, I was just thinking, it's funny because I have a buddy in the gym business. And,
And his father knew a guy in Canada that, so are you a member of a gym like LA Fitness or
something?
Yeah.
You know how once a year, like you pay your $40 a month.
And once a year, they hit you up for like $59.
So everybody kind of expects it.
Like if you've been there a year or two, they, of course, you get that $59 and you're all like,
damn it, what's this?
And they go, look, it's an annual fee.
It's in your contract.
We'd always do it.
Oh, yeah, that's right.
That's right.
He had a buddy.
His father had a buddy who ran a gym.
And also I knew his father.
He ran the gyms.
So in Canada, this guy made millions.
But every two or three years, he would hit everybody across the board for like $39.
Just ran it.
This guy's a multi-millionaire.
He's got like 20 gyms.
He's got, you know, he lives in a $4 million house.
Like, he's filthy rich.
But every three or four years, he just hit him across the board.
And he said, anybody that complained, he gave them their money back.
He said, but like 75 to 80% of the people did not complain.
He said, or if you called up and you said, oh, yeah, that's our annual fee.
And they were good, no, no, the annual fees, you took out six months ago.
And they go, we did?
Hold on.
Let me check.
Oh, you're right.
I'll refund that.
Sorry.
You got thrown in with the wrong bash.
And they gave me the money back.
He said 75% of the people didn't complain.
Wayne. And so he would just keep the money. He said, you know, it was nice. You get an extra,
you make an extra half a million dollars for no reason. You know, it's a nice little perk.
Well, he'd been doing it for like, done it four or five times over 10 or 15 years. And at some
point, there was an investigation. And he got in trouble. And it was, ended up being like six
million dollars or something outrageous. And he had to do, he got three years. I think he did six
months in jail and then the rest of it he said you know it's Canada so the rest of it you know
they put an ankle monitor on you and tell you to go sit in front of your TV and do it in your
living room and he's a multi-millionaire so you can imagine like that's nothing like he gets to
live in this big house he didn't even have to work um that sounds tortures right not really
but that's minor like that's a minor scam but this is what I just describe is just evil right
That's what I'm saying.
And he probably said for each one of those patients, who knows how much money he saved.
Like what was each patient worth to him?
That I don't know.
A thousand bucks, $800, $40, $2,000?
I mean, it's cancer medication.
He did all kinds of stuff, though, Matt.
He would do things like, you know, he would, people would bring things, like the reps would bring things.
He would sell the things that the reps would bring.
So like if someone brought diapers or wipes, he would sell those.
It's just terrible trying to make that donation.
He's a good Christian.
I mean, you make a dog a bad guy.
I mean, the book is built with so many stories, but that's one that stuck out for me today.
Oh, hey, I have a question.
So did you get funding for your documentary or did you just do the documentary?
I begged people.
So this is a thing for the doc.
I've had to fundraise and it's so expensive because the people that I had to hire are
real people. They're real filmmakers. Some of them are Emmy nominated directors of photography.
Like, so I had to raise. My own is so expensive. So expensive. In the end, did you recoup all
that money? No. No. Or are you still trying to. I'm still trying to recoup. I'm headland
books. No way. No way. I haven't seen a, I haven't seen a royalty check in years.
So you went to Netflix and what did you, so you ended up doing?
doing it yourself. Did you try and do a sizzle reel to get funding? Yeah, of course.
This is a thing. This is the thing. What's interesting is what sell, and this is just my opinion,
what sells a project is not the project. It's the people and not the people in it, the people
around it. You need an Emmy nominated Oscar award winning somebody, whether that's a DP,
whether that's a writer, screenwriter, somebody. So the story can be amazing.
The footage you have could be outstanding.
But if you don't have a name, somebody that went to USC film school or NYU film school or Spike Lee student or something, you got to have something to get through the noise.
If you're just a regular old person with a great story, hang it up.
Pray because it's hard.
It's really, really hard.
And that's what I was.
I was a regular person with a really incredible story.
So if I had taken this story to someone, like, someone famous,
it probably would have worked out a lot better than it actually did.
So.
And you didn't partner with a production company that had already done?
I did.
And that cost me a lot of money, too.
Because partner means pay for their people.
That's what partner means.
So because there's not a lot of money in documentary filmmaking.
So that's what you have to remember.
So know that you're doing this more for marketing than for money.
Okay.
So did the film get me known in a lot of circles that I would not otherwise be in?
Sure.
Do I have any other projects that are on Netflix or that was on Amazon?
No.
So I'm in a space that I might not be in.
But it's more, it's more about marketing yourself than it is about money.
Well, yeah, I was going to say that, but now you can say I've had a, you know,
My documentary ran on Netflix.
It's currently on...
Well, would you rather have...
Would you rather be able to say that?
Would you rather have the money in your pocket?
But if you do another one,
then you're that much further ahead
if you did another doc...
This is the thing.
If I do another...
If I ever do a project again,
I've got to walk into it with the funds.
Like, someone's got to, you know,
there's got to be a studio attached to me.
Hey, so what did you want to talk about?
Well, I want to tell you
about Wagovi.
Wagovi?
Yeah.
Wagoe.
What about it?
On second thought, I might not be the right person to tell you.
Oh, you're not?
No, just ask your doctor.
About Wachovie.
Yeah, ask for it by name.
Okay.
So why did you bring me to the circus?
Oh, I'm really into lion tamers.
You know, with the chair and everything.
Ask your doctor for Wagovi by name.
Visit wagovi.comi.com for savings.
