Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast - My Fake ID Didn't Work... ( FULL PODCAST )

Episode Date: May 25, 2023

My Fake ID Didn't Work... ( FULL PODCAST ) ...

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Mr. Allen, I'm like, no. What's your name? I go, my name is, blah, blah, blah. You know, whatever I use. And he's like, you have ID? Yeah. He's like, oh, got it. Hey, this is Matt Cox.
Starting point is 00:00:19 Zach. And we are answering subscriber questions. So, this is it. Yep. Let's go. So what's the, what's a good question? question more and more questions for zach which it does hurt me a little bit i don't think it's that many right here it's a little i don't think it's that many right here in my heart it hurts
Starting point is 00:00:40 a little bit when i hear guys say you're awesome zach you're amazing you're right and then one guy was like you know oh and i love you too man well that sounds like um that was just like threw me in there that was that was pit that was pit out of pity uh all right pity so what's up oh um well is what's your favorite thing to eat who me yeah bacon I answered that guy bacon you answer that guy before yeah when I saw it because I I didn't realize right because we posted I posted that little I posted that comment what is it what is it the community comment I posted the community comment saying hey ask us questions and that came in right away as soon as I commented it or put the comment or put the notice up so I didn't think it was the same thing I answered and then I thought
Starting point is 00:01:30 oh wait I'm not supposed to be answering these but yeah I've said bacon oh like bacon bacon scallops or something like that I would eat bacon and scape or bacon wrap scallops oh my god scallop wrap I didn't really did that it's it's amazing they're amazing you know who used to have them um who used to have those they were great uh bonefish grill bonefish oh I got to try that I got to try that. I don't think they have them anymore. They'll make them for you. Because when I got out of prison and I went to Bonefish Grill for the first time,
Starting point is 00:02:04 and it was still, by the way, six, when I got out of custody, it was six months later before I actually went to a restaurant. And I didn't even pay for it. Somebody else paid for the meal. They were like, what do you want? I said, you know, you guys used to have this, but it's not on the menu. And the woman said, we'll make them for you. They made them.
Starting point is 00:02:22 They were awesome. They were amazing. What's the other question? and we got a ton of questions like I posted that last night late last night and by this morning we had like 40 questions this is ridiculous I know all right so um did you ever consider trying to have oh I didn't name my favorite my favorite thing to eat is a I'll say cereal specifically frosted rice Krispies did you ever watch friends yeah like asked Joey one time what's your favorite thing to eat and he goes sandwiches they're like what kind of sandwiches sandwiches any guy just sandwiches
Starting point is 00:03:02 that's what you say cereal yeah cocoa puffs or brand raisin brand it's a huge difference raisin puffs but all right so let's go all right um did you ever consider trying to have your fingerprints altered while on the run it's funny you say that because i i i don't know how much I looked into it, but somebody, you know, the problem with your fingerprints is that they grow, you know, from obviously they grow out. So the only thing you can really do to alter them is extreme scarring. Like you can put acid on them. And you could actually constantly put acid on your fingerprints and wear them down. And there's some kind of sulfuric acid or some kind of acid where you could do that all the time. But I mean, you know, in the end.
Starting point is 00:03:49 It's going to come back. Yeah. Look, if they got you. Yeah, they're going to wait eventually. And even at some point, they're just, they grab you and they think they know who you are. I mean, at some point. Well, you know, fingerprints are generally for murder or violent crimes. They don't do fingerprints mostly for, like, fraud. They'll go, see if you get these fingerprints off that check. You'd be like, a lot of people have touched that check. So here's the thing.
Starting point is 00:04:15 I know what you're saying. I had a scam that I ran one time in Orlando. Guy gets, so this is actually this. Chick Allison, one of my co-defendants, we actually had a scam. And so we ran a scam and it got caught halfway through. I don't want to go into the whole thing. But basically halfway through, they recognize,
Starting point is 00:04:38 they think that it's not her on her license. It is her. But they, for some reason, because she changed her hair, they think it's not her. So it sparked this huge investigation. They didn't give her the check. Well, that investigation ended up spilling over to another scam I was running in Orlando.
Starting point is 00:04:53 you know and you'd have to read like the book and everything so I had two different scams and so the FDLE came in first because it was multiple because the Florida Department of law enforcement is FDLE so they came in because it was all within Florida but it was multiple counties so one so you know Tampa PD can't be investigating something in you know in Jacksonville right so the FDLE he came in and one of the things he did was he actually he actually did dust everything that Allison had touched in order to see if he could get prints. And I didn't know that at the time. I ordered the Freedom of Information Act when I was in prison like five years later and read it. And when I read it, he actually had a whole thing where he had ordered the stuff and he got it back
Starting point is 00:05:48 and the crime lab came back and said that there were no prints found. And now, every time I sent somebody in, like with Allison, I sent her and we put super glue on her fingers. We just did like the tips of her, the first few tips of her fingers and the side of her hand. So I was like, look, you can put your hand down and you can sign something. But, you know, because we had the, we had, we basically had her hands. I don't know that I did every digit. I did every, the tips of every finger, thumb, and the base of her, anything we thought was going to touch. Right.
Starting point is 00:06:22 because she was a mortgage broker, and so she's, she's in the system. Like, she's got fingerprints are out there. Right. So, but I think what one of the things that guy might be thinking, too, is like, Matt, if you got grabbed, if they were looking for me and they grabbed me as somebody else and I have a real ID, they think I'm, they think I'm Michael Eckert. So they're putting me in as Michael Eckert. They may fingerprint me.
