Scamfluencers - ENCORE: The Book Bandit
Episode Date: March 4, 2024The mystery thickens in this rerun about a puzzling phishing scam. When some of the biggest authors, publishers, and agents in the world become targets, it throws the industry into chaos – ...and turns everyone involved into an amateur detective. Rumors about the scammer’s identity – and motives – abound. And as the scammer gets bolder, his targets become determined to crack the mystery wide open. 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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Sarah, what is one of the stranger scams that you remember that we've covered?
Oh my gosh.
All of them feel so strange to me looking back.
I guess Liver King was one of them.
That was insane.
I mean, there are too many to pick from.
Okay, well, to me, it's the book thief.
I think about it all the time. It's
a scam with seemingly no monetary reward, no glory, no clout, just chaos, all because
this guy wanted to mess with authors. And authors, by the way, do not really make that
much money to begin with. And Sarah, I actually have some gossip for you. I've heard that
the book bandit might be back at it. A few writers I know have gotten some weird emails lately and word on the street is that
he's maybe back or maybe someone's just pretending to be him.
A scammer pretending to be a scammer?
Who knows, maybe that'll end up being our sequel.
So in honor of his possible return, we're going to play an encore of the book bandit.
We'll be back with brand new episodes on March 18th on Wendry Plus and March 25th everywhere else.
Hi, Sarah.
Hey, Sachi. So much like myself, you're a bit of a book influencer as a journalist,
right?
Oh, yeah. I'm constantly reading books all the way through.
You are famously literate.
Yeah, famously can read.
Right, so you probably get like a ton of advanced copies of books, correct?
Yeah, it's a real hodgepodge.
There are some that no disrespect to authors, but not really books I'd want to read.
Yeah.
Well, what if I told you that one of the biggest scams in the history of publishing involves
stealing books that publishers were giving away for free anyway?
That sounds like it's something that would happen to the book industry.
I mean, look, some people scam to get rich, others scam for power or revenge, but then
some people scam to steal hundreds of books that they didn't even really need to steal
in the first place.
And it all starts with some very weird emails.
In March 2017, Linda Altrov-Berie
is working at Sweden's oldest publishing house, Nordsted.
Linda's the rights director there,
and she's on one of the biggest books of her career.
It's the newest book from the mega best-selling Swedish author,
Stig Larsson.
Well, sort of.
Larsson actually died right before his debut crime novel
became one of the best-selling books of all time.
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo.
Sarah, did you ever hear of it?
Not only have I heard of it, I have read those books
multiple times and I watched the movies.
So yeah, you can say I'm familiar.
Really bragging about knowing a piece of pop culture here.
I am a part of that world.
Okay, great.
I'm really proud of you.
Well, as you know, since Stig is dead, another author is taking over his series.
And this new book, called The Girl Who Takes an Eye for an Eye, is a really big deal.
It's like the book world equivalent of a new Marvel movie.
Linda's worked at her publisher for more than 15 years,
and she knows that keeping this book's plot under wraps is crucial.
Because if people hear spoilers before the book comes out,
they won't buy it.
And lots of people buy these books,
like tens of millions of copies worldwide.
And that success is really valuable to the publishing house
because those big bestsellers,
like the girl with the dragon tattoo,
are what keep publishers from being
in massive hordes of debt.
Yeah, all these big books basically subsidize
the thousands of other books that sell like 10 copies.
It's how other books can get made.
It's how my book got made.
And I bought one of like 10 copies. It's how other books can get made. It's how my book got made. And I bought one of those 10 copies. Thank you for your two cents.
Well, I mean the other thing is Swedish publishers don't often score international mega hits. So
this book has to succeed. And that means taking every precaution to keep it from leaking. So when
Linda has to share the manuscript with her publishing partners around the world,
she uses something called Hushmail,
a super secure encrypted email service,
and it's password protected.
The book's small army of translators
have all signed NDAs.
So Linda's in her office
inside this grand Victorian building in Stockholm.
It's got spires and it's right on the water.
It looks like a palace.
And that's where she is when she and another rights agent
named Catherine Merck get this email
that makes them roll their eyes.
Sarah, can you read a rough translation of the email?
It says, dear Linda and Catherine, I hope you are well.
Could you please resend me the link to the manuscript
of the girl who takes an eye for an eye?
Thank you!
So this email is apparently from the book's Italian editor, who has somehow misplaced the link that they'd already been sent.
And Linda and Catherine are obviously annoyed because this is a major screw-up.
But then another email shows up. And this one's just in Catherine's inbox.
It's asking for the password to open the file.
Okay, so now things are getting really weird.
Losing the link is one thing, but the password too?
Linda thinks, hmm, something's up.