Exclusions may apply.
the money. You have to do a sizzle. You have to do a sizzle and you have to be able to walk into Netflix and have them say, look, we're going to give you a million dollars to do this project. And now that Netflix is dominated by the stars, like that's hard as a regular person. So and you need a broker. You can't just walk into Netflix now. You got to find a broker that does that for you, which probably got to pay or give them a percentage. So I think Netflix eight years ago was probably way different than Netflix is.
now because there are just too many stars there like the obamas have movies there like come on
there's no place for me so well you're very negative i'm just like that buried by the u.s government
and ignored by the national media this is the story they don't want you to know when frank
amadeo met with president george w bush at the white house to discuss nato operations in afghanistan
no one knew that he'd already embezzled nearly two hundred million dollars from the federal
government, money he intended to use to bankroll his plan to take over the world.
From Amadeo's global headquarters in the shadow of Florida's Disney World, with a nearly
inexhaustible supply of the Internal Revenue Services funds, Amadeo acquired multiple businesses,
amassing a mega conglomerate. Driven by his delusions of world conquest, he negotiated the
purchase of a squadron of American fighter jets and the controlling interest in a former Soviet
ICBM factory. He began working to build the largest private militia on the planet, over one million
Africans strong. Simultaneously, Amadeo hired an international black ops force to orchestrate a coup in the
Congo while plotting to take over several small Eastern European countries. The most disturbing
part of it all is, had the U.S. government not thwarted his plans, he might have just pulled
it off. It's insanity. The bizarre, true story of a bipolar megalomaniac's insane plan for total world
nomination. Available now on Amazon and audible. So listen, I'm going to tell you something,
this is good for a scam. So I know, and I'm not going to tell you the name of the guy.
So I knew a guy, I know a guy that I've dealt with. And we've been on, you know, he's actually
been on like, I don't want to say. We've had some interactions. And after we'd had several
interactions and talks and, you know, he says, listen, like, I feel comfortable with you. I'm
going to tell you something. I said, okay. So he calls me back. He is, I'm only telling you this
because you're the only person that will really understand what I did and appreciate it. He said,
because I can't tell anybody else. I said, okay, what did you do? So he wrote a book.
He said, the book did okay.
He said, but I didn't get any offers to turn it into a movie.
It wasn't optioned.
And he said, so, you know, I was upset.
It did okay.
So he said, he turned around and he said, the problem is I noticed that people want to option things that have been options.
Okay.
I said, okay.
So he made up a fake producer.
He gave him a LinkedIn account.
He connected him to a bunch of projects.
He got, got him an IMBD, what is it called?
Mm-hmm.
You're right.
Yeah.
He started a website, got him an email, paid for everything, started a little production
company.
He's like, like, totally looks legit.
And then he did a press release about how this guy had optioned his book.
He said, as soon as I optioned it through the website, he was contacted by, it wasn't
Warner Brothers, but it was someone like underneath, let's say, Sony or something.
He created his own buzz.
He was, so now the fake producer was contacted and they said, look, we're interested in
buying out the option.
So he said, they then bought out the option from this fake producer.
He said, like, I'm signing a name.
He's signing, I'm signing names.
I'm doing this.
He said, so they end up buying out the option.
And when he was telling me that, he said, he's like, and I'm telling you right now,
they're talking about this actor and this one and this one.
And then there was, by the way, then in the Hollywood reporter or, you know,
they then did a newspaper report about how they just bought this from that producer.
Who's nobody?
Like he was telling me, like, I looked it up.
I was like, this is nuts.
And he goes, yeah.
And I said, and I remember thinking to myself, the likelihood that movie, that book
gets turned into a movie, let's face it.
They option two, three thousand a year, and they never get made.
Three of them get made.
So I thought, okay, well, I said, yeah, that's pretty cool.
And he said, yeah, right now they're auditioning or talking to these actors.
Once again, they do that.
They'll connect an actor to a film.
He said, so-and-so is writing the screenplay.
Okay, still doesn't matter.
I've been in that situation.
It never went anywhere.
But guess what?
They started filming the thing about three months ago.
And he said, as soon as it's done, he said, I want to, I'll come on your program and I'll tell the whole story. And I said, that's, that's incredible. That's a good one. Right? That's great. That's a good one. Yeah. I want to be on when you do it. That's a good one. You've been in that situation. Like, you know the, like the idea of being able to do that, having the forethought. I mean, he, wow. I mean, he created, he created his own buzz. And so when you create the buzz, then the buzz, buzz, buzz, buzz.
and other people pick up.
So how much time did you get for what you did?
I got 26 years and four months.
But I don't like to say the four months.
I typically just say 26 years because if you say four months, it's like you're whining
about it.
Matthew.
Yeah.
How much time did you actually do?
Just shy of 13 years.
Yeah, I know.
But it's the first decades that that's the hardest.
You know, the last three years just flew by.
My favorite question of all time that I've ever gotten, and this is just a narcissist in me, is that this one student said, this female student goes, do you feel like, she was, do you feel like you got away with it for so long because you're so charming? And I mean, I started laughing so hard. I was like, I wish I had recorded. I was like, that's the best question ever. But anyway, but I like, but I like writing. So I wake up early and I
write and I write stories and I like I like crime stories and I don't really like violent crime
stories I have an aversion to to violence for some reason but I like scam stories I like I like
things I like interesting unique criminals that were kind of you know did things uniquely
or maybe maybe in an ingenious way of some kind so that's typically what I stick with
in five sentences can you tell me about your crime I owned them more
mortgage company, took advantage of that system, went on the run for three years, between
15 million and 55 million, semi-colon, depending, or, yeah, semicolon, but depending on who
you believe. And ultimately, I was caught in sentence to 26 years. And you did 13? 13. Yes.
