Scamfluencers - ENCORE: Sandy Jenkins: Have Your Cake And Steal It, Too | 195

Episode Date: January 5, 2026

We’ll be back in two weeks with a brand new episode. In the meantime, here’s one of our favorites: an unlikely scam baked up in a small Texas town. Sandy Jenkins moves to the gossipy..., small town of Corsicana, Texas to work in its world-famous fruitcake factory. Desperate to keep up with his cliquey neighbors, Sandy starts cutting himself checks to pay for jewelry, cars, a second home and private jet trips. But this half-baked scheme starts to crumble when a new employee takes a closer look at how Sandy cooks the books.Be the first to know about Wondery’s newest podcasts, curated recommendations, and more! Sign up now at https://wondery.fm/wonderynewsletterListen to Scamfluencers on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen early and ad-free on Wondery+. Join Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts or Spotify. Start your free trial by visiting wondery.com/links/scamfluencers/ now.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey there, Scamfulencers fans. Want to be the first to know how these wild scams unfold. Join us on Patreon to get early access to episodes, add free listening, and exclusive content that reveals even more of the drama. Just search for scamfluencers on Patreon and dive deeper into the scandal. We'll be back in two weeks with all new episodes of scampluencers. But since we're in the holiday season and fruitcake seems to be everywhere, we thought it was the perfect time to revisit one of our most unforgettable confectionery capers. Sachi, do you remember our episode on Sandy Jenkins, the accountant who turned a Texas fruitcake empire into his personal piggy bank? Oh, yes. Sandy was the bookkeeper at the Collins Street Bakery in Corsicana, Texas.
Starting point is 00:00:45 But behind the scenes, he was quietly siphoning off millions of dollars to fund a luxury lifestyle. Think private jets, expensive wine, and designer everything, all so that he could keep up appearances with his small Texas town. Well, since that first episode aired, the bakery has finally spoken and shared their side of the story, along with how they've rebuilt their operations and how the scandal has reshaped their company culture.
Starting point is 00:01:10 Thomas McNutt, Collins Street Bakery's executive vice president, calls the company the ultimate comeback kid. Big words for a fruit cake company. Yeah, you know what? Nevertheless, they persisted. Also, a feature film based on the scandal called Fruitcake was announced last year,
Starting point is 00:01:29 starring Jennifer Gardner and Paul Walter Houser. So with Sandy Jenkins back in the conversation, we thought it was the perfect time to revisit the story. So enjoy the encore, ideally with a slice of fruitcake. Sachi, I am so curious. What is the craziest thing you've done to fit in? Honestly, I probably just let people say my name.
Starting point is 00:01:56 name wrong a lot. Other than that, it wasn't really going to happen for me, so I didn't do a lot. Thank you for your answer, Scotchy. When I was a kid, my sister worked at Walmart. She's about 10 years older than me. And I lied, and I said I could get everyone free Pokemon cards. Obviously, I did not do that. That's a perfectly good lie. Yeah. I mean, in retrospect, it was embarrassing, but I was a kid. And today's story is all about a very unremarkable. and unpopular guy who wants to be the big dog of his small town so badly
Starting point is 00:02:31 he almost convincingly scammed his way to the top. It's a July morning in 2013 and it's already a scorcher in Corsicana, Texas, a small town about 50 miles south of Dallas. Jim Polk is mowing his lawn. He probably pauses to wave to a neighbor
Starting point is 00:02:51 grabbing his paper and says howdy to a young couple walking their dog. Everyone here seems to know each other, which means gossip is the town's unofficial currency. People here are known to pass judgment if someone doesn't have plastic surgery or wear designer shoes. Sachi, do you want to read how one resident
Starting point is 00:03:09 described Corsicana to Texas Monthly? Why, yes, I would. They said, The Housewives of Beverly Hills, we'd blow that shit out of the water. Okay, I need Andy Cohen and four cameras. Yeah, I do feel like this would be an amazing housewives town.
Starting point is 00:03:24 And the rumor mill is about to be sent into overdrive because as Jim mows his lawn, a parade of gray cars race down his block and screech to a stop in front of the house across the street. Jim stops mowing and watches in shock as FBI agents swarm his neighbor's home. The house belongs to Sandy and Kay Jenkins. They're both in their 60s with short gray hair.
Starting point is 00:03:48 Sandy is a quiet and well-dressed accountant. His wife Kay is outgoing and warm. She used to own a catering business, but she put it aside a few years ago right around the time they came into money. A lot of money. Jim knows this because they haven't exactly been shy about it. For the past few years, he's watched Sandy bring a new luxury car home seemingly every week, and he's noticed that Kay's always carrying around a fancy handbag and wearing expensive jewelry.