And she writes a separate email
to the Italian editor just to check in.
And the Italian editor calls Catherine immediately.
She spooked.
She says that she didn't send any emails.
Actually, she's got the manuscript printed out right here on her desk.
And while they're still on the phone to Italy, Catherine gets yet another email asking for
the password.
Yeah, that definitely sounds like a scam as a foot.
Yes.
And so at this point, they know that someone's trying to get the book.
And when they look more carefully at the messages,
a couple of things jump out.
Like, the Italian editor's signature
has the wrong job title.
She actually got a promotion two months ago.
And the name of her publishing house is misspelled.
It's a pretty clear red flag.
And that's when they realize that the email address itself
is also wrong.
This one ends in a dot com, but the publishing house uses dot IT,
which is Italy's national domain.
So now they start to panic.
Who's sending these emails?
Is it a hacker, a criminal syndicate?
Soon, Linda and Catherine learned
that they are not the only ones
dealing with emails like this.
The biggest publishers across three continents
are all becoming targets too.
The book world is freaking out.
Someone's trying to get a hold of books, hundreds of them,
but no one can figure out why.
And when the scammer's identity is revealed,
it shocks the publishing industry.
It was someone they never expected,
someone they underestimated,
and in some ways, he changes the industry forever.
Hi, I'm Anna.
And I'm Emily.
We're the hosts of Wanderer's podcast Terribly Famous,
a show where we bring you outrageous true stories
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early and add free on Wondering Plus on Apple Podcasts or the Wondery app.
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From Wondery, I'm Saachi Cole. And I'm Sarah Hagee, and this is Scamful Encers.
Come and give me your attention, I'll forever learn my lesson,
tell my speakers you are loving, I feel like a legend.
Sarah, I'm gonna be honest with you, this week we're covering a kind of inexplicable scam.
It's one focused entirely on stealing
the dorkiest of prizes, books.
And not just any books at like a bookstore,
but like unpublished manuscripts.
But look, I also love this scam.
I watch the news of it unfold online through tweets
and memes and I just find it so bizarre.
Like I imagine being smart enough to steal shit
and you decide to steal books.
But it also calls into question
whether the book industry has any value at all,
which is something I personally love
as a published author and nihilist.
In any case, I'm calling this episode, The Book Bandit.
Peter C. Baker is a freelance journalist in Illinois, who, like the rest of us, unfortunately,
has been working on a novel for 10 years.
Peter is a rugged-looking Midwestern guy, brown hair, beard, Patagonia.
In the summer of 2020, he decides it's finally ready for the next step.
So he sends it out to some agents.
Here's what he told the writer of this episode.
I only actually finally did it because I was about to become a dad
and didn't want to go to the hospital without having sent it to some agents.
So I did.
In July 2020, Peter signs with his new literary agent, Chris,
and he becomes a dad.
So Peter works with Chris to get his manuscript ready to send to editors
while caring for his newborn son.
He's exhausted, delirious, and excited.
Then on September 20th, Peter gets an email from Chris.
Here's Peter again.
In this email, he was asking me if I could send him
the latest version of the manuscript as a Microsoft Word file.
Peter has been up all night with the baby. He's running on caffeine and a prayer
that when his son does go down for a nap, he'll be able to sleep too. So Peter
doesn't think twice. He finds a previous email where his manuscript was
attached as a Word file and he shoots that off to Chris. And then he says, I get another email that appears to be an email for my agent.
It says, did you send it?
I didn't get it.
So I did it again.
And then Peter gets another email from Chris.
This one says that the agency is in the process of changing servers.
Maybe that's why the email isn't coming through?
And Chris asks Peter to send the manuscript to a different email.
It's the exact same email, but with a.co instead of a.com at the end.
Later that day, Chris calls Peter.
He sounds a little panicked.
He asks why Peter sent his book over multiple times.
Here's Peter again.
It was known at that time, not to me, but within the world of publishing, that some
person or group of people had been perpetrating deceptions of this type, not just all over
town, all over the world.
And that's when Chris has to tell him the bad news.
Dude, you got scammed.
So it doesn't make sense to me that a scammer would want this magazine writer's unsold debut,
no offense to Peter.
Like, why not try and get a new Stephen King manuscript or something that is of higher
value?
Great question, and Peter can't really wrap his head around it either.
Listen to this.
We tried to talk about what is this person's motive?
What are they going to do with a word file of my manuscript?
And we couldn't come up with a plausible explanation that created this sort of
nauseous stomach dropping.
Who am I?
What is this world kind of feeling?
Here's the good news.
Peter went on to sell his book.
It's called Plains and it's out now.
You can get it wherever un-stolen books are sold.
And even though he was nervous for a while,
nothing actually happened with the stolen manuscript.