Now, in the federal system, you do 85% of your time. So I cooperated.
I was asked to be interviewed by Dateline NBC News, which I was.
I was asked to be interviewed, this was by the U.S. attorney.
I was asked to be interviewed by American Greed, which I was.
I was then asked to write an ethics and fraud course, which I did, which is taught to the nations
and mortgage brokers have to take like four hours of ethics and fraud.
I wrote a course that a national one or actually two of the national
national schools teach.
I also wrote a federal red flags rules course.
And we then turned around and after a lot of legal battling, you know,
we got the government to reduce my sentence by by seven years.
Then as soon as I came back onto the, you know, after I went to court and got
seven years knocked off came back. I was walking the track with this guy who was actually
cooperating in his case. And he was, his name was Ron Wilson. He'd stolen $57 million in the
largest Ponzi scheme in South Carolina history. And we were, you know, talking and he was
basically explaining to me that he was, he didn't think, he didn't believe that the government
was going to give him a reduction in his sentence for his cooperation because they
thought he was still hiding money. And at some point, after months of just walking around,
he told me where he'd hidden a bunch of Ponzi scheme or that he'd actually given a couple of people
money to keep for him. So what did you do? I happen to be, this is what's so funny. I'd love to say
I got on the phone and called my attorney, but I didn't think the government would give me anything
for anything else. They didn't want to give me the first reduction. You know, we had to go to court
and fight to get that reduction. So a month or so,
later, I was ordering my transcripts. I had my lawyer sending me my transcripts for my
reduction because I wanted to include it in part of my book. I was still kind of writing my book.
And we were talking on the phone and she just happened to say, so she was like, yeah, yeah, I'm
going to order those. I'm sorry. I forgot. I said, okay, okay. I said, okay, well, let me know. I said,
thank you very much. And she was like, so what's going on? What's going on? Like, this woman never
wanted to talk to me. Like, they don't want to talk. We're not friends. And I was like,
what's going? What do you mean? She goes, what's going on in there? Anything happened?
I went, no. And she goes, okay, nothing, nothing. And I just was like, it was almost like I was like,
I said, you know what? Something happened the other day. Listen to this. And I told her.
I told her what happened. She was, well, let me look into it. A week later, I get told by a
correctional officer, hey, you got to go to SIS, which is.
as a department.
So I go to this department and they say,
they put me on the phone with somebody.
They said, hey, you got to talk to this guy.
He's a Secret Service agent.
And he says, listen, I understand that you know where Ron Wilson hid Ponzi scheme money.
And I said, I mean, I do, but it's not a lot.
And I said, I need something in writing saying you'll give me a reduction.
And he said, yeah, no problem.
So they got me something.
You became a whistleblower.
You became a vigilante whistleblower.
Yeah.
I became a cross.
You're a crossover into the vigil.
Lanty, what's the lower category? I was just saying, see, inmates have a different word for it.
You're a DL snitch. Is that what you were? Is that what people thought of you? Oh, absolutely.
Absolutely. But I mean, it was funny because there's all, like, you're not, I'm not advertising it.
But if somebody were to say, like, because they knew I went to court, got my sentence cut, like, guys were like, oh, bro, I heard you cooperate. I'm like, right? And well, that's some bullshit. I got over this, bro. I didn't come here to make friends.
Like, trust me. You got there a long time, though.
you needed some friends, right?
Well, look, it's a medium you might have needed some friends.
But I did three years in the medium, and then I went to the low.
And honestly, a lot of that is for guys that are in like penitentiaries.
And in the federal system, the bulk of inmates cooperate.
You know, I used to, they say like 95% of them cooperated, but 100% are lying about it.
So, you know, and I could, I would sit there and you'd be in the,
in the unit, guys would sit there and talk about, you know, oh, snitches this, snitches that.
And I'd say, well, let's do the math.
And you would sit back and say, there's 150 guys in this unit, 95% cooperated.
We know that it's not these 10 guys, because they all went to trial so they didn't have an option.
We know it's not these.
You start doing the math and you go, so that means there's five people in this unit that did not cooperate.
And, of course, there'd be five or six of us standing around.
And I'd go, and I'll bet it's every one of you guys.
so yeah so i i i talked to talk to s i talked to the secret service and eventually they indicted
that guy ron wilson and the two people working with him they recovered half a million dollars
and after once again government didn't want to give me anything uh so we had to fight we had to file
paperwork and fight them in court and i got another five years knocked off my sentence by the time i got that
five years knocked off my sentence. Now it's 12 years knocked off my sentence. I'm basically leaving.
I'd already been locked up seven or eight or eight or nine years by that point. So within a year
or two, I was transferred. So it ended up being 12 years in change. You know? How hard? How hard? Did you
have a family? Like, how hard was that transition for you? Well, one, I'd been on the run for three
years. So. And how is that? I'd essentially abandoned my family anyway. How hard was that? Well,
you know, I had a son. I had a little boy, but I was divorced from his mom and I'm basically a
weekend dad. So like every two weeks, he's coming over for the weekend and maybe you pick him up on a
Wednesday. And he's three years old and he doesn't even really know who I am that much. You know,
he knows I'm daddy. But mommy has a new boyfriend and that guy's living in the house. So, you know,
So I'm more like an older uncle that picks him up and buys him toys.
And that's great.