Starting point is 00:06:47 And find out that you're not Michael. Find out I'm not Michael Eckert. He's saying, what about altering? But the truth is you can tell that they're altered. Like if you alter them, typically it's only temporary. And if you scar them so that there are scars, there's like these little, I forget what they call them, the little round base points that they actually kind of pinpoint. You'd actually have to scar over every, it'd be difficult.
Starting point is 00:07:10 Yeah. I wouldn't think it's worth it. For the crimes, I just don't know how often they would do that. But it's interesting they did that and found no prints. They found no prints because they were I mean she I told me she had super glue over everything Oh that was Allison All of her everything she
Starting point is 00:07:27 They didn't find anything on her Because every She had we put super glue on every All in her hands before she walked in Listen bro I was trying to think of everything Right Was it super glue or Elmer's school glue? No I used super glue
Starting point is 00:07:40 It could have been Elmer's glue Would have been great Yeah because that makes like a little film And they don't really see it What super glue do you don't either Oh okay She put super glue or it was a clear gloss the super glue that not like the runny one but the and yeah we did it and the worst thing was that was
Starting point is 00:07:55 for the next three days you're picking off super glue from your fingers and it's hard to i don't know if you've ever had super glue on your hands if you if you put super glue on your fingers and you try and pick up anything it's super difficult yeah you're just so you're sliding your stuff over and having to pick it up on the it's got to look off of the of the of the desk makes sense um let me see i remember Travis went in one time we had put a bunch of he had super glue on some fingers and he we had wrapped up like two of his fingers were wrapped up and then we put like we put uh band-aids on a couple of his fingers like we were really like so and he was like yeah i fell i don't know i was riding my bike and i went over the thing and i hit the ground and i
Starting point is 00:08:41 he had a whole story behind why his hands were like right because we had gone in a couple times with super glue and didn't want to use it anymore he was like yeah i'm sick of this like i'll do three fingers and the rest of them we're going to put band-aids over because I'm picking super glue off for four days. All right, so my opinion of that is that that cause like they would have to need ballistics immediately.
Starting point is 00:09:02 Like what happened? Ballistics is for, you mean forensics? Forensics, thank you. Bullets. Yeah. I've never shown. All right, sorry. They would need forensics immediately because like people touch that. Yes. Because if a desk in a daytime if I sit here and I left and they ran
Starting point is 00:09:17 to fingerprints, I'm sure they'd be multiple people's Sprint to you. Especially in a title company, because that's all your title company or or inside of a bank is the only place you're going to be constantly touching things. So how many people are on a loan application, God knows how many people go through a loan application. Like you know, you touch it. The customer touches it. The loan officer touches it. The processor touches it. The underwriter touches it. The, whoever's, you know, putting together the file. Like there's just, who knows how many underwriters touch it actually. And it just goes, it gets touched over and over and over and over again. Right. But I, I, I, I, you know, I. hear you yeah but no that i never i mean i did think about it i just didn't think it was worth it plus i was so arrogant i thought they're never going to catch me don't need to go did you really think that you thought i really thought i was never going to get caught keep in mind the few times i'd been caught i've been caught by banks and lawyers and i'd always talked my way out of it i've been handcuffed taken out of the police station talk my way out of it i've been oh yeah in south carolina remember i got arrested in the handcuffed in uh wakobia bank he told me about that
Starting point is 00:10:19 brought downtown talk my way out of it so i mean by you got to think my confidence level on my ability to talk my way out of something is through the roof at that point you got hey i remember that story hopefully we cover that all right what's the biggest or weirdest thing you saw flushed down the toilet in prison i don't i mean i've i mean other than what drugs yeah well you know drugs i mean you've heard the story about um there was someplace in like i want to say arizona state prison or something that they killed some guy and they cut him up and flushed him down the toilet piece by piece by piece i've heard that story i don't know how true that is that that can't be too true what the the biggest thing i've seen is a guy that they beat up pretty bad when i got to the pen
Starting point is 00:11:07 and he had a bloody sheet and the guy goes flush it down the toilet he's like how am i going to look so what he did was he took the sheet and he flushed and just kind of funneled it yeah and and And he kept flushing. And he kept flushing. Got it all the way down there. Yeah, those toilets are something else. I know. Pretty powerful.
Starting point is 00:11:24 That was the weirdest thing I ever saw. But yeah, he slid that down there. I'm going to tell you the... Bro, we had such a vastly different experience in prison. Yes, we did. But the worst thing I saw flush down in the toilet was my MP3 and my headphones. By accident? By accident.
Starting point is 00:11:42 I had it clipped to my shirt, right? And listening to it at nighttime, you know. You know, and they give us the little tiny MP3 that you can clip on to certain items. So I had this clip to the collar of my shirt and I used the bathroom in the middle of the night and I have to lean over to put because there's a button you push the flush of toilet.
Starting point is 00:12:02 So I lean over to press the button and when I lean over to press the button, my MP3 falls off. Blip. It's like, and it goes down and it pulls the headphones right out of my ear because when I look, I'm like, and then a headphone and MP3.
Starting point is 00:12:17 down the toilet. I was, like a scene from a movie. I was sick. Like, I moaned so loud. My celly woke up. Like, what happened? I'm like, I just flushed my MP3. How much easier was your time with the MP3 player?
Starting point is 00:12:33 Oh, my goodness. That was like, that knocked like 20% of my sentence off. Yes. Having an MP3 player. Oh, going into the zone and disappearing from it. And you, hey, I'm listening to music, bro. Yeah. Oh.
Starting point is 00:12:45 It was almost like, like, when you went to commissary, and would get a little pint of ice cream. Yes. It was like a little taste of freedom. It was like five or ten minutes. You know that that ruined like, yes, eating it did was a little taste of freedom. But the fact that you had to eat it right then and there, like you couldn't eat it at a time that you want to. Unless you want to eat it.