Starting point is 00:04:16 Jim also knows they own a second home in Santa Fe and that they travel there by private jet. But the source of Sandy and Kay's newfound wealth has been a total mystery. I imagine the source of their wealth has been an ongoing discussion in Corsicana. Yes. And now everyone can't stop talking about this raid. Before Jim knows it, the whole neighborhood is out on the street watching the scene in front of the Jenkins's house unfold. The police arrive to help out the FBI and a newspaper reporter starts asking questions. Jim cranes his neck to see over the car.
Starting point is 00:04:51 crowd. A tow truck arrives to haul away the couple's Mercedes and Lexus. Several agents emerged from the house, carrying boxes of crystal and silver, and almost a dozen paintings. They've also got not one, but two Louis Vuitton steamer trunks. Jim and the rest of Corsicana immediately start speculating about what kind of trouble Sandy and Kay are in. Sandy lost his job about a month earlier, now Jim and his neighbors are wondering, could the raid have had something to do with that? But when the neighbors read the local paper, the Corsicana Daily Sun, they're completely rattled. Sandy is in much bigger trouble than any of them imagined. Turns out, he's stolen millions from Corsicana's most beloved establishment, the Fruitcake Factory.
Starting point is 00:05:47 From Wondery, I'm Sarah Haggy, and I'm Sachi Cole. And this is scamphalancers. Come and give me your attention, I won't ever learn my lesson, turn my speakers to 11, I feel like a legend. This is a story that can only happen in small town USA, a place where keeping up with the Joneses can turn into an obsession. Sandy Jenkins was a hardworking family man who wanted the respect of his neighbors. But the only way to rise up in his status-obsessed town was to be a job.
Starting point is 00:06:17 to get rich or die trying. Much like a fruitcake, this tail has a little bit of everything, gossipy neighbors, family dynasties, and joyrides set to Barbara Streisand. It also reminds us that everything's bigger in Texas, even the fraud. I'm calling this one, have your cake and steal it too.
Starting point is 00:06:41 To understand how a place like Corsicana could stir up a multi-million dollar fruitcake scam, let's take a trip back, to more than a century ago. The year is 1894, and Corsicana's growing fast, so fast that there's not enough water for everyone. So the local utility company starts drilling well. But instead of water, they find oil, lots of it. It kicks off Texas's first ever oil boom.
Starting point is 00:07:11 Corsicana transforms into a land of opportunity, attracting dreamers and schemers from all. all over the world. One of these dreamers is a baker from Germany. He opens a store on Collins Street and names it Colin Street Bakery. Soon, all the fine folks in Corsicana are salivating over the delicious breads and pastries. But there's one treat that stands out, the deluxe fruitcake. It's got bits of papaya, pineapple, cherry, raisins, and pecan all baked into it.
Starting point is 00:07:43 And since fruitcake keeps for a long time, people passing through on the rail line can take it home with them and share it with friends and family. Soon, word spreads far and wide. Collins Street Bakery starts getting letters from out-of-towners asking to buy cake by mail. Even John Ringling of the Ringling Brothers Circus wants to get his hands on some deluxe fruit cake. So, in 1914, the bakery owners starts shipping cakes. This turns Collins Street into one of the very first mail-order businesses in the good old US of A, and the whole cake-by-mail thing becomes a massive hit. That is so much energy for fruitcake, which I don't think is very good.
Starting point is 00:08:26 I mean, it was the past. There wasn't that much to look forward to. Yeah, they didn't have a lot going on. Well, several decades later, in 1946, Collins Street Bakery is bought by a local family, the McNuts. And that's when the business really takes off. In their first decade of ownership, the McNutts grow fruit. fruitcake sales from $100,000 a year to over half a million dollars. Customers include Frank Sinatra, Estee Lauder, and the Queen of Spain.