So leaving him, you know, it's like I can't, I'm not taking, I can't take him with me.
I'm not raising him anyway.
So that was, that was the worst part.
That and leaving my mother.
My dad was always such a, just a real jerk.
It really was.
Like my dad, you know, like growing up, it's funny because one of the things I'm always
asked is, you know, oh, well, why did you do it?
And, you know, initially, I always say, well, I did it for the money.
But then you write a book.
And then you think deeper.
And you have to really think about it.
And you start reading books about how to write books and how to write a memoir and how to.
And I probably read three of them while I was locked up before I even started writing.
And while I was writing.
And, you know, you start realizing there's just different techniques.
And I think ultimately it ended up being like, yeah, that doesn't make sense.
because when you when you for for a limited time at McDonald's enjoy the tasty breakfast trio your choice of chicken or sausage mcmuffin or mcgrittles with a hash brown and a small iced coffee for five bucks plus tax available until 11 a.m. at participating McDonald's restaurants price excludes flavored iced coffee and delivery first started committing fraud it was a little bit here a little bit there and nobody knew that fraud had been committed and you got the money you got 100,000 and then you got 300,000 then it was 500 so you had the money.
You didn't need the money now.
But why are you still doing it?
You know, and it just continued and continued and continued.
And even when I got called, why didn't you start over?
Why didn't you move into your parents' spare room, claim bankruptcy, and start your life over again?
You could be a car salesman.
You could do lots of things.
Why didn't you do that?
So I really, when it boils down to it, I think it was just a fact that, you know, I was raised by a very narcissistic father who was disappointed.
You know, was not the son he wanted.
He's five foot 10, you know, good looking athletic.
smart everything came pretty easily to him you know made him you know you know had nothing growing up
and was now making hundreds of thousands a year and I'm a kid that has struggling with dyslexia
is not great at sports you know what I'm saying like I was not the son he wanted or deserved so
and and probably made you feel feel guilty for that every chance he could yeah yeah it was always
the snide comments but what's great is when I started making money he really
started respecting me. Like, I opened a mortgage company. Like, I graduated high, I graduated high
school with C's, graduated college with A's. And then it was still with a degree in fine arts. And I remember
as I was graduating, he said, yeah, he said, yeah, you got a degree in fine arts. He said, he said,
you'll be able to, he said, with that degree, you're, you're probably your best course of
action nowadays is you'll be drawing sweaty tourists at Disney World to think about moving to
Orlando. I was like, wow, it's a four-year degree, you know? So,
So anyway, I end up becoming a mortgage broker, ended up opening my own mortgage company.
Now I'm making money.
I own real estate.
I had like 50, more than 50 properties within a few years.
I'm doing great.
So, yeah, I continue to commit fraud.
And then eventually I got caught and he was like, I do it.
Wait, wait, wait.
When you opened your company, though, there was a period where your company was successful legitimately, right?
No.
Really?
I mean, from the very, you have to understand, the very first fraud I ever committed had what,
A very first loan I ever did had fraud in it.
And what was that fraud in that loan?
You have to understand, I, like, banked everything on being a mortgage broker.
I had to go away to be a mortgage broker.
I paid the fee.
I took the class.
I passed.
I started working knowing I'm not going to make any money for at least 30 days.
And I was working 80 hours a week.
I was there before everybody stayed till 8, 9, 10 o'clock at night.
They gave me a key.
you know so um by the time i had a couple of loans going uh like i'm a month behind of my car payment
might have been two you know my mortgage is behind like it's not good so i really need this
loan to close and it turns out that i brought the loan file into my manager and she opens the
file and she's fumbling through the paperwork and there's one document she pulled
and put to the side and she said and she said it's a perfect file looks great but on this on the
verification of rent for your borrower she was 30 days late on her rent in the last two years
that's a that's a deal killer it's over you're not lending money to somebody who pays their
their rent late they're going to pay their mortgage late if they paid it all so I was I just was
like oh my God and I remember she she while she was telling me this she pulled out a
bottle of white out. You know, the old ones, not the spit, but one of the
starts, she's like, yeah, so here's what the problem is.
So they're going, okay, let's with the, you know, and then she handed it to me, she said,
so if I was you, I would wipe that out. I would make a copy of it and stick it back in the
file. She goes, they'll never catch it. I was like, that's fraud. I could go to jail.
And she goes, worse that happens is you get fired. Nobody's calling the FBI. You'll be fine.
She says, I do it all the time. It's going to
be fine. There's a lot of documents in there. And I was like, wow. So I trusted her. I
whited it out, put the document back in there, sent it to underwriting. Three, four days later,
I'm freaking out for three or four days. Like I didn't sleep for four days. So three, four days later,
they call me, they say, hey, we're ready to close. And we close. We close a few days later.
I got a check for like $3,500. I'm thrilled. And then you're back. You're back in business.
You're paying your rent. You're paying your car note. Yeah, but the next guy that
came in, made 52,000 a year. If he made 57,000, he could get the loan. Wow. It's now the
fine arts degree seemed like a good idea. So now I'm changing the 52 to 57. Yeah. And all the
corresponding. So let me ask you this. Did the clients know that you were changing making the
changes? Not always. Like sometimes if it was something small, I didn't say anything. Like I'd
rather have them deny it if they were going to be asked.
You know, it's interesting because in my categories, you are almost a cross between
a righteous perpetrator and an intentional perpetrator.
And you're a little bit more righteous than you are intentional just based on how your
story started.