Starting point is 00:13:05 Yeah. Yeah, going to the store at seven o'clock in the morning and having to eat ice cream, that that ruined pretty much a good day. Yeah. All right. So this guy says, I would be interested in hearing about pop. politics of pardoning and deal, why some people get pardoned and some don't. Politicians using crime criminals as face for pushing legislation, state and federally. And how do a lot of Wall Street guys get light sentences and other financial criminals get
Starting point is 00:13:36 longer sentences at federal level? My God, that's a hell of a question. Yes. That's an hour and a half, two-hour podcast right there with two people that know what they're talking about. Well, the answer to that really is much. money. All that is money. I agree. And prior record, the Wall Street guys have no prior conviction, so they get bond and they get money. And believe it. And they can hire lawyers that can
Starting point is 00:14:00 really, really tear apart a case. Yeah, and the sentencing guidelines. Like they can, like, the way the sentencing guidelines are written, they're extremely broad. Yes. Right. So take Conrad Black, for example. Conrad Black take the same charges and the same dollar amount for Conrad Black, and most people would have gotten 20 years. Conrad Black got a few years, right? I thought he had like 10, but he won in the Supreme Court. I know. That's what I'm saying.
Starting point is 00:14:29 He won. Could you have won that case? No. You don't have the lawyers. You can't pay a dream team of lawyers to fight the case. Now, here's the thing. So that charge with that dollar amount, with all the under the sentence and guidelines, and let's say he got, I think he got like 10 years.
Starting point is 00:14:47 I mean, it was, it was like, um, level, what was the highest level, 32? I don't know, but yeah, it was, it was, he got a huge sentence, right? So what you're saying? He initially, he initially got a huge sentence. But it got cut. He only did a few years. Yeah, right, because he won in the Supreme Court. Something that they adjusted, they legislated and, and I think they made something in the
Starting point is 00:15:08 sentencing guideline to apply to him, right? Okay, they forced it to apply. They forced like mail fraud, like, um, dishonest, services mail fraud to apply to him, which he didn't. So he beat that. They then said, look, you cannot charge this guy with this crime because he doesn't meet that criteria. And as a result, he got let out, right?
Starting point is 00:15:29 And they had to resentence him. When they resentenced him, he had to come back in for a few months, like three or four months, and then he left again. Oh, okay. Have you met him? You met Conrad Blatt? No. No.
Starting point is 00:15:39 I mean, I was like barely missed him by like a few weeks in the low. Him getting out the second time or the first time? the first time. Okay. Because he got out, then he had, I think, the first time. Then he came back, but he didn't come back to Coleman. He came back to another incident. He went to like Miami to the camp or something below for a few months.
Starting point is 00:16:02 But that's neither here and order there. The point is that, so he got a big sentence, but he ended up starting a little, very little time. Here's the thing. How many times prior to that had the federal government charged someone with the same crime, it didn't apply to, and every one of those people did all. of their time. So they did 10 years. They did five years that they shouldn't have until someone like Conrad Black comes along with a dream team of lawyers who can go all the way to Supreme Court and explain to the Supreme Court that basically my crime doesn't fit this criteria. I shouldn't
Starting point is 00:16:32 have been charged under this. Therefore, I should be released and resentenced. Right. So prior to that, for 20 years, people were being charged with that crime doing all their time and getting out because they don't have the money to fight it. Well, what about, um, what's his name, crap? I don't know with that one. With the prostitution where they sat and they videoed him coming out of that salon in South Florida, you don't remember about that? Well, he got charged with solicitation. The owner of the Patriots? Yeah, the owner of the Patriots.
Starting point is 00:17:04 No, I didn't hear that. You didn't hear about real quick, probably overview. He went into a massage parlor in South Florida, and they were watching that massage parlor. And when he came out, I guess they started recording the address or that his car would pull up and how long he was in there and he came out. So then they went in and they charged them with solicitation of like prostitution. Even though they don't know what happened in there. Kind of, I think they arrested the girls and they kind of twisted the girl's arms. Well, they took him to jail.