Starting point is 00:08:56 The business is passed down from generation to generation. By the 1980s, Collins Street is pumping out 30,000 fruit cakes a day during peak season and shipping them to every state and nearly every country. The McNuts are one of the most respected families in town. They're at the top of the social ladder, but all that was. wealth and status makes them a target. And if the McNuts aren't careful, their fruitcake empire could crumble from within. It's 1988, and Sandy Jenkins is toiling away at his desk. He's an accounting clerk who works for a utility company in Fairfield, Texas. It's a rural
Starting point is 00:09:38 town with more livestock than people. Sandy has a loving wife and a young daughter, but he's pushing 40 and working a nine-to-five. He's tired of his ordinary middle-class life. He wants a change of pace, and he wants to live in luxury. Sandy's been fascinated by jewels, expensive watches, and designer couture ever since he was a kid. But his parents were working class. He probably couldn't see a path to the finer things in life. That is, until he took a trip to visit a funeral home owned by a distant relative. What he saw there took his breath away. The lavish interior, the crisp suits and shiny black cars. This was a life he'd always imagined for himself. Immediately, he knew what he wanted to be, a funeral home director.
Starting point is 00:10:29 You know what? Someone has to do it. I'm glad it's someone who sees it as glamorous and not a societal duty. Yes. But Sandy's parents didn't approve of his dream. They wanted him to pick a more mainstream career. So he went to college. That's where he met Kay. He got a degree in business administration, and he got married shortly after. He got a sensible job, but started to feel stuck. So now, when his company announces it's relocating to Dallas, Sandy sees it as an opportunity. He decides to move his family a little closer to the big city, to Corsicana. After they arrive, Sandy and Kay buy a historic home with Greek columns and a wrap-around. porch. Then they start trying to climb the social ladder. Sandy's dying for an invite to a
Starting point is 00:11:17 supper club. Sachi, do you know what supper clubs are? I don't even like the word supper. Makes me think of someone who drinks milk with pasta. But no, I don't know what a supper club is and I'm a little worried about what you're going to tell me. Okay, so I'd also never heard of them before, but apparently they're popular in the South. It's when a private group gathers in a restaurant, rented venue or someone's home for a meal. There's usually a theme and a curated menu. It's just an excuse to get together and congratulate themselves for being friends. And knowing what we know about Corsicana, gossip like crazy.
Starting point is 00:11:52 Sandy would settle for an invite to the local wine society, and Kay would like to join a book club. But invitations don't grow on trees. They're only extended to respected, active members of the community. So Sandy and Kay get involved around town. They both join the church and Sandy becomes a deacon. Meanwhile, Kay opens a catering business. Over the next few years, the couple starts to make a name for themselves.
Starting point is 00:12:18 They even win Yard of the Month a few times. But despite all their striving, or maybe because of it, the inner circle of Corsicana socialites aren't interested in welcoming Sandy and Kay into the fold. Sandy's too shy to carry on a conversation, and Kay doesn't wear the latest fashions, and she hasn't had to be. any cosmetic work done. That's all the reason people might need to shun her from the Quintillion Corsicana's oldest and most prestigious book club. This is a wonderful reason to never speak to your neighbors, which I have always advocated. Just don't get to know them, and then they can't reject you.
Starting point is 00:12:55 I agree. Then in 1995, Sandy gets laid off. Finding new work isn't easy. He and Kay have to rely on donations from their church to help them through these hard times. But about three years later, Sandy gets a huge break. He lands a job as a payroll supervisor at Collins Street Bakery. Now that he's getting a second chance, he's hell-bent on reaching the top, no matter the cost. It's late 2004, and Sandy's been working at Collins Street Bakery for about six years now. He makes a modest salary, but he's managed to cobble together a life close enough to his dream. He has a Rolex watch, he drives Alexis, and he's Sips his coffee from Fine China every morning.
Starting point is 00:13:40 But he's still light years away from the fabulous wealth and social acceptance he's always craved. Sandy's struggling to fit in, and he can't figure out why. He's a hard worker and good at his job. A few years ago, he even helped the company digitize their accounting system. It was enough to get him a promotion to corporate controller, but not enough to make friends. He tries to be extra friendly to his coworkers, complimenting them when he notices they've gotten a haircut or a new. outfit, and he always seemed to give him a friendly response, but he senses that it's only out of polite obligation.
Starting point is 00:14:15 Sandy feels invisible, and that feeling is only made worse when he walks by the office of the new CEO Bob McNutt. Bob's in his 40s. He's tall and balding and built like a Halloween skeleton. He recently took over the business from his dad, becoming the third-generation McNutt to lead the bakery. I really think they missed an opportunity to name the bakery after themselves
Starting point is 00:14:41 McNutt Bakery. The branding does itself. Well, you know how they say money talks but wealth whispers? Well, Bob's wealth is a whisperin. Even though the business brings in $35 million in fruitcake sales alone, Bob doesn't flaunt his fortune.