Peter is just another victim
of this prolific international book thief.
Since 2016, a scammer has targeted authors
like Margaret Atwood, Ian McEwen, Ethan Hawke,
and of course, Steve Larson.
But obscure books too, books the world hasn't exactly been clamoring for,
like Icelandic short story collections written in Icelandic have also been stolen.
And no one can figure out who the scammer is or what it is that they want.
The reason that Peter's agent, Chris, is freaking out is that this scammer has been going after books since at least 2016.
And they're pretty good at it.
They've gotten hundreds of books under false pretenses from all over the world.
And as far as phishing schemes go, this one's pretty simple.
The scammer registers web domains, and then they use phony email addresses that look almost like the real thing, to request
the book. A lot of people don't spot the subtle difference, so they just send it, much like
Peter did. But none of the books that the scammer got their hands on appear on eBay or the dark
web or anywhere else. No ransom demands are ever made. There's nothing.
That is so strange. I mean, it does seem like a scam that's easy to fall for because how often are you looking
at like the actual email that you're sending it to?
Yeah.
You just kind of glance at it and register it looks similar to what you've seen before,
right?
Right.
Also, most first drafts are shit and they change so much.
It just doesn't make any sense to me.
But see, this is the thing.
The scammer very clearly understands how publishing works.
Like they know which agents represent which writers,
which editors are buying which books,
and how book scouting even works.
That's how publishers often find out
about books from other countries.
It's pretty in the weeds stuff.
They're imitating agents, editors, and scouts
to trick people into sending their books,
and it's working.
And that's what drives people like Chris insane.
Could it actually be someone in their own industry?
Is the call coming from inside the house?
But, if they are so familiar with how the book industry works, they must also know it's
just not that hard to get free books.
Advanced copies are incredibly common across publishing.
Yeah, I mean, it's pretty easy
if you just contact a PR person and say,
like, I want an advanced copy of this book.
Yes, exactly.
And I know you also know this, Sarah.
The publishing industry runs on gossip.
So by the time Peter's book is stolen,
everybody has a theory on
who the scammer might be and why they're even doing this in the first place. All the theories
are wild. I'm going to tell you some of them. You can let me know what you think, okay?
Okay.
One, publishing is being hit by an international crime syndicate, one that's out to pirate
books.
Okay, relax, nerds. Nobody cares that much.
Okay, well, here's another one.
Russia is stealing books to undermine the West
because what better way to undo NATO and the EU
than by stealing manuscripts from publishers
in Sweden and France?
Okay, once again, relax nerds.
Nobody cares that much.
Okay, but then some people are like, it's the mob.
Because why not?
You know how much the mob loves debut fiction?
All of these are clearly the work of people who are like,
my job is really important and books change the world.
Listen, book people have an over-inflated sense of self
and it's really coming out and trying to figure out what's happening here.
But despite all the countless irrational theories,
people still don't know
who's scamming writers out of their books.
Rumors about the scammer's identity are swirling
all over the global publishing industry.
Who would bother to hatch such a specific crime?
They clearly know enough
about the ins and outs of publishing.
Would someone in Turtle do this to their own colleagues,
to their own industry?
And while the scammer is getting bolder,
one writer becomes determined to crack this mystery wide open.
In February 2020, Reeves Whiteman,
a journalist at New York Magazine,
hears from someone in publishing.
Reeves is in his 30s with brown hair
and a perma five o'clock shadow.
He got a start as a fact-checker at the New Yorker,
and now he writes about tech and the media.
He's got sources in the publishing industry,
and they're freaked out about this mystery scammer
who's stealing manuscripts.
Reeves has already heard about this case.
His colleague Lila Shapiro tried writing about the book
Thief the previous year,
and she quit when her leads didn't go anywhere.
But Reeve starts to poke around.
The thief has never stopped scamming,
so maybe there's a loose thread ready to be pulled.
And then, as the pandemic causes shutdowns
all over the world, Reeve's hears from more and more sources.
Here he is talking about it on the Read Smart podcast.
I have sort of a database as I became kind of obsessed
with this of all the emails this person had sent
and the books they had gone after
and it's hundreds of emails
and that's a fraction of I'm sure the full output.
And while the emails used to be unerringly polite,
now they've gotten really dark.
Like later that year when Reeves reaches out
to Linda Altrow-Berry, do you remember her?
Yeah, she was a Swedish publishing employee
who found out the scammer was trying
to get the new Larson book, right?
Correct.
In August of 2020, Linda gets another strange request
in her inbox.
And this one's from a Spanish editor
for a book that Linda knows that editor
just would not care about. She realizes that she's got the thief on the line, waiting for
her response. So Linda thinks, hey, why not have some fun? Feeling just a little smug,
she writes back, keep on dreaming. And she doesn't have to wait long to hear back. But the response is pretty shocking.