Starting point is 00:17:37 Well, then he hired some huge dollar lawyer who kind of came in and said, so tell me about your surveillance. They're like, well, we sat over here and we watched it for, you know, like five, six, six. hours or a whole day. And he's like, according to the law, if there's nothing going on, you can't just watch like innocent people doing innocent things. Right. You know what I'm saying? You have to have a suspicion of a crime. So if you watch them for an hour and a half, you got to stop. You know what I'm saying? So you weren't really suspicious of a crime. You're just going to sit like, I could watch you all day until you did something wrong and then arrest you. So they're like, you can't do that. So he brought into light the fact that,
Starting point is 00:18:17 it comes to surveillance, there's a limited time frame where they can actually sit and watch you do something innocent and turn that whole law around. He got that whole case thrown out based on that. Well, it would have been one of us, absolutely no way a lawyer would have argued at that point. No. No, what you have to think, too, like, so when you get arrested and so first of all, most people, they get arrested, the first thing they do, if it's any kind of money crime, they come in and they seize everything you have. Well, if you're Conrad Black or someone, they don't, if you're a Wall Street lawyer who's got $30 million and all these different assets, they don't seize anything. Like, typically they come in, they arrest you or they indict
Starting point is 00:18:54 you. They bring you downtown. They typically, like, they don't show up with guns drawn. They knock on your door with a bunch of guys. They say, hey, look, you're coming with us. They handcuffed you. They let you, like, they treat you way different. Yes. Because they know this is going to, there's going to be a lot of lawyers involved. This guy's got money. And we don't really have, we can't get a federal judge to sign off saying, we're going to seize 45 different accounts. We're going to sees all this proper like because the truth is we don't know how much of the fraud is covered in all of this and it'll look bad because we know it's going to get publicity we know the one thing we Zach and I agree most criminals will agree with is the one thing that government does not want
Starting point is 00:19:30 is press right so if you arrest some wall street guy with a bunch of money he can one fight you so now it's an even playing field it's not an even playing field with some fraudster who's stolen a million dollars and doesn't have anything in his name right or he's got some stuff his name but you're thinking we we kind of feel like it's from fraud so sees everything he has because he's not going to get a lot of press he's not we seize everything too we put him in a bad position he's going to have to get a public defender because that's what happened like with me you they come and grab me there's 700,000 in this account there's 400,000 here there's X amount of money all over the place there's a bunch of assets but guess what none of it's in
Starting point is 00:20:07 Cox's name so we can seize everything he has no choice but to go with a public defender and the the federal government it's really not in the federal government I think it's the Association. I'm sure some lawyer can correct me, but so, but I'm pretty sure the bar, there are, there's things called certified public certified trial attorneys. Right. Okay. So like less than three percent of lawyers are certified trial attorneys, which means that they've spent X amount of time actually in the courtroom. Right. All right. So that's one thing that that's a list that's out there by the bar. But there are other lists that are held by the U.S. attorney's office and insurance companies where they say how often has this attorney gone to
Starting point is 00:20:49 court trial so think about it they know they know that zach's an attorney he's a he's a federal public defender or he is a he's under the federal public defender program where he's put himself up there to be to represent criminals but we also know this about him yeah he's never gone to trial He's been trying cases. He's been taking cases for 15 years. He's never actually tried a case. So guess what? If Zach gets appointed that independent attorney under the federal defender program, so he gets
Starting point is 00:21:25 appointed that lawyer, Zach can't go to trial. He won't go to trial. He'll take any plea we offer him because his attorney might bitch and moan, but we know in the end his own attorney is going to convince him to take the plea because when we get to a point where we say that's the least we're going to offer him, we'll just go to trial. We know the attorney's going to turn to Zach and scare the hell out of him, man, you can't go to trial, brother, they're going to give you 30 years, you've got to take this plea, because he doesn't want to go to trial.
Starting point is 00:21:51 You know why? He's never been to trial. He doesn't really know how to do trial. He's terrified, and he's never done trial. He's not going to do trial. So he's going to convince his client to take a deal. So we're going to give him 10 years and he'll sign the 10 years because we know his lawyer can't go to trial.
Starting point is 00:22:04 He's terrified. Yep. And that's what happens. And that's what happens in law. Like, for instance, you. You get into a car accident, and your lawyer comes in and you go with this lawyer, and that lawyer goes to State Farm Insurance. State Farm's insurance adjusters go, who is this?
Starting point is 00:22:18 Oh, 30 years. Been to trial twice, lost both times. Hasn't been to trial in 15 years. He ain't going to trial. Then they go and they offer Zach $100,000 for what should be a million dollar settlement. Zach's own lawyer convinces him to take the $100,000. He should be a million, but he should be a million, the title they know right he's he's got poor representation well then that that informed infers that
Starting point is 00:22:47 the entire system is screwed up because because you're right no stop it I won't sit here and listen to you talk bad about the justice system in the United States you're right you're absolutely right yes that that's what that kind of infers because and then the fact that these lawyers just take money from insurance companies who jack up the rates of the people who have to have insurance You know how many times I've been in prison and met some guy who got seven or eight years for like $30 million, $50 million. What? Just a few years. And I'm sitting there going, I got hit with $6 million and I got 26 years.
Starting point is 00:23:30 How did you get seven years? Well, it was this crime or it was that or was that or I or went to trial on. six million dollars went to trial and lost and got like 12 years 12 years you went to trial and lost and got 12 years well i had very good lawyer and you're right you did have good lawyers right because i had a public defender who you know she did what she could i mean look in my case it's hard to in my case there wasn't a lot of wiggle room because i was so overwhelmingly guilty right but the other thing is the way they they the way they hit you up for like your dollar amount. Like my dollar amount is so ridiculous. Like they, I know a lot of guys that plead guilty
Starting point is 00:24:12 to dollar amounts that they, they truly feel like I pled guilty to $15 million, or $10 million, but I never saw $10 million. And then, you know, there's all these things that offset it. And that, and even though the U.S. Attorney Office knows, they always try and hit you for the full amount, which is just such a scumbag thing. So if you borrow half a million dollars, right, And on an asset that's worth 400,000. So if the bank, the bank's never going to lose more than 100,000, they have a house worth 400, they lent half a million. Right.
Starting point is 00:24:46 There's only $100,000 in what's in potential loss. Right. That house offsets the half a million. So the government will come in and say, we're going to hit you for, or we're charging you for half a million dollars. Isn't that that intended loss? It is, but you understand, like in my case, they first came out of the gate saying they were going to hit me over $25 million.
Starting point is 00:25:07 You know, damn, well, I didn't take $25 million. So it's up to your attorney to argue that down. But think about it, that U.S. attorney would have been perfectly happy to give some guy 30 years that he knows he maybe made half a million dollars. Yeah, but we've got numbers that say $25 million. So we're going to charge you with $25 million and your lawyer can argue it down. What if my lawyer says, yeah, that's the way it is? That's just how it is.
Starting point is 00:25:33 You, they hit you, it's 25 million. You're going to have to take the 30 years. Okay. So you plead guilty to 25 years or to 30 years. Think about that. Right. That's totally up to your lawyer because you're just some guy who commits fraud. You don't know that you could only really be charged for a million dollars.