Starting point is 00:14:58 He doesn't brag about giving to charity or flying on private jets. When he does talk about his world travels, He brings it all back to the bakery. He captivates his employees with tales of his visit to Costa Rica, where the bakery's pineapples are grown. Everyone adores Bob, except for Sandy. Watching his coworkers hang on to Bob's every word
Starting point is 00:15:21 makes Sandy seethed with jealousy. One December day, Sandy's sitting at work, feeling the financial crush of the holidays. He's at his breaking point and in his mind, not being paid enough for all the work he does for the bakery. So he decides it's time to take control of his destiny. He opens a desk drawer and zeroes in on a box of petty cash. He glances around and when he's sure no one's looking, grabs a wad of money.
Starting point is 00:15:52 Every day after that, he expects someone to walk into his office and ask why there's cash missing. But no one ever does. A light bulb goes off in Sandy's. head. Finally, he knows how to afford the fancier car he's been dreaming of. So, a few weeks after he stole the bakery's cash, Sandy drives his car to a Lexus dealership in Dallas. He trades in his old model for a used, but new to him, gold sedan. He can't afford the payments, but he's got a plan, and a new lease on life. He peels out of the dealership and rockets down Interstate 45. He finally has his dream car, and it's on Bob McNutt's dime.
Starting point is 00:16:36 Sandy rolls down the windows and blasts Barbara Streisand. After today, no one's going to rain on his parade. When Sandy gets home with his new car, he tells Kay it was a gift from a client he's been doing some freelance work for. Kay doesn't question him. Sandy's wanted to upgrade his Lexus for so long. When the bill comes a few weeks later, he kicks his plan into action. Sandy has unrestricted access to the bakery's electronic checkbook system. So he sits in front of his computer and types up a check for $20,000.
Starting point is 00:17:15 He makes it out to Citibank where he has his personal credit card. He hits enter and the software automatically cuts a check endorsed with Bob's signature. Then Sandy prints out and mails it to his credit card company. Collin Street Bakery has just paid for his Lexus. Sandy then goes back into the accounting program and covers his tracks. He clicks void and the check disappears. The only record of it is in the voided check folder and no one is going to go looking there.
Starting point is 00:17:46 I have had corporate cards before and I have lived in such fear of misappropriating funds and then I hear stories like this and I'm like, I should have bought a car. You should have gone to more expensive restaurants. I can tell you that now. Yeah, that's for sure. Well, at this point, Sandy's hidden the check, but he knows Citibank is still going to cash it. He's got to make it look like a legit business expense.
Starting point is 00:18:08 So he types up another check for $20,000 the same amount of money he spent on his credit card bill. He makes this checkout to one of the bakery's vendors, like, say, their raisin supplier. Except Sandy doesn't print or mail this check. He just saves it in the system. Now, if someone were to inspect the report, It would look like Sandy accidentally wrote a check to Citibank, but voided it and made a new one out to a vendor.
Starting point is 00:18:36 That's kind of clever. Yes, and of course, Sandy runs a risk of someone noticing that the Citibank check is the one that cleared. But nobody's looking at the accounts that closely. Everyone trusts Sandy. Still, he lays low for a while. And once he realizes that no one has noticed the money go missing, he goes hog wild. He repeats a scam over and over again. In the first year alone, he cuts more than $2 million in fraudulent checks.
Starting point is 00:19:07 Sandy found his very own cheat code to the life of his dreams. But the money itself isn't enough. Sandy wants a spot at the top of the social pyramid. And he's going to get there by making all of Corsicana believe he's as rich as Bob McNutt. Now I feel like a legend. Now that Sandy can finally afford just about everything he's ever wanted, he starts making up for lost time. He puts almost $100,000 on his credit cards every month
Starting point is 00:19:46 and pays it all off with company funds. He buys Armani clothes and Gucci shoes. He's such a regular at Neiman Marcus that he has a personal shopper there. She calls him Fruitcase. And Sandy can never have enough Rolexes. In 2006, about two years after he cut himself that first check, he buys five Rolexes in one day. And every few months, he brings home a new BMW or Mercedes-Benz.