And in the book, I talk about righteous perpetrators are people that have.
have power or privilege with inside an organization that use that power to help someone
outside. So, like, yes, you did receive a fee. So you did. But you also knew that,
goodness, 52,000 versus 57, if I just changed this, this person can be on their way to home
ownership. This feels minor. And like, the worst is going to happen is sort of a slap on the
risk you know so and you received your commission but to you got to a point where maybe I'm
sure that commission you didn't need it anymore but you could still help people um well I mean I'm not
sure like like initially like you said it started small it was just to get get the loans closed
get my commission get the next person you know let's let's get this you know this is the thing
it's like were you a mastermind at some massive massive million dollar scheme at first no no but
did you think that gosh if i just changed this one little thing i could help i could help them
greatly and help me a little bit like yeah well i mean i obviously you want these people to get
into the house right and and and i had worked before opening my mortgage company i'd work for another
mortgage company and their credit line got shut off at one point and i remember getting phone calls
from people where they had packed their stuff up and you haul vans because like they have to be
out of the house and they're calling me like listen what you said we were going to close i'm like yeah
i thought we were going to close though they the credit line got shut off i don't know what's happening
They're looking for new investors.
It didn't typically happen.
But they were approving people with only one outlet to sell those loans.
And when that got shut off, they turned around and went to other ones.
They didn't have it.
So I've got people ready to close.
People's leases are up.
They have to be out of their house or their apartment or whatever.
They're loading up lieu halls because we're being told, give it a few more days in a week.
We don't know what to tell your customers.
So I do remember feeling desperate when people are telling me like, you know, we're staying in their life.
I mean, this is their real life.
Right.
And so somehow you've turned from mortgage broker to almost a therapist, you know, like, because you're a part of their lives.
Their livelihood, the way they're going to live.
I mean, yeah, but I mean, I would love this to sit there and say it was, you know, altruistic.
But, you know, I'm saying the truth is.
Well, it got big.
I mean, I'm sure.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, once it got away from me, it was.
some point it at some point when I started my own company now I've got my brokers coming to me
they need their loans to close they need a W-2 change or they need a bank statement change
or then and then it got to the point where it was like it's such a pain to change bank
statements like it's easier if I just create my own bank online and come up with my own bank
statements logos and everything processes and all right and then I can then I can just in you
they walk in and pretty much everybody that came in the door, if they thought there was
going to be an issue with their bank, they just put down that they worked at, or their bank was
one of their banks.
No, it was Bank of Ebor.
There was a place, Ebor City in Tampa.
It was Bank of Ebor.
And they'd still put down their own bank.
They just have two banks.
And so if we needed, if they didn't have quite enough money in their bank or they needed
reserves or whatever, well, yeah, well, I've got an extra $15,000 in Bank of Ebor.
Oh, I didn't know.
Well, yeah, I can give you the bank statement.
And they could call the bank.
You know, we had some, we'd answer, put them on hold.
Tell them, hold on.
You know, I'll check.
Can you put back?
And it wasn't.
It was a whole sham.
No, it was all a sham.
It was all a sham.
And that way, there were multiple banks.
There was probably like two or three banks.
There was three banks, actually.
You should let me do the documentary about your life.
I was going to say, so what happened was eventually I end up getting in trouble.
was there a whistleblower how did you get caught well well i mean i get in trouble a lot
like the what what made me what what made it go from changing w-2s to be so when i was listening to
your you discussed the different types of perpetrators right or whatever scammers or so i
initially i started off i believe that you know as i was just an opportunity
I was just in the right place of the right time. I needed it to happen. But then at some point,
someone who had worked for me, she went and opened up her own company and she got in trouble
with the FBI and wore a wire on me, she and her husband, because she knew what I was doing.
And what I was doing was one of the ways that I got so many rental properties, my wife and I got
So I mean, rental properties is I would buy a property and then I would sell it.
I'd renovate it and then sell it to my ex-wife.
So there's something called seasoning where if you buy a property, you have to wait a certain
period of time before you can refinance it.
So instead, if I buy it, fix it up and sell it.
I can supersede that.
Was it, whatever, I can get around that.
And what happened is when I'm selling it to my wife, we're not telling the lender that's
my wife.
We tell her just some client, like she never took my last name, specifically for this purpose.
So we end up getting several million dollars worth of property very quickly within about a year or so.
All she has to do is collect rent, raise my son.
So we're doing fine.
Well, this other, this person that used to work for me ended up telling the FBI so that obviously she could get a reduction in her sentence.
And so now I'm, I get in trouble with the FBI.
I end up taking a plea deal.
I take three, three years probation.
But I can't, I can't own my mortgage company now.
So I decided what I was going to do.
is like, that's where it was like, okay, well, you could claim bankruptcy and start over, right?
So I was in the middle of the divorce.
It sounds very stressful.
Yeah, it was, it was stressful.
So, um, so I was getting divorced and from the woman that you owned all the properties
with.
Yes.
Yes.
She didn't want to be married to a felon.
Anyway, um, like, she sort of was one too.
No, she, I would know, that list definitely. I mean, but it's so, like she was, she, she had blood
on her hands too.
Oh, no.
she absolutely did. And here's what's really funny. What's really funny is my lawyer, when I got
my lawyer, here's what he told me. He said, listen, to be honest with you, like, how close are you
with your wife? And I went, what do you mean? He said, listen, because he knew I was living
somewhere else by that point, if that makes sense. Like, we were already having problems.