Starting point is 00:25:49 True. Well, I mean, you say all that and my loss amount was 130,000 and I got 198 months. Your arrest record is outrageous. Yes. It's off the chart. Yes. You've never. You have like a learning disability when it comes to crime because like you can't seem to understand.
Starting point is 00:26:12 You have to stop this. You keep getting arrested and arrested and arrested. And all you're thinking is, well, these are learning experiences. No. These are chances. Unbelievable. Good point. But we'll talk about that in the next video.
Starting point is 00:26:32 But we've got another video. We're going to talk about arrests and how they went and how it happens and how you're treated and the process. So go ahead. Sorry. All right. It says ultimately what gets people caught, greed or complacency? Or is it extant factors, women, kids that hold people in one area that ultimately lead to their arrest? What do you think?
Starting point is 00:27:00 I think it's more complacency than greed. I, I, because the greed is what leads you to the pull off, what you're pulling off, and it, what puts everything together. And initially when you do it the first time, it's very, you're watching everything. And when it works, you're kind of like, okay, cool. So then you might go to second and third time and you kind of get complacent and forget to the, to cover certain items that are very important. Yeah, yeah, I definitely think you become emboldened by your success.
Starting point is 00:27:32 Right. That's part of it. Obviously, look, I think, I think part of it, it's the same thing. Part of it is driven by greed. You need the money or you want the money. Sometimes it's necessity. Sometimes you're just in such a horrible situation. You see a very clear path to making a bunch of money.
Starting point is 00:27:54 And, you know, so you take that, you know, you take that path. But I think, I think what happens is the more emboldened I got, I mean, the more crime I got away with, the more emboldened I got. Yes. Like, I did constantly think, fuck it, I can do this. You know, I can get away with this. I can do this. Yeah, I'll go in the bank.
Starting point is 00:28:13 You said earlier that you didn't think you would ever be arrested. Like, they're never going to catch me. Right. Absolutely. Because every time they caught me and I talked my way out of it, I thought, man, I'm good. I'm good. I know what I'm doing. Like, I'm good at this.
Starting point is 00:28:25 I'm, there's never going to happen. So it did. It kept getting, you know, my arrogance kept getting higher. and higher and higher and I'm not sure that makes sense but but I think also you know everybody always you know it's always like oh a woman a this or that okay well look you were going to get caught eventually like you can't say like is this like this one chick told on me and that's why I got or my buddy got you were going to get caught anyway eventually you're going to get caught how many law enforcement officers are there out there you know what I'm saying
Starting point is 00:28:59 and they're looking at you and they're looking for this and everybody Everybody's looking out for this. I mean, eventually, to think you could do this forever. I think the only way to do it is to do it, do it successfully, get away, and then just stop. And then you've got a chance. Yes. Yeah, I don't think it does the noise. This is, do you hear this?
Starting point is 00:29:19 I hear it, yeah. Can you hear it on the? It's tough to tell. It sounds to the range between here and what I'm hearing. You're right, right. Yeah. And I knew this eventually that was going to. That's why I got, I have to get into a big.
Starting point is 00:29:32 a bigger place, a house where I don't have neighbors. Or no Saturdays. You got to do it. Yeah. Well, the thing is, like, that's the dog. Like, that's the dog. That's a bone. Like, the dog will pick, when he gets hyper and he'll run around, he'll pick up the bone
Starting point is 00:29:47 and drop it, pick up the bone and drop it. And he's playing with the bone. So, but I don't think you hear it on the, on this. If anybody hears the bone dropping upstairs, the boom, boom. Let us know in the comments. All right. This one's for me. It says, much respect, brother.
Starting point is 00:30:02 My question is, have you ever considered becoming a pastor so that you can legally scam? The way you talk, you would be very believable and good at it. No. I've often thought of becoming like a motivated, a motivating, motivated speaker. Motivational speaker. Thank you. Wow. I know.
Starting point is 00:30:25 And my angel worked. And you worked for, he worked for. Antony Robbins. Oh, I was going to say Tony Robbins. Yeah, Tony Robbins. I think it's Anthony Tony I mean Anthony Robbins or Tony Robbins he actually worked for him for what 18 months yeah that's pretty good did you know that yeah but that's why I want to tell him to come one day when he has like two or three hours and can tell his whole story this is insane this was in the 90s when he had his um got fired from Anthony Robbins by Anthony Robbins and said when he was done he said when he was done firing him he said I felt really good like I was going to go on and be successful like It was the best firing I'd ever had. Like, that was motivating, huh?
Starting point is 00:31:06 I'm out of a job, but damn. I feel good. I feel like I do have a future. Not with him, though. No. Elsewhere. Yeah. Yeah, we'll have to do a whole video on that.
Starting point is 00:31:19 Oh, that's part of his whole story. That's part of his whole story. That's part of his story. Well, yeah, it was his train to trainer. When he was training people to train people. He had this whole. program going and I think I was like I in my opinion I was the token you know it's like back I think back in the late late 80s early 90s it's like hey get a black dude okay got one cool
Starting point is 00:31:44 we are integrated yeah what's the next one okay but no I never thought about becoming a pastor but I have thought about becoming a motivational speaker nice what's it like going into the bank now after you've been out of prison for defrauding them Having a B-O-A, a Bank of America account now would be hilarious. Yeah, so I can, let me, you can answer it first because obviously I've opened a Bank of America account. I didn't try them. Yeah, I did.
Starting point is 00:32:13 I tried to open a secured Bank of America account. I sent them the money and they sent me, no, I didn't send them money. Sorry. I applied and they just came back and said, not interested. Now, granted, I do owe them $2 million. I feel like they're holding resentment. It's like, get over it. It was like 20 years ago.