Starting point is 00:20:14 I do not find these kinds of displays of wealth interesting or compelling, but I bet it played really well in Corsicana. Yeah, it definitely attracts attention. And Sandy tells Kay that all this money is from freelance work. He's not sure if Kay buys this cover, but she doesn't ask too many questions. She loves being spoiled, and Sandy loves to spoil her. He buys her tons of new kitchenware from William Sonoma, and he buys so much jewelry from a store in Dallas
Starting point is 00:20:45 that they drive samples over to him with armed guards so he can shop on his lunch breaks. He also pays for upgrades to their award-winning yard, building a greenhouse and a vegetable garden. Sandy and Kay are making themselves impossible to ignore. They host elaborate dinner parties with themes like burgers and Bordeaux, where they show off their newly renovated kitchen and serve plates of veal and expensive bottles of wine. They also buy an adobe home in Santa Fe
Starting point is 00:21:14 and invite their friends to visit via charter jet. And when they're not in Santa Fe, Sandy and Kay spend millions flying private to Martha's Vineyard, Napa and Aspen almost every weekend. Sandy tells everyone that the plane belongs to his rich cousin. This extravagant lifestyle unlocks a whole new world for Sandy and Kay. They're finally a part of high society. Sandy earns a spot at not just one but multiple supper clubs.
Starting point is 00:21:43 And Kay doesn't just get to join the Quintillian Book Club. She becomes its treasurer. Sandy's not sure if people like him for him or his money, but it doesn't matter. He's popular now, and he can't help but go overboard. He buys a $7,000 cell phone, a $10,000 mattress, and a nearly $60,000 Steinway piano. Plus, he starts collecting ancient coins
Starting point is 00:22:08 and 14-carat gold lighters, and he starts bringing his own bottles of wine to the Corsicanic Country Club because their selection isn't up to his standards. Even Kay has to tell Sandy to pump the brakes when he buys her even more jewelry or when he rolls up in a Bentley. His annual salary is $55,000 a year,
Starting point is 00:22:28 but he's spending a quarter million dollars every month. This is a lot of money to spend just to prove a point about a guy you don't like. Yeah, I mean, Sandy still can't shake his one-sided rivalry with Bob McNutt. When Bob's wife arrives at a party wearing a Van Cleef and Arples necklace, Sandy buys Kay an even bigger necklace from the same brand.
Starting point is 00:22:51 Sandy even makes a point to outspend Bob at charity auctions, which is ironic because he's using Bob's own money. Sandy thinks he's fitting in, but people with real money, like Bob McNutt, know that the truly wealthy don't act like this. In fact, Bob hardly notices Sandy at all, which is how Sandy's been able to get away with the scam for over four years now,
Starting point is 00:23:15 with seemingly no end in sight. It's a late awe, about five years after Sandy's first illegal check and Bob's in his office pouring over pages of financial reports. It's approaching the end of the fiscal quarter and once again, the bakery didn't reach its goals. For the past several years, the business keeps coming up short
Starting point is 00:23:38 and no one can figure out why. They try everything to solve it. They run payroll audits and take inventory of the ingredients. They stop giving out raises and even lay people off. but nothing works. Through all of this, no one suspects Sandy, least of all Bob. To him, Sandy's just another employee.
Starting point is 00:23:59 Bob hardly remembers his name. One day, Sandy stops by Bob's office, and all he wants to do is talk about a recent trip he took on a private jet. Bob's just like, why are you telling me this? No matter how hard Sandy tries, he just doesn't make it on Bob's radar. How mortifying to steal from someone,
Starting point is 00:24:20 and not only do they not really notice, but they don't even know who you are. She truly just is like, okay, dude. He's like, cool, get back to work. But remember, Bob's a legacy CEO who's used to the way Collins Street works. It'll take someone new, someone willing to ask tough questions,
Starting point is 00:24:37 to finally uncover Sandy's perfect crime. That's when the scam will start to go stale. In 2011, Colin Street, Bakery hires a new accounting clerk named Symmetric Walker. She's a former bank teller in her 30s. She's black with a petite build and caramel-colored hair. She's good at her job, and she probably likes the perks like free samples. But Symmetric supervisor, Sandy, is a little weird.
Starting point is 00:25:05 One time he complained that Bob was born with a silver spoon in his mouth, even though Sandy's the one jetting off to Napa practically every weekend. Another time, he asks Symmetric to put an expensive-looking wall. watch and the company safe for him. She was curious about the watch, so she looked it up and was shocked to learn it cost $80,000. See, this is what I mean. Some people do not have inherent curiosity and it makes them get scammed faster.
Starting point is 00:25:33 And people like this are the ones who survive because they do some light Googling to find out why things don't smell right. Yes, I see an expensive looking watch. I'm Googling it right away immediately. Well, Symmetric is clearly starting to notice that things are not adding up, and she obviously knows money has been tight at the bakery. Sure enough, when she reviews reports, she sees that some check numbers don't match. Someone tells her it's a glitch in the computer system, which is kind of suspicious,
Starting point is 00:26:03 considering Sandy has the only computer that can write checks. But Symmetrics new to the job, so she shrugs it off. As time goes on, she starts to get more comfortable and confident. In June of 2013, about two years after she started the job, she discovers a massive accounting error, one she can't ignore. She finds a photocopy of a check, but it's showing up in the accounting system as voided. Then she sees it was made out to a bank where the bakery doesn't have any accounts. And that's where her alarm bells go off.