The translation is,
Hope you die of the coronavirus.
That's insane.
Right, and insofar as insults go,
it's pretty good, it's timely and cruel.
Very cruel.
Reeves also hears that the thief has started taunting authors
by sending them entire passages
from their stolen manuscripts.
That's monstrous.
And they've been threatening to publicly leak the entire book,
unless of course they're given the PDFs that they want.
They even start telling victims that they know their home addresses
and that they'll pay them a visit one day soon.
The idea of having to like re-read something I had written before it was edited,
it makes my stomach hurt.
I'm actually sweating.
Okay.
So we understand how threatening this is.
And the scammer is now sending thousands of emails
in like 10 different languages.
They're also registering hundreds,
maybe thousands of domain names
designed to fake people out.
Some of those domains were registered
in the names of the people they were scamming.
Plus, sometimes the scammer was using their credit cards too.
It's a rapidly expanding con job.
That's crazy.
It ended up getting financial as well.
That's like true scam siren shit.
Yeah.
And several people in New York tell Reeves
that they think they know who the scammer is.
The English and the emails, it's a little clunky.
And some think it's distinctly Italian.
There is this Italian publishing professional in New York who just, he just rubs people
the wrong way.
He's rude.
He doesn't have that many friends.
And he's known for being a bit vindictive.
He's the type of person who might, you know, want revenge on an entire industry.
Oh, and some of the email domains, they're actually registered in that guy's name.
Okay, so I mean they know who it is then, right?
Well word spreads that there's a suspect at least, and Reeves is excited.
After months of digging, he finally has a real lead.
Reeves gets in touch with the Italian publishing guy.
They have a Zoom call, and he freaks out
when he finds out he's a suspect.
Over the next day, he sends Reeves 64 emails
laying out his defense.
Mamma mia, indeed.
And he says that he doesn't have to steal books.
He works in publishing, and the biggest piece of exonerating evidence
is that the email address is being used to register the domains.
It isn't his, it's just another fake.
So Reeves' big lead? It goes nowhere.
But soon, he won't have to go hunting for the scammer anymore.
The scammer comes to him, and it isn't pretty.
Reeves is talking to everyone he can for his piece.
His colleague Laila even comes back to work on it too.
And soon enough, the scammer gets wind of their investigation.
And then the scammer starts sending them emails.
But it all escalates really quickly.
The scammer starts impersonating their agents
and may have tried to access their LinkedIn
and dating profile accounts.
At some point, Lila, who's now eight months pregnant,
exchanges emails with the thief.
She suggests meeting for a drink in Cobble Hill,
which is a neighborhood in Brooklyn that I cannot afford to live in,
and the scammer writes back,
how about fuck you, Hill?
That's so wild!
And more threateningly, they reply,
take my advice, drop this stupid article and stop with it immediately.
Oh my God, this is crazy.
Yeah.
It seems like the thief is becoming downright dangerous,
and law enforcement is starting to get involved.
In fact, two investigations are launched, one in New York and another in DC.
And then in July of 2021, when Reeves and Lila publish their piece, they say they still
don't have any idea who's scamming the book world.
But they do give the thief an instantly iconic name, the spine collector.
Oh, that's great.
Yeah, it's perfect.
But while Reeves and Lila can't figure out the thief's identity,
the FBI is making headway.
Actually, they found their man.
There's just one problem.
He's not American, and they'll have to wait until he's on U.S. soil
before they can finally make a move.
and they'll have to wait until he's on US soil before they can finally make a move.
I'm Afua Hirsch.
I'm Peter Francopane.
And in our podcast, Legacy,
we explore the lives of some of the biggest characters
in history.
This season, we delve into the life of Mikhail Gorbachev.
This season has everything.
It's got political ideology.
It's got nuclear armageddon.
It's got love story.
It's got betrayal.
It's got economic collapse.
One ingredient that you left out, legacy.
Was he someone who helped make the world a better place,
saved us all from all of those terrible things,
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he unwitting character in history or was he one who helped forge and frame the world?
And it's not necessarily just a question of our making. There is a real life binary in
how his legacy is perceived. In the West, he's considered a hero and in Russia, it's
a bit of a different picture.
So join us on Legacy for Mikhail Gorbachev.
Hello, I am Alice Levine,
and I am one of the hosts
of Wondry's podcast, British Scandal.
On our latest series, The Race to Ruin,
we tell the story of a British man
who took part in the first ever
round the world sailing race.
Good on him, I hear you say. But there there is a problem as there always is in this show.
The man in question hadn't actually sailed before.
Oh, and his boat wasn't sea worthy.