Starting point is 00:32:32 It was like, it was like 17. Oh, the FDIC gave you your money. Yeah, yeah. It was about 15 years ago. Right. That I, you know, so whatever. They're, they're just, you know, they're just, they're holding on to it. So one, they wouldn't even let me open a secure credit card.
Starting point is 00:32:47 I did go and open up a business account with them. So I opened up a business account and they shut it down like two weeks later. Right. I don't know what happened. They ran me through the system, everything. They were like, yeah, no problem. And I'd already been denied by it for the security. credit card and I thought, huh, okay. So, and I knew other guys that got denied for secure credit cards
Starting point is 00:33:09 with Bank of America. So I thought maybe they're just a little bit stricter. Anyway, I opened up a business account. Two weeks later, they mailed it back. They just said they closed it for no reason. But the first time I went into the bank, I was in a halfway house. Right. So I went into Wells Fargo and I opened a bank, a bank account. Wells Fargo had an agreement with the halfway house to allow people at the halfway house to open up accounts. So that was the account I got opened. But when I walked in there, I just remember thinking, you know, I walked in there like, oh, where are you staying?
Starting point is 00:33:40 I was like staying at the halfway house. I were like, oh, okay. You know, very polite, very professional. But I kept feeling like they're going to close the account. They're not going to give me an account. Right. But they did. They gave me an account.
Starting point is 00:33:51 I was like, and everything went through okay. She was like, yeah, yeah, everything was fine. Yeah, I was like, okay. So I've had that account. That account's been great. Wells Fargo was a good bank. I'm TD Ameritrade. I haven't, I haven't, I didn't, I didn't, I didn't start with them.
Starting point is 00:34:06 I started with Chase and Chase, Chase, Chase, I don't think it's going to be too bad on here, but. That's insane. It is. Chase closed my account afterwards, but I, why? They didn't, they don't tell you. They just say, we're closing your account. Yeah. And a month later, we'll send you your money.
Starting point is 00:34:26 But they, um, apparently they, oh, Chase must have some connection with, net spend because when I got out I didn't get a bank account I just went ahead and got a prepaid card with the Western Union netspin card and I was using that and then my brother said why don't you just get a real bank account so I went online and applied for Chase and they granted it and opened it and everything so then they closed it so I didn't know what it happened I figured I was in NCIC so then I went to another bank TD Bank and I've been there ever since I love it you know so yeah no problem secure cards and all you know it's you know it's funny I I feel the same way about every time I've gotten on a plane.
Starting point is 00:35:04 Well, not every time. The first time I went to fly, I just remember thinking, they're never going to let me on the plane. Like, you know, I have passport fraud. I had a red notice on Interpol. Like I was on like a no-fly list. Like there was all these things that they were looking for Matthew Cox. Now, granted, it was 15 years ago. But I was thinking, there's just no way.
Starting point is 00:35:24 They're going to run my name. I'm not getting on. But I've never had a problem. We'll really know when I have to fly when I go to Europe. I'm going to Europe in a couple weeks. So when I go to Europe, I'll be run through the system. Like, then I'm going to know. Especially coming back.
Starting point is 00:35:41 Into the U.S.? Yes. Yeah, like leaving, you're right. Leaving might be not be an issue. Coming in might be. I don't know. We'll see. I mean, I almost want to get pulled aside and questioned.
Starting point is 00:35:51 I want to be able to go, but I'd almost be comical. Like, what a great story that would be. Mr. Cox, we'd like talk to you over here. Awesome. What's up? No, they, they, I can tell you from experience of the couple of people who I know that came back in the country and got picked up, like, so when you walk out of the terminal, it would be two people and they'll be like, Mr. Cox, can you, can you follow us, please? Oh, you're not going to go through. It's not going to be at passport control.
Starting point is 00:36:16 Yeah, no. You're going to, you're going to, you're going to come off the plane and they're going to be like, excuse me, Mr. Cox. You're like, yeah? I'm going to be like, no, I'm going to be like, who? Mr. Cox, can you follow us, please? I'm so sorry. You must have me confused. Okay.
Starting point is 00:36:33 I'll pull up my another fake ID. My name's Johnson. You know, that's part of my arrest and feds. Oh, I know, I know. They asked me, I go, no, my name is such as such. They're like, oh. Now we've got you for identity theft, too. That was an extra two.
Starting point is 00:36:49 Did you just gave me a fake idea? That was an extra two years. Aggravated identity theft. Nice. That's exactly what he did. It's like, I go, Mr. Allen, I'm like, no. What's your name?
Starting point is 00:37:00 I go, my name is, you know, whatever I use. And he's like, you have ID? Yeah. He's like, oh, got it. Two extra years. Yeah, let's go. Good try, buddy. All right.
Starting point is 00:37:20 Did you ever fight a guard or see a guard fought? Interesting story of someone attacking a guard. Okay, first of all, anybody walks? watching this it's embarrassing that someone would even ask this right like do either one of us are going to fight a guard yeah not fighting a guard that you can't you don't win fighting a guard no no if you even if you got a took even if you got the best got the best of them which i'm not getting the best of anybody so if i got the best of them i mean you're going to get the piss beat out of you when they back in the back when they grab you and catch you know people they come in oh no i don't do
Starting point is 00:37:57 that the hell they don't they'll beat your ass like you can't believe and then they'll keep you into the shoe until you heal and then they'll let you see the doctor see we told you nothing was wrong with them that was two months ago it's all better now yes but yes have you seen a guard get beat up or attack yeah i've seen a bunch of guards get to fights at the low i saw i i didn't see this there was actually one time a punk that The guard tried to grab the punk. He yanked, the punk yanked away. Don't you touch me?