Starting point is 00:26:36 Symmetric brings a check to Sandy and asks if he can help her understand it. He starts to fidget and the color drains from her. his face. He looks like a ghost. Sandy tells her he'll look into it and get back to her. But Symmetra can tell that something is seriously wrong. She runs a report of other voided checks. It shows 16 discrepancies in the past eight months totaling at least $250,000. Symmetric realizes where all the bakery's money is going. The fraud is coming from inside the house. Sandy is a thief. I love a whistleblower.
Starting point is 00:27:16 I hope when she tells the company what's happening, they give her all the money he stole. It's crazy that it was as simple as being like, hey, how many voided checks have there been? Yeah. Well, Symmetric shares her findings with an executive at the company who loops in Bob. And when Bob learns what's been going on,
Starting point is 00:27:36 he just says, well, that explains a lot. Now that Sandy's secret recipe for success is revealed, he's about to get burned. The next day, Sandy gets called into a meeting with two executives. They show him copies of the fraudulent checks and ask him to explain. At first, Sandy shrugs and claims he doesn't know. So they ask him point blank. Did you write these checks?
Starting point is 00:28:02 Sandy probably knows that denying it seems silly. He's the only person in the office who could have done it. So he replies, quote, I must have. It's my job to write the checks here. But then, when Sandy is asked to explain what happened, he shuts down and refuses to say anything else. He's fired on the spot and escorted to his desk to collect his things.
Starting point is 00:28:25 Sandy's in shock. His nine-year spending spree has finally come to an end. He's lost his job, and his life as he knows it could soon be over. Sandy knows he's in deep shit, and then he needs to hide the evidence. So he speeds home, swerves into his driveway, and dashes. inside. He barrels through the door and starts shoving jewelry, gold bars, diamonds, and other valuables into giant bags. He pulls out a stash of Rolexes hidden in his air conditioning vents, and Kay grabs more than $60,000 in cash. She and Sandy shove the bags at least 40 pounds
Starting point is 00:29:02 worth of luxury goods into their car. Then they hightail it for Austin about two and a half hours away. That's where their daughter, Allison, lives. they get there, they stash everything in her safe. And then they flee to their home in Santa Fe more than 11 hours away. These are the two most selfish people in the world, because now they're going to implicate their daughter in their nonsense and run away and leave her literally holding the bag. Yes. Meanwhile, back in Corsicana, Colin Street Bakery has been trying to serve Sandy with a lawsuit and a restraining order. But they can't find him. they finally hold a hearing without him.
Starting point is 00:29:45 Sandy is rep by his lawyer who says he doesn't know where his client is. Sandy is accused of stealing more than $16 million over the last eight years. The bakery's lawyers demand that the bank frees all of Sandy and Kay's accounts, and they request a restraining order against Sandy. Not long after, the FBI raids Sandy and Kay's home. All of their neighbors stand outside and gawk as agents haul away crates of wine and boxes of designer goods. This is the scene from the beginning of our episode, Sachi.
Starting point is 00:30:18 I would give anything to have been at the supper club that happened after Sandy and Kay got raided and all of the neighbors were just talking shit. What a true gift to this community, you know? Mm-hmm. Well, when Sandy catches wind of the raid and the lawsuit, he knows he's in deep shit. So he heads back to Austin, unloads a safe, and stuffs all his valuables and groceries.
Starting point is 00:30:42 bags. Sandy calls it his retirement account. He gives Kay and Allison some cash and tells them to hire a lawyer. Then he drives to a nearby park and scatters a bunch of his watches, jewelry, and gold behind some trees. He even dumped some into the water. Sandy later says he knew it was all evidence of his crime and that he needed to get rid of it. But he apparently didn't do a great job because just a few hours later, an off-duty cop from the University of Texas, finds the evidence, or at least some of it, 16 watches, a gold bar, and two gold coins. There are still some things unaccounted for, though. One bag containing up to $3 million in jewelry has still never been found.
Starting point is 00:31:29 Can you imagine being the person who finds a bag of $3 million worth of jewelry? They probably don't even know what they found if they found it. Yeah, that is kind of my new dream. But Sandy and Kay then go back to their home in Corsicana. It seems like a strange move for a couple on the run. Maybe they've resigned themselves to giving up, or maybe they're delusional enough to think they're in the clear. Either way, when they get home, they're greeted with a rude awakening.