So he was like, about how close are you with it? Like, you're getting divorced? I was like,
probably, yeah, geez, he said, he was because all the loans are in her name. Like, he's like,
I mean, he said, I could, if you were to cooperate and you were to cooperate against some of
your mortgage brokers, I could keep you from being indicted at all. She'd be indicted. They'd be indicted.
It's like, yeah, listen, this, this woman hates my guts already. Like, I'm already in danger.
Like, she could cut you. Like, she's an angry person. And I said, I'm, I'm, and she's raising my son.
And I said, no, I said, besides, I'm just going to get probation. So I end up.
I pay my lord $75,000 to give me probation.
And of course, now that I know how the sentencing guidelines work, I realize, like, what a sheister.
I was never facing prison time.
Like, I could have gotten a public defender for that.
So anyway, the point is that I plead guilty and I can't own the mortgage company anymore.
So I decided I'm going to start a development company and start renovating houses.
But there's issues with that.
To get the money, you need money, obviously.
You need capital.
And my issue with that was that I was going to start renovating houses, but in the area,
Ibor City, where I was going to renovate them, which is just outside of Tampa, it's Tampa.
Properties are selling for like, the average price is like $75,000.
So you can buy a house for, let's say, $40,000, put $20,000 in it, sell it for $100.
Maybe you make $30 or $40,000 or $30,000, more like $25 or $30,000.
That's it.
So I need to be able to get these houses to appraise higher.
So that's a problem.
well the way you determine how much a house the value of a house is a comparable sales so i need to
be able to compare these houses to houses higher and the way you can so i started dating a girl at
a title company and she i know you were going to say that and so i asked her hey how can i like if i
buy a house and i sell it for a hundred if i buy it for 50 how can i record the sale at 200 and she
said oh well you'd have to pay the extra doc stamps and you'd have to switch out the transaction form and i said
Okay. So I do that. I pay the extra doc stamps, which is nothing. It's like an extra $1,000
in doc stamps and I buy a house for $50,000. I recorded it 200. And it shows up like a week
later in public records as being a sale for $200,000. So I decided I'm going to start buying these
houses and recording the values higher. But the problem is people in that area don't buy houses
for 200. Until I 18th, get excited.
This is big! For the summer's biggest adventure.
I think I just smurf my pants.
that's a little too excited
Smurfs
only date is July 18th
1000 so I need borrowers that will buy houses for 200,000
and the problem with that is if you find those borrowers
they can only borrow so many
and the other problem with those people are
that they want part of the profit
and I don't want to give them part of the profit
so what I decided was
I was just going to start making my own borrowers
because that's really the go-to move
you created fictitious people yeah yeah synthetic identities i figured out how to get social security
to issue social security numbers to children that don't exist right so i make a fake birth certificate
for like an eight-month-old girl and then i go into social security and i say here's my
birth certificate and here's my shot record because if the kid's over 12 months old you have to
actually show it with the with the baby well i don't have a baby to show up with it's 11 or
13 or 14 months old.
So, but if you just show up with a shot record in the birth certificate, you're good.
So I do that and I start getting these people and that you probably, well, you're not a
psychiatrist.
So I was going to say, this is probably, okay.
So I was going to say I name the people, not all of them, but most of them were names like
Michael White, James Red, Lee Black, Brandon Green, William Blue, David.
Common names is somebody might actually be named that.
know, like, the thing about the last names, black, red, white, green. Yeah. So there was a movie
called from Quentin Tarantino called Reservoir Dogs, and he gave everybody names like that,
Mr. Pink, Mr. Black, Mr. And I love that movie. So, you know, I started naming these characters,
those names. I got them all three secure credit cards, made the payments for six months,
and after six months they have 750 credit scores. Okay, I take it back. You are not a righteous
perpetrator. Right. So she was like,
It evolved.
Like, I knew the credit system.
I knew how these things worked.
I knew I could take advantage of that system.
You know, what's interesting is how easy it is to do.
Yeah, once you're kind of in the system and if you can poke around and figure,
especially if you're in a position where you can learn through trial and error, right?
So every time I made a mistake, I learned a little bit more, a little bit more.
And I was able to, if a bank blamed.
So if a bank found out about it.
and came to me and said, this is what we just found out.
I'd say, are you serious?
You're telling me my customer sent me that?
And the customer, you create it.
Well, no, I'm saying if it was a real customer at the old,
because I learned most of this while I was a mortgage broker,
changing their document.
So if they caught something, I'd be, oh, you're telling me my,
you're telling me my customer gave me a fake W2.
He seemed so honest.
And I said, well, I'm not doing that loan for him.
Hey, by the way, how'd you figure that out?
And they said, oh, well, it turns out this.
Really?
Yeah.
Oh, okay.
Then I'd alter it and send it to another lender and then it'd go through and they'd close the loan.
So I feel bad.
So what happens is I start creating these fake people.
I raise the value.
I start buying these houses for $40,000 and $50,000, recording the values of the houses at $200, $220,000, $190, $250.
And so the whole area raises up through the roof.
and my borrowers, each borrower buys five, sometimes six houses,
refinances those houses after a month or so,
pulls out 150,000, you know, 100, 150,000,
whatever the appraisal came in at, like 80, 95%, 90%.
And so once each one of them got to around a million,
1.1 million, 1.2 million.
And I'd make the payments, of course,
then I'd just stop paying.