Starting point is 00:38:33 And ran. Really? Really? He ran into the bathroom, into the, went into the toilet stall and closed the door. Well, the guard caught up and realized, okay, he's in there. Goes in and kicks open the door and the punk attacked him. He fell on the ground and he was beating on him. The punk is screaming while he's fighting with the guard.
Starting point is 00:38:56 the guard is screaming like help help I mean it was a whole thing like it was hilarious bro the guard had a black eye like he came back like two days later he came back that we never sold a punk again so I saw that I'm sorry I heard that um I've seen guards beat up inmates and they fight back it's just not a great no not a great fight with a guard um but uh yeah I think that's that's pretty much it um well i've i've seen um a couple of guards fights like you have probably my my favorite one was a guy was an old man about 65 or something and the guard was saying hey like he came back and came back in from we were coming back in from um chow from eating and the guards at the door said hey let me pat you down and he's like no and he starts walking faster because
Starting point is 00:39:54 like when you're coming up the walkway you make a right to go into your unit so he's coming up the walkway and the guard as he's turning to go in the guard's like hey let me patch you down so the guy like he has to hear him he goes hey he calls him by name and everything he's hey smith let me check you and he kept walking he started walking faster so i'm like about four steps behind him so i'm watching and hearing this and then i see the guard going after him so the guy's moving real fast to a cell so he gets to a cell and the guard goes in and the next thing you see is the door explode open and these two are like fighting a 65 year old man so they're swinging like the like the 65 year old man swinging so he gets the 65 year old man it sounded like that wow
Starting point is 00:40:36 yeah as soon as this is over i'm gonna make it call it's he sounded he got the 65 year old man in the headlock right somehow the 65 year old man gets out of the head log and gets the guard in the headlock it's like they exchanged wrestling positions like the whole unit is It's like awestruck as this is going on. It's about 15 minutes of them fighting, rolling up, swinging, headlock, headlock. And the guard didn't hit the button? You know, all of them so most people don't realize. Matter of fact, eventually, the guy got the old man in handcuffs.
Starting point is 00:41:09 Like after like 15 minutes, you're like you're watching this like, it's going on for it's like about a 20 minute fight. 20 minutes before the guard next door because it's two guards, it's two units. So he goes in after the guy. It's 20 minutes before the guard next door comes in to help him. But he's got him in handcuffs. So what happens is all the guards have, they all have a radio. On the radio, there's like a red button. Yes.
Starting point is 00:41:37 And they can hit the panic button. If they hit the panic button. You call them the deucees. Yeah, the deuce. They hit the deuce. So they hit the deucees, all the guards come running on that. They converge on that location. You could always tell because, I mean, immediately they start screaming over the PA system, you know,
Starting point is 00:41:53 lockdown lockdown you know so and then all the guards start running to that one person that one guard's location i mean and listen there some of the guards are there in 20 seconds 30 seconds yeah exactly ready for action right there was a female guard that used to run to all uh when i was in the penitentiary there was a white female lady we think she was crazy she would not only if there was a fight she'd run in and she tackled dudes like if you and i a fighter were standing up she'd actually tackle me like like she had some kind of aggression where I guess she loved that type of physical play and so she was she was on it right like hey I get to get all this out all this aggression out leave there like sex me sex me all right so yes I've seen many guards in in action
Starting point is 00:42:41 and fighting what's what's another one okay another one um Matt I remember you said your one-time friend got caught up in Orlando and snitched on you Just curious if you ever had any adventures back in the day in central Florida like Orlando, Seminole County, Volusia County, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, or any people that you're associated with that were from out there that had anything significant to your hustle back in the day. I probably shouldn't have circle that one. Yeah, I don't. That seems. I mean, I know that I mean, obviously I've got, um, I've committed fraud in, in like, like Hillsboro, Pinellas. Did you go to Polk County?
Starting point is 00:43:24 What county is Orlando? Orange County. I was in Orange County. I was in Orlando. It's orange and it's one more. Done stuff in Jacksonville. And where's Tallahassee? Tallahassee is Seminole. Is it Seminoleian County? I don't know.
Starting point is 00:43:42 Marion is Orlando. Jackson. Tallahassee is a, it's not Bay County. I think Bay is Fort Myers, Fort Walden Beach. Tallahassee is, I want to say Seminole, but I'm probably fine. It doesn't matter. And the point is that, you know, so I mean, yeah, I've got a bunch of different counties in Florida that I've done fraud and real estate fraud. The bulk of that fraud was real estate fraud.
Starting point is 00:44:09 I mean, but I'm not even sure what the rest of the question means. Like, have I, like, are there people in those counties that, no, there's nobody that was in the counties. Like, I went to the county because I was trying. trying to, I was trying not to consolidate my, the bulk of my fraud in just Hillsborough County. So obviously I was traveling to different counties hoping to kind of, and by the way, that's an enhancement, changing jurisdiction to evade detection. Yes. Like to me, that's just what you do.
Starting point is 00:44:36 You know, but apparently that's an enhancement. You could get an extra few years for that, which I did. So, yeah. So that was, that's why, that's why initially my entire charge or my case started with the FDLE because there were so many different counties involved that they had to put together a task force to investigate. Once they had investigated the task force and they had all the information, they were like, okay, well, this is, he's borrowing money from banks all over the country in these different counties, in different, you know, it's too complicated of a case for the local police to look
Starting point is 00:45:12 into. So that's when they handed it over to the FBI. That was my first case. That's not true. That was my second case. That's your second case. Sorry, but go ahead. All right. Are you able to disappear or erase your tracks right now? Is there someone that makes that service Breaking Bad style? I mean, in Breaking Bad, don't they have like some seedy underworld guy that can turn these guys into like ghosts?