Starting point is 00:31:58 Their belongings have been removed and the locks have been changed. So Sandy and Kay break in. This triggers the alarm system and the cops show up, but luckily for Sandy and Kay, there's no warrant out for their own. arrest yet. The FBI is still putting together the case against them. So the cops let them stay. Sandy knows it's only a matter of time before he ends up in handcuffs. On August 12th, 2013, the FBI knocks on FBI knocks on Sandy knocks on Sandy. The FBI knocks on Sandy, door. Sandy waits at a neighbor's house while the FBI loads more of his stuff,
Starting point is 00:32:45 including a Steinway piano, into a truck, and haul it away. Finally, after five hours of waiting and watching, Sandy surrenders. He's under arrest. The jig is up. Two days later, Kay files for divorce. About a month after that, Sandy is criminally indicted. He's 64 years old and facing 10 counts of mail fraud and up to 200 years in prison. The indictment alleges that he wrote 888 fake checks over the course of the eight-year scam. News of the drama has spread across Corsicana faster than a glaze over a hot fruitcake. It's the most exciting thing the town's ever seen. And they've been gossiping about it for months.
Starting point is 00:33:29 People wonder what's going to happen to Kay. She's gotten permission to stay at the house in Corsicana, but she doesn't have a car and she doesn't have any money since her and Sandy's bank accounts have been frozen. Some people think she's been getting help from her daughter. At this point, Kay's let Sandy take all the blame. She claims she's as shocked as everyone else, but her neighbors aren't buying her act. Here's what one of them has to say about it
Starting point is 00:33:54 in the Discovery Plus documentary, Fruitcake Fraud. If my husband had brought on a new Mercedes every few months, I would have known there was some of it. I would guess that Kay had some suspicions, but the reality is that she liked the new Mercedes every few months. Like she didn't want to ask those questions and now they're in trouble for it. Yeah, it really seems like Kay's in denial.
Starting point is 00:34:17 Apparently, she's been calling her book club members to see if she can still attend an upcoming event. But in February, five months after Sandy's indictment, reality comes knocking. Kay's kicked out of her house and it's put up for sale. And a month after that, the government introduces a new indictment, this time with Kay's name all over it.
Starting point is 00:34:38 The couple is hit with charges of money, laundering, aiding and abetting unlawful activity, and making false statements to a bank. That's in addition to Sandy's 10 counts of mail fraud. When Sandy and Kay's belongings go up for sale, it quickly becomes the event of the season in Corsicana. So many people show up to their house, the line wraps around the block. Bob walks up and down, handing out treats. All the proceeds will go to Collins Street to pay back some of what Sandy stole.
Starting point is 00:35:07 Everyone's dying to see the goodies at their crooked neighbor's street. treated themselves to on the bakery's dime. The house does not disappoint. Inside, there's gold and silver jewelry, several china cabinets, and what the local paper the Corsicana Sun calls, a quote, frighteningly large collection of Hummel figurines. I would also wait all night and all day to get into that property to look around. I get it.
Starting point is 00:35:34 Yes, I am very anti-waiting in line, and I would wait in line for hours to get a glimpse. After eight years of living large, Sandy's now lost his beautiful home, his marriage, and his freedom. His imagined rival, Bob McNutt, is catering the fire sale on everything he owned. He's behind bars awaiting trial
Starting point is 00:35:55 and has little hope of seeing the outside world maybe ever again. With nothing left to lose, he calls his lawyer and says, it's time to settle. Not long after the estate sale, Sandy signs a plea deal admitting to his crimes. He says that Kay didn't know the true source of the money,
Starting point is 00:36:15 but that she did know it wasn't legitimate. About a year later, Kay pleads guilty to conspiracy to commit money laundering. She says she, quote, deliberately closed her eyes. Sandy is sentenced to 10 years in prison and Kay gets five years probation. After that, Sandy's friends and family stopped talking to him. He ends up dying in prison in 2019. Okay, my God, that is a dark ending for this guy. Yeah, it is incredibly bleak.
Starting point is 00:36:46 It's unclear what Kay is up to these days. Their daughter, Allison, is an accomplice chef. As for Symmetric, she went on to become the VP of Finance at Collins Street. Sachi, can you please read what Bob McNutt has taken to saying about Sandy? Yeah, he said, you know, one of the real tragedies for Corsicana is we've lost arguably our most sophisticated watch collection. and also the most sophisticated collector of fine furs for men and women. Wow, I hate Bob. I hate him. He didn't really have to do anything and he beat Sandy at a game he wasn't even trying to play.