And the houses would go into foreclosure,
And the bank would take the house back. And the bank would send out an appraiser to say, hey, how much is this house worth? And the appraiser would once again say, it's worth 220,000. And they'd put it on the market and it wouldn't sell. And then they lower the price. Three months later, they lower the price again. Eventually, they'd end up selling it for $70,000 or $50,000 or whatever. And they'd lose $100,000. They'd say, man, that's crazy. I can't believe how off we were on that. That's, yeah, that happened. So,
they didn't know there was a scam that had been committed and you had already pulled the equity pull the money out oh all the money's gone no they owe the bank 110 thousand or sorry 180,000 210,000 and the bank just takes the loss because that does happen people buy houses for 200,000 and then they foreclose on them and they resell the house and sometimes they get 110 sometimes they get 140 you know by the time the house is taken back.
back, it's been trashed. And after a year, the windows are knocked out. Someone stole the copper.
The AC doesn't work. And so they sell the house at an extreme loss. So the banks never,
they never thought fraud. It's now been a year or two since they've gotten these, or a year or so,
since they got these documents, there's no way to verify anything. And if they did look into it,
like if they started, they obviously sent letters or they'd send somebody by to try and serve you with
paperwork for the foreclosure, I would type up a letter, I'd type up an article. I'd take an
article from the newspaper and I'd insert my borrower's name into the article saying like there
was a 12-car pile up on I-75 and someone that was lifelighted to Tampa General Hospital and I'd
put Mr. Black in there. And then I'd write a letter from Mr. Black's sister saying my brother was
in a horrible accident. He's currently in a coma. The doctor said, this is too much. I don't believe
you did this is too you did all this listen look you look it up the amount of articles that are out
there they even talk about mr black mr green they're like they talk to investigators for the bank
and the investigator for the bank says listen i couldn't tell if this guy was alive or dead his his
his address was a piece his address was a mailboxes etc account his like starts naming off all these
things he's like i couldn't even figure out if he was alive if he'd ever have been alive so yeah
so it was it was but keep
How long did this last for you?
That, I borrowed like $11.5 million, about 18 months, about 18 months.
Did you live like you borrowed $11 million?
No, I never did because I'm not really a flashy person.
Like I didn't have a, you know, I didn't have a Porsche or a Lamborghini.
Like I had a expensive Audi sports car.
I actually lived in an area called Tampa Heights, which was kind of an up-and-coming area.
It was being kind of, you know, urban renewal kind of thing.
you know. And I owned a bunch of houses in that area. I had almost every house on my block and was
renovating them. So, but it, the projects was, you know, a mile, two miles away. And so I didn't live
super flashy. I traveled. I had money. I could do whatever I wanted. But, you know, I don't need to,
I'm not living in a two million dollar house. I'm not trying. I'm not trying to, I wasn't trying to,
but you're on federal probation still doing this. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And it's funny too,
because, like, my probation officer showed up in my office one time, and I had, I'm telling
you, I must have had seven or eight phones, cell phones on the credenza behind my desk.
Like, and I just was thinking, like, this guy's got to ask some questions here.
Like, that's not normal.
Like, he's got to say, what's with these phones?
But he never did.
He just, hey, what's going on?
I don't think they're trained to look for fraud.
So how are you now?
How are you on the straight and narrow now?
Why now?
You know, I got 26 years.
Like, first of all, there's two things.
One, I got 26 years.
Listen, I didn't even tell you about going on the run for three years.
But let's, we don't want to get in that.
Let me ask you a question.
Have you ever, did you ever do any insurance fraud?
Yes, but it was minor.
Like these are like break-ins.
And this is like, these are minor.
Like you staged a break-in?
Well, one time, only because I didn't have insurance when I got broken into.
So then I went out and got homeless insurance and I waited about a month and a half.
And then I called the police and said I got broke into.
And then I maximize the policy.
You know how they have policy limits?
Like people think, oh, you tell them $40,000 or you might get $10.
Why?
Because you said that was $40,000 for furniture.
They only pay $10 for furniture.
So I went through the policy and I said, okay.
There's jewelry is up to $10,000.
Great, $9,000.
Here's the receipts.
Did you create the receipts too?
I would create receipts or something you just go and get receipts.
Like you can go and walking, if you're walking out of Home Depot or you're walking out of,
people throw their receipts away like at, remember Circuit City?
You know, you grab receipts from Circuit City.
You have friends that have receipts, you know, that owns stores.
A friend of a friend knows.
But the receipt has to match up with the date.
At least a date.
Yeah, but it's obviously, it's going to match up with a date.
And they're not backtracking any of this stuff.
And most of the time it's just photographs.
A lot of times it's photographs.
I'm doing this insurance.
I'm doing this project for the Coalition Against Insurance Fraud.
And I have been interviewing people that have committed insurance fraud.
And I was just curious, just based on everything that you were saying, I was thinking he must have done an insurance fraud scheme.
So I think if you, if the title.
You understand that a lot of these things, title insurance paid off, too.
So that was insurance.
And it's not normal.
The title fraud that I've committed is more than your average fraud, right?
Like, it's a different type of fraud.
But it still falls under an insurance category?
Yes.
Well, for instance, you're buying a house.
So you own the house.
Let's say I own a house.
And I own a house.
And on Monday, they do the title search.
So they search the title.
But it's not going to close till Friday.
So I know it was searched.
I know it came back on Monday.
Call the, you know, you call the title insurance company.
You say, hey, listen, did you get you, when did you get the title policy back?
Oh, we got it back yesterday.
Oh, okay, thanks.