Starting point is 00:45:37 Like they can eliminate everything on the, there's not really that I know of a person that can do that. There's, there are sites called, that site called, um, reputation. Reputation.com. So Reputation.com they actually, what they do is they don't eliminate things on the internet about you, but they'll post
Starting point is 00:46:01 so many things with your name in it and your basic information on you in it that they push any derogatory information down like 15 or 20 pages. So if somebody's looking for you and they're looking for your charge.
Starting point is 00:46:18 Right. And there's multiple blogs and different types of, different types of websites that you're mentioned on. Every time, somebody's not going to go 15 pages. There's 20 per page, 15 pages. They're not going to look through 300 different, you know, different information, whatever you call it, things that came up to try and find your arrest.
Starting point is 00:46:42 So they're going to click on the first one. It's like, okay, well, this is some blog from, five years or two years ago about this guy that they met and blah blah blah blah that's an interesting service then they go to the next one it's called like it's called like um reputation dot com I think oh they go to the next one they go to the next one and then oh this is a little like you can pay more and more like oh this is an article that mentions him in it and you know stupid stuff but they flood the whole internet with that and they push all your bad stuff down I know this because there's a a bunch of fraudsters and con men in prison and all of them were like I'm going to
Starting point is 00:47:16 that i'm gonna they're all trying to cover up everything you know they want to get rid of their charges and change their name and do this and do that i'm gonna go to reputation dot com and have them built that way they will bury anything that came out on me that was in the newspaper and you know so there's that service the more you pay the more stuff they can flood it with and oh that's what so they they actually do the opposite of erasing they just kind of overwhelm which is right because you can't get you can't get you can't get rid of it like you can't go like if there's something on my website and your names on it you can't get rid of that there's just no way somebody has to hack into the website and get rid of this like you can't go into
Starting point is 00:47:54 this server and that that's populated on numerous servers like so there's just no way so what they do instead is they just overwhelm them and they're like okay wow this 20 pages on this guy right and think about it like this too like for instance um i have i had a friend that i had signed that she signed up for um to become a a Wikipedia, oh, God, it's a Wikipedia reporter. Because people think like Wikipedia is like 100% like legit. Like, oh, yeah, it's all vetted and it's this and that. And it's really not.
Starting point is 00:48:28 Well, it's an encyclopedia online. See, you're thinking the same thing. You're thinking, no, no, it is. No, it's not. It's independent. So they have a small staff of people that do a little bit of vetting. But the bulk of Wikipedia is written by independent Wikipedia reporters. And so what happens is you could sign up and say,
Starting point is 00:48:46 hey here's why I want to be a reporter with Wikipedia because I've done this and I used to write for my my college newspaper and I this and you can put a little bio together which can be complete BS. Right. And then you then go on several different Wikipedia pages and you can, you know, you can change it on Wikipedia. You can go in and say, hey, guess what? That guy did get 26 years but he was recently released. Right. And then they'll, and you put a link and if they check it, they go, hey, that was good information. We're adding what you want. wanted, and we like that. Right.
Starting point is 00:49:18 So if you can change, let's say you change five or ten different Wikipedia pages and they see that you're credible, they'll now make you an official Wikipedia reporter and you can write Wikipedia pages. So you can start putting up Wikipedia pages. I could write a whole Wikipedia page about you. And so now I've written a whole thing and then they'll vet it. Well, where did you get this? Oh, you got this from this newspaper article.
Starting point is 00:49:40 Oh, you got this from this book about him. Oh, you got this. And they'll kind of look there and they'll go, you know what? that is this is a good good one and they'll post it so what I'm saying is a lot of that can be done they have Wikipedia they have Wikipedia and then they have Wikipedia people right so you can start you could actually sign up and to imagine what you can do with that once you do that other there are other websites that will go in and take that information and create their own right does that make sense yes so more and more so it comes up more and more and more on you
Starting point is 00:50:15 Like, you can almost do it yourself. You could also write a small article about yourself and post it on multiple blogs. Like, you can start forcing stuff down on you because this is more recent stuff. And if you look at it a lot from different IP addresses, it populates higher, too. So it pushes everything down. I like that, though. That's a smart comment. That's really basically all the good questions.
Starting point is 00:50:37 What's there one about? There was one about, so there was one question. I know some guy had asked about, like, what crime? Are there any crimes that you came up with in prison? I think that was the last one. Remember, I told you, I used to walk when I got a... No, that was the other podcast I did that on. No, that's not on this one.
Starting point is 00:51:01 Well, there was one guy, I remember I read one question where it's like, are there any crimes that you came up with while you were incarcerated? And I know, because I know I read that one, and I was like, you know what? we should do we can do a whole i could do a whole podcast on that because it'd be it'd be kind of like the tax the drop the tax scam right and just how because you had done the tax scam and we were going to talk about how it's kind of dried up and why it's dried up and then how it could how it's
Starting point is 00:51:30 evolved and different versions of it that i saw while i was incarcerated right and then you know different ways that it's slowly evolving and anyway so that's like a whole podcast on it's on its own and we're actually going to do a podcast on that and it may be after this podcast i don't know that's up to Colby. But anyway, it'll be something about the tax scam or something about, it'll be called something about tax scams or income tax scams or something. I don't know, it'll be titled something tax scams. So we'll check that out next time and are we good?
Starting point is 00:52:02 Okay, so that's it. All right. So this is, my name is Matt Cox and that's Zach. And we just did the podcast. And so if you like the podcast, hit the subscribe button, hit the bell, share the video. Can you imagine? See, you'll be doing this soon. Share the video, send it to a bunch of your friends, buy a book, buy a t-shirt. You know what's going on, man.
Starting point is 00:52:26 All right. See you.

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