Starting point is 00:37:22 He didn't even know they were playing the game. As for Collins Street Bakery, it is still rolling in the dough. They continue to ship about 2 million pounds of fruitcake all over the world every year. Sachi, this was not. not an uncommon scam as far as the stealing part goes, but I would say this is one of the bigger losers we've covered. Yeah, I mean, it's true across the board for a lot of the episodes that we do that the person doing the scam usually is doing it because they just want someone to like them.
Starting point is 00:37:56 But this one is so direct and obvious. Like all this, all this fraud, all of these scams to get people to like you. And it probably would have worked better if he was just like maybe a nicer, guy. Yeah, it seems like he just didn't understand how to connect with people at all. Like, there's just, like, nothing in him that knew that, you know, friendship wasn't transactional and that you have to have the right vibe for people to like you. And I feel like Sandy just had bad vibes all the way through. Cursed. I guess the part that I am so stuck on is how people weren't even really looking at him because he was so uninteresting to everybody. Like,
Starting point is 00:38:35 Bob couldn't be bothered to even really know his name. This is the part I can't really wrap my head around for a town that loves gossip so much where they're constantly talking about everyone and how people did this or that. And then that's it. If I was a part of this community, I would have been so relentless in trying to figure out how this guy is rich. Well, Sarah, this is what separates common gossips to gossips like you and I, because we will look into it.
Starting point is 00:39:05 We'll find out. But also, as someone who did work with someone who was stealing money from a company, I worked at doing retail in high school, I knew something was up and I did not ask questions because the girl who was stealing money bought me Starbucks and McDonald's at lunch all the time. Okay, wow, you are really revealing yourself here. You are so easily bought. I mean, here's the thing. It was a retail job.
Starting point is 00:39:30 It was minimum wage. I was a teenager. I knew this girl was a liar and a fraud. I didn't know how, like, what am I going to do, investigate? They found out at the end of the day. That's really why I like to treat you to lunch periodically. So you keep your beautiful mouth shut about me. Yeah, I think I do understand the townspeople a little more.
Starting point is 00:39:47 I was doing that from McDonald's and Starbucks. They were riding on private jets to Santa Fe and Aspen and shit. Yeah, I would keep my mouth shut. I'd be like, this guy is weird as hell. But, you know what? He's kind of generous. And I don't really like him, but he's paying me off for my friendship. So sure, why not?
Starting point is 00:40:04 I guess the lesson of today's episode is that if you're going to be a scam artist, you better be sure that you effectively buy friendships. Yes, exactly. He should have bought Symmetric a big watch that would have solved it all. See, Symmetric has honor and dignity. That would not have bought her off. She would have been like, no, no, thank you. Sorry, I forgot. She's not like us bought by McDonald's and Starbucks.
Starting point is 00:40:28 No, Symmetric is kind of an angel. Loving scam influencers, get exclusive episodes and early access to new ones all ad-free on Wondry Plus. Join now in the Wendry app, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify. Before you go, help us out by taking a quick survey at Wendry.com slash survey. This is Have Your Cake and Steal It Too. I'm Sarah Hakey. And I'm Sachi Cole. If you have a tip for us on a story that you think we should cover,
Starting point is 00:41:06 please email us at scamfluencers at Wendry.com. The idea for this story actually came from a listener of the show. Thanks, Marin. We use many sources in our research. A few that were particularly helpful were just desserts, written by Katie Vine for Texas Monthly and Janet Jacobs' reporting for the Corsicana Daily Sun. Liz Galalas wrote this episode,
Starting point is 00:41:25 additional writing by us, Sachi Cole, and Sarah Hagee. Sarah Eni is our story editor and producer, and Eric Thurm is our story editor. Fact-checking by Sarah Baum. Sound design by James Morgan. Additional audio assistance provided by Adrian Tapia. Our music supervisor is Scott Velasquez for Frieson Sync. Our managing producers are Desi Blaylock and Matt Gant.
Starting point is 00:41:48 Janine Cornelow and Stephanie Jens are our development producers. Our associate producers are Charlotte Miller and Lexi Peary. Our producers are John Reed, Yasmin Ward, and Kate Young. Our senior producers are Ginny Bloom and Jen Swan. Our executive producers are Jenny Lauer Beckman, Marshall Louie, and Erin O'Flaherty for Wondery.

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