Oh, and also tiny little detail almost didn't mention it.
He bet his family home on making it to the finish line.
Wattenstude was one of the most complex cheating plots in British sporting history.
To find out the full story, follow British Scandal wherever you listen to podcasts, or
listen early and ad-free on Wondry Plus on Apple Podcasts or the Wondry app.
And I feel like a legend. Sarah, I'm going to take you back in time a bit to October 1, 2008.
A strange book appears on the shelves of Italian bookstores.
Its author is Filippo B. Its cover is a silhouette of a teen boy with gelled hair, a popped collar,
baggy jeans, and the book's title is Bully, which means the same thing in English as it does in Italian.
So Bully tells the story of Diego, a shy teen living in an unnamed suburb of Rome.
His parents are divorced and he's struggling to fit in at school.
His classmates tear into him because he looks, acts, and dresses like a dork.
And he loves just two things, books and the internet.
A loser, like yours truly.
And yet Diego is also special.
He's brilliant.
He's so brilliant that he gets his hands on a copy of the final Harry Potter book before
anybody else does.
But despite pulling that off, he still remains an outcast.
So he figures he's got no choice but to become a bully,
just like everybody else.
So that quote, everyone will like me
because the truth is that I am better than them.
That's really dark and it also is really sad.
Yeah.
Well, Filippo B is the not so subtle,
gnome to plume of Filippo Bernardini, a bookish, awkward
Italian kid, much like his main character, Diego.
And also like Diego, Filippo was raised by divorced parents in an elegant, medieval suburb
of Rome.
Another trait they share is that Filippo seems pretty convinced that he's superior
to everyone around him.
After all, he published Bully, his debut novel, when he was still just a teenager.
Now, Bully is basically the diary of a lonely outcast.
Filippo is so angry at his classmates that in the book, he uses their full names.
So this is essentially fan fiction of his real life.
Yeah.
And the lesson of the book is pretty dark.
Sarah, can you read this particularly telling passage for us?
There is a relationship between tormentors and victims,
something close to a real friendship or even love.
A person cannot live without others,
just as a tormentor cannot live without his victim.
Imagine writing that down.
This is clearly a teen who's experiencing a lot of shit in their life.
Yeah.
And by publishing a book, Filippo hopes to get the recognition and praise that he craves.
It doesn't exactly work.
As of this recording, it's only got three middling reviews on Amazon.
But it seems to have inspired Filippo to pursue a career in the book world.
So after school, Filippo moves to Milan,
the capital of Italy's publishing industry.
And he's determined to chart a course for literary stardom.
It's the fall of 2010, Filippo's going to school at Milan's Universitat Cattolica.
It's this gorgeous school inside the city's ancient walls, with roots tracing back to
the 8th century.
It's exactly the type of cultural pedigree and prestige that Filippo is after.
Filippo's setting himself up for a career in publishing.
He's got a real gift for languages, so he studies Mandarin and English, and he
considers becoming a translator. While in school, he works as a proofreader at the
small but prestigious publishing house that put out bully. And this is where he discovers
one of publishing's greatest perks. Free copies of books months before they come out.
Remember when you were young and not jaded, and the idea of free books forever sounded so cool.
Yeah, it was enough to be like,
I will accept these poverty wages
if I get to read books for free.
Yeah, we were stupid.
Well, five years later in 2015,
Filippo sets off for London.
He's getting a master's in publishing
at the University College London.
It's the next best stepping stone for a career in the industry.
And he's a good student.
But the cocky and spiteful author of Bully is still in there.
Sarah, can you read what one classmate told New York Magazine about Filippo?
Yeah, he was loud, boisterous.
Nothing would really daunt him.
My lasting impression of him was how confident
but borderline rude he was.
Wow, sounds like a guy in publishing.
He could be anybody.
Well, at this point, Filippo's in his early 20s.
He's got a wide smile, a prominent forehead,
and he wears big square glasses.
And he's still just a student,
but he wants a glamorous life.
So he goes to posh events in London, especially movie premieres.
In October 2016, he spends the evening fawning over celebrities walking the red carpet at the premiere of Arrival,
the Denis Villeneuve sci-fi movie.
Denis and Jeremy Renner wave as they pass by, screaming fan snap photos from behind the barricades.
But Filippo, he only has eyes for Amy Adams.
He takes a picture on his phone
and later posts it to Instagram.
Sarah, can you read his caption?
He writes, O-M-G-G-G-G-G.
Just 40 meters far from Goddess hashtag Amy Adams
at the premiere of hashtag arrival at hashtag BFI.
I will say I appreciate him measuring in meters.
That's very close to Amy Adams.
He also boasts to classmates about spending
a thousand pounds a week on groceries.