You immediately go and record a lien on the house.
the property for a new roof and the windows and whatever it's $25,000 so then the house closes on
Friday you wait a week you go to the new homeowner and you say hey what's going on where's Matt
Cox oh he sold us the house he did well he never paid me this 25,000 he owes me and I have a
lien on this property who'd you close through and they go oh we closed through lawyers title so he goes
there's a lawyer's title and says, hey, I did a bunch of work on this house. And he shows them the
$25,000. Then they go and they go, no, we, we searched the house. He said, what are you talking about?
I have a lien on it. They go back and search it and go, man, we missed the lien. He recorded it two
days after we searched the policy during what's called the gap period. So we owe this guy $25,000.
So they have to pay him $25,000. Now, they can turn around and go to me and try and get the money from me.
I said, nah, that guy did horrible work. I'm not paying that guy.
And they go, we already paid him.
Well, that's, here's the thing.
What I learned from dating the girl at the insurance company or at the title company was this.
If there's the dispute over the fee, they have to pay it.
So they won't sue me because I have a dispute over this guy, but they missed the title.
And by law, they have to pay it.
They cannot sue me because there's a dispute.
So that's a nice little.
You did this?
Yeah, I've done that a few times.
How much? Do you know how much you did it for? No. You didn't get caught for, though. No. Listen, there's so much stuff I didn't go. Like, they never charged me with credit card fraud. Every one of those people that every one of those identities, which I almost never talked about, they also got probably $50, $60,000 in credit cards. They also got, like if I knew I was about to dump the guy, I'd go out and get three or four personal loans through, you know, bank.
Bank of America, Wells Fargo.
On the synthetic identity person.
Right. Because I'm about, I can get another $100,000 out of this guy. Like I might have got, I probably got six or $700,000 for the property. I get another $100,000. So. How much did you make doing all this, Matt?
I don't, I mean, you know, I, I feel like a lot of that money went to other people. It went back into the properties. So they said it was nine point. They said my mortgage company did $40 million. But keep in mind, that was just basic.
fraud. There was no real money involved. Like that's money fraudulent loans going to buy houses. So that's not really like money in my pocket. Sure. The other one is after they sold everything, it was $15 million that they said I did. Well, first they said it was like 25. Then we got it down to 15. We argued. And then they said, well, there's nine and a half million missing. And then we argued and I got it down to six million because they just didn't want to do the paperwork. So I'm,
my restitution, $6 million.
At one point, it was probably legitimately $9.5 million.
I'm sorry, yeah, $9.5 million.
You're amazing.
You're amazing.
I think a lot of it has to do with your upbringing, though.
Like, I think just probably that ongoing emotional abuse, you, like, you were out here.
You're like, guns blazing.
I was going to say, it's funny if you read, if you read my book.
like there were all these little tiny things that my father like if when someone they say like you know
like think back like what's a story you can tell about your father like i don't all i have all my
stories are like they're rough and they're not rough in a in a brutal way they're rough in a way
that at the time i laughed about it and looking back i'm like you don't say that to a kid like what
like that doesn't what do you why would you you know i always remember
to this because I always remember immediately thinking this because my dad was an alcoholic right
but he made he worked for state farm insurance and he would get be sober for a year or two
get drunk they put them in a rehab go right back to work this happened over and I don't mean like
a 10 day rehab we're talking 45 days 30 days 90 days like outrageous one time they put our
whole family in rehab we had to all go to alin on like twice a week we're going to these
alanon meetings is like why have I got to keep him sober so
what happened was I remember one time he and I were driving in his BMW and I have my little
Izaid shirt on he's in a suit and tie we're going to movie you know our movie day right like we
would go to go see a movie and really we never really would see a movie he would drop me off and
come back like four or five hours later so but we're on our way and I remember looking over at
car that was next to us and it was a it was a beat up old Nova that was rusted out a bunch of little
kids in the back seat mom and dad are in the front and just the kids in the backers they just look
filthy they look filthy their clothes are messed up the cars rusted out and I remember being at a
stop sign and looking over at these kids and they're staring at me through the window and I just remember
thinking like just being like a shame that we had money and like I felt bad for them. I remember
looking down and my dad instinctively noticed something was wrong and he looked over at me and he looked
over at those kids and he looked at me and he goes hey and I was like yes sir and he goes he says I wonder
what the poor are doing today and I just went and then he went and he's kind of chuckled and
laughed and I remember thinking wow like I like and my my my
thought what I always remember from that is this is that it was always no matter what you had to do
no matter how you had to behave it was always better to be driving the BMW and and that's how he was
like he made a lot of money for a lot of people state farms should have fired him 10 times they
never did he was always the top produce top 10 producing uh managers in the nation always won the
trips, always taught the classes. Whenever they had the big wigs come, come to the head office,
they always called him in. They asked him to do training seminars. Like, but every two years,
we got to throw this guy in a rehab. But that's okay. It's okay. He'd show up one time,
he showed up one time and talked in front of a thousand people drunk. They had to practically pull him
off stage. Put him in rehab. Get him back to work. You could behave however you want.
You're a star.
Exactly.
As long as you make everybody a ton of money.
And I just remember thinking that, I remember my mom said one time, I remember asking her,
because God, they used to fight all the time, all the time.
And I mean fights like where she'd get all the kids, put them in a car and drive and leave
for a couple of days, come back.
And I remember thinking, why, like, are you that in love with him that we're going back?
And she said, you know, he's a good provider.
you know so it was like it was like both of them you know what I'm saying like they need they
need she had four kids what's she gonna do so yeah I mean I just that's just how I grew up and I
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once, which is going to be in the description. I'll leave the link to the book and any other
social media links for Kelly Pope if you want to get in touch with her. And I appreciate you
guys watching. Thank you very much. See you.