He posts photos on Instagram of the elaborate meals
he cooks with his new partner
who has
a job in corporate compliance.
I'm sorry, how do you spend a thousand pounds a week on groceries?
I have no idea.
I could not do that if I tried.
We should do an episode on that.
Yeah, he probably is getting scammed.
But he's also still fixated on the same goal he's had since his emo teen novelist days. Literary stardom.
During this time, his Instagram is full of pictures of galleys, which, as you know,
are advanced copies of books. There are huge books by internationally famous authors like
Jonathan Franzen and Nick Hornby. He even gets an early copy of Ghosts at a Watchman,
which is Harper Lee's surprise prequel to
Kill a Mockingbird.
And don't worry, he makes sure to include hashtag uncorrected proof, hashtag advanced
readers copy, hashtag not out yet.
Just so all the plebs know that he's getting the good stuff before everybody else.
If it's literary stardom that Philippa wants, or just plain stardom, he's getting closer,
but he's not yet close enough.
Philippa scores a major coup around this time in 2016,
an internship at Andrew Nurenberg Associates.
That's one of the UK's most renowned literary agencies.
This is the kind of gig
that can really open doors in publishing.
And on paper, he's exactly what agencies
and publishers are looking for.
Filippo's already published a book.
He's worked for an Italian publishing house.
And he's in the process of completing a master's degree
in publishing.
He's fluent in at least three languages, Italian, English,
and Chinese.
OK, here's the thing.
Filippo is talented.
He might not be the best writer, but he's clearly hardworking.
He's clearly someone who is trying to get somewhere.
I just don't understand where the scam starts taking place or why.
Yeah, I mean, there's obviously a lot of ego wrapped up in this, but his time at Nernberg, it's a wet, hot
disaster man.
Filippo feels like intern work is beneath him.
One agent walks in on him spinning around in a chair and asks him to tidy up bookshelves.
And Filippo looks at him and says that's too boring.
This is the problem with Filippo throughout all of this.
He expects his genius to be recognized immediately.
When that doesn't happen, he loses it.
He wants to get hired at the agency, but they reject him, obviously.
So he stands outside of the building, screaming at the company's agents and employees as
they walk in and out.
He's rumored to have consulted an attorney about a lawsuit, supposedly because he thought
that the company was bad-mouthing him to potential employers. Oh, and also, not long after he left Nuremberg,
the company's website was hacked, and somebody put up personal information about their agents
along with some nasty comments. Hmm, who could that have been? He's not very subtle.
Filippo came to London for a career in the capital of European publishing
and for confirmation that he really was special.
Not only special, but more special than everyone around him.
And now all that seems to be slipping through his fingers.
So he comes up with an audacious scheme to raise his profile
and to get revenge on the establishment that has shunned him.
He decides to start stealing books, allegedly.
So, Filippo supposedly started around this time in 2016.
He begins living a double life, again, allegedly.
By day, he's on the bottom rung of the publishing ladder
and after blowing up his internship,
Filippo is back to striving, reading manuscripts,
and writing reports, sometimes for as little as 50 pounds each.
But by night, he's becoming a prolific scammer.
He scours publishing news reports for potential victims.
He registers hundreds of domain names.
He even creates a fake homepage for a database
used by a scouting agency.
He used that to collect emails and passwords
so he could monitor some publishing professionals'
correspondence.
So I mean, he kind of has two jobs at this point,
one of which he is not getting paid for.
Yeah, again, allegedly.
In real life, Filippo's just another underpaid cog
in the publishing machine.
Meanwhile, the book thief is a growing menace,
causing waves with book people all over the world.
It sounds like he's kind of also maybe romanticizing
this idea of being a nobody on the surface
that no one would look at twice
and then on the other side hacking into people's emails.
That is what it sort of seems like. And then in 2020, he gets two big breaks. One, a stable job
in Simon and Schuster UK's Foreign Rights Department. And two, he gets traction with a
translation in Italian of the Korean writer Cho Nam-joo's Kim Ji-young, born in 1982.
It's successful enough to get Filippo the job of translating a forthcoming book by
parasite director Bong Joon-ho.
But this is when the book thief grows more deranged and threatening.
He also starts scamming other low-level publishing hopefuls.
People like him.
That is so crazy.
It's like he's finally getting success
and now he's targeting people who have no power at all.
Yeah.
And posing as an editor or an agent,
he would offer young aspiring professionals
a job reading a manuscript.
Basically, he would ask them to read a book
and then write a report summarizing it
for the offensively low going rate of 150 bucks.
And after they turned in the report, which would often take dozens of hours of work,
he would just ghost them.
Why?
Like why do that?
It's so useless and so evil, it benefits no one.
Yeah, I don't know why.
By 2020, the publishing industry is onto the thief.
He's getting found out more frequently by the people he's trying to scam,
and they're raising the alarm with authorities in the US.
But he's also getting more brazen.
He's stealing manuscripts from publishers he's worked with
or pitched himself to as a translator.
He's impersonating people he's actually met before
and then threatening some of them later
when they try to expose him.
He's been growing bolder and bolder,
always thinking he was one step ahead.
But he doesn't realize that the FBI is on the case.
In fact, they've known his identity for months
and they're starting to close in.
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I feel like a legend.
On January 5th, 2022, a 29-year-old Italian man wearing big square glasses
steps off a plane from London at JFK Airport in New York.
It's Filippo Bernardini,
and he's here for a post-Christmas vacation.
But as soon as he steps off the plane,
he's swarmed by FBI agents.
He's charged with wire fraud and identity theft,
charges that could lead to up to 22 years in federal prison.
That is a lot of time for a very weird scam,
but he did hack into people's emails.
He did use credit cards, so I kind of get it. Right. And it's not like it was that easy
to catch him either. The FBI has been building a case for more than a year. The lead investigator
on the case is Michael Driscoll, a 25-year veteran of the agency and a former lawyer.
He is no joke.
He worked counterterrorism in Africa and England,
and he went after Al Qaeda in 2003.
He's got expertise in international investigations,
which is now being used to track down a dorky,
but super intense, low-level publishing employee.
It's not exactly Osama bin Laden.
So when the news of the arrest breaks,
publishers are confronted by a surprising and uncomfortable truth.
The scammer who's been plaguing them for years,
causing an international brouhaha,
it isn't some sophisticated criminal syndicate.
Nor is it the intelligence arm of a country hostile to the West.
It's a lone individual, a junior employee,
the exact type of person most people in the
industry spend their days ignoring, if not outright abusing.
Many insisted in the weeks after Filippo's arrest that he must have been working for
someone else.
I mean, how else could he have sent all those emails?
You know, it is not surprising to imagine publishers being shocked by this. Like, as you said earlier, they thought it
was like this huge criminal conspiracy, because everyone
cares about publishing so much that they probably couldn't at
any point look inward and be like, hey, we're an industry that
really underpays people. Maybe it's a disgruntled former
employee.
Yeah, exactly. But some people in publishing were less surprised.
Because for the underpaid and overworked, Filippo's elaborate and kind of pointless
quest for revenge ignites a reckoning in the industry.
Filippo Bernardini's anger and frustration towards publishing was threatening to many.
But it struck a chord with some. Specifically, the overworked, underpaid interns,
assistants, and associates who make the industry run.
For junior employees, here was someone
hitting back at bad bosses, impersonating and terrifying them.
He was beating them at their own game
of gossipy, clicky power moves.
Within days, meme accounts on Instagram were all over it.
But in Italy, meanwhile, the arrest was greeted
with a mix of national pride and a type of cruel irony.
One article in the Italian press spent several paragraphs
comparing him to the talented Mr. Ripley
because of the complexity of the scam.
But it went on to note that he was neither rich
nor particularly handsome.
Italian journalist Clara Masaleni
wrote a pretty perfect and pretty devastating summary.
Sarah, will you read it?
She says,
There is the scammer, the scam,
the skill, the chameleon-like talent
of being mistaken for someone else.
But the part of linen shirts and boat holidays is missing.
In short, all the coolness part is missing.
Absolutely.
There's just something deeply uncool about the scam
where it's like, okay, all this for books?
For books, I know, man.
I mean, the scam has no sex appeal.
Well, if found guilty,
it would mean that he stole hundreds,
if not thousands, of manuscripts.
He impersonated and violated the privacy of dozens of individuals.
Some public figures, but mostly just regular people.
He pulled off a complex, sophisticated international scam that humiliated some of the most powerful
people in the international publishing industry.
Okay.
What I'm wondering is, outside of some of the fraud he did with, you know, getting
people's credit card information and also hacking into people's emails, what did he
actually do?
Like, what was the crime?
Well, here's what Mike Driscoll at the FBI said about the crime.
It is just so mean I need you to read it.
Okay.
Mr. Bernardini was allegedly trying to steal other people's literary ideas for himself,
but in the end, he wasn't creative enough to get away with it.
Oof.
Imagine that being like an official report that somebody makes about your crime, that
you're just not smart enough to have done anything better.
What a dunk.
But there's just one problem with this explanation.
It just doesn't make a lot of sense.
Like even if Filippo was trying to steal the ideas,
he would be months behind.
The books he stole were often weeks away from publication.
So by the time he could put something together,
he would be years too late.
And now Filippo is facing decades in prison,
but there's still no evidence that he profited from the scam.
None of the manuscripts ever showed up on torrenting websites.
There's no reason to believe that they were used in any type of pirating.
And it might just be that he's always been the same lonely kid
who wrote a confessional novel in 2008,
desperately seeking to prove that he was just a little bit better than everyone else.
When Peter C. Baker heard that Filippo Bernardini was arrested and charged with being the book thief,
he was shocked too, and a little relieved.
I will admit it felt kind of good to know that this was happening to more people, not just me.
You know, it could happen to anyone and wasn't proof of my special unique dumbness.
And though the book thief never profited
off of stealing novels,
Peter can attest to the fact
that this was not a victimless crime.
Having your manuscript stolen sucks.
It always feels bad to get sort of tricked or scammed,
even if it's not touching on
a 10-year creative project that you have foolishly wrapped up your identity with.
Yeah, that makes a lot of sense to me.
I mean, his book still got published, but there is this idea of getting fooled by someone
when you're working in such a precarious industry where it's like, it's so hard to get a book
deal and it's so hard for a book to do well
once you actually do get that deal.
So I feel like playing with people's emotions like that
is so cruel.
And also he didn't really benefit from that at all.
No, he just did it to be a jerk.
But between being scammed by the book thief
and learning about the arrest,
Peter's book had sold and been published. So he found it kind of hard to be angry.
Instead, he took the chance to reflect.
The shared international enterprise of contemporary literature was, for me, as for him,
like the place where I wanted to do my thing, to show the world what I could do
to have my work received and seen and responded to.
I don't think it's too implausible to say
that he wanted something like that too.
That's a very empathetic lens, I guess.
Yeah, I think Peter seems to really understand
that there are a lot of ego monsters in this industry
and everyone's like acting out in different ways.
Yeah, totally.
Well, Filippo has pleaded not guilty
and is currently awaiting trial in New York
where he has remained under bond since early January.
And the good news is it sounds like
he's gonna have a lot to read.
So this whole story actually,
I feel like it just calls into question
what a scam even is. Like, does someone have to benefit financially for it to count as a scam?
I don't think so. I mean, I think he had like an ultimate goal of being financially successful
with this, but he just like cheated and played with people's minds and he scammed them in
a pretty evil way.
Yeah, but the weird thing is his motives are still a mystery.
Like, why go to this extraordinary amount of effort just to steal PDFs?
Like, why would he choose to enact revenge in a way that gets him,
honestly, less than nothing?
I think I won't be able to get over this scam because it was truly so pointless.
It was really just a way to cause chaos and unrest
in an industry that wasn't rewarding you.
Right.
The book industry is so small
and sort of in the same way that he was trafficking
in the gossip of the book industry,
he could have trafficked in the gossip of being a nice person
and it could have really changed his trajectory.
You know what it is?
He was so entitled.
Yeah. He was so entitled. Yeah.
He was like this guy who was bullied as a kid
who thought like, I'm smarter than everyone.
And I think once he tried making it,
he realized it's very hard to become famous in this industry.
And I think he just couldn't handle that.
Well, Sarah, you know what Iowa say?
Never try.
Let things kind of just happen to you.
That's how we got this podcast.
Truly, if you just lie very still,
like in a guana about to be attacked,
good things will come.
You know, I feel like the lesson here
is that most people can smell desperation.
You gotta play cool to be cool.
I've never tried in my life.
Why start now?
Ha ha ha ha.
Cool. I've never tried in my life. Why start now? Before you go, tell us about yourself by completing a short survey at wonderie.com. This is our series, The Book Bandit.
I'm Sachi Cole and I'm Sarah Hagee.
We use many sources in our research.
Reeves Weidemann and Lila Shapiro's The Spine Collector and their follow-up, the talented
Mr. Bernardini in New York Magazine were particularly helpful.
Elizabeth A. Harris and Nicole Pearl Roth wrote the first story about the scammer for The New York Times and later broke the news of Bernardini's arrest.
Alex Shepard wrote this episode, which includes original reporting as well as information from his story about Bernardini in The New Republic,
the bizarre unsolved mystery of Filippo Bernardini
and the stolen book manuscripts.
Additional writing by us,
Saachi Cole and Sarah Haggy.
Jen Swan is our senior producer.
John Reed is our producer.
Charlotte Miller and Tate Busby
are our associate producers.
Sarah Enne is our story editor.
Our senior story editor is Rachel B. Doyle.
Our music supervisor is Scott Velazquez for Freeze On Sync.
Adrian Tapia provided audio assistance.
Our sound design is by James Morgan.
Our executive producers are Janine Cornelow,
Stephanie Jens, and Marshall Louie for Wondery.
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