Scamfluencers - ENCORE: The Hollywood Ponzi Scheme | To Live and Lie in LA | Part III
Episode Date: January 30, 2023Zach's fake business deals and lies are starting to catch up with him. The money has stopped flowing, and entertainment bigwigs are hounding him for answers. But like everyone else in Hollywo...od, Zach thinks he's just one box-office smash away from solving all his problems.Support us by supporting our sponsors!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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Also, if you haven't listened to episode one and two yet, go back and listen to them. All of this will make much more sense.
Sarah, Saty, have you ever impersonated someone or has anyone ever impersonated you?
Um, no, not necessarily in my youth,
I did get catfished on Neopets.com
by someone pretending to be Hilary Duff.
And it worked.
I thought I was friends with Hilary Duff.
It was the first time I realized, like,
oh, people actually do lie all the time on the internet.
Yes, they do.
And they'll do it with real gusto, because the key to a good impersonation is total commitment.
Well, for Zach, impersonating others is basically his art.
He works in assumed identities the way some people work in watercolors or in clay.
And in our final episode, he really pushes the form to its limits.
In January 2020, Zack sits in his home office. It's the one with the framed print of his company
motto. Sarah, do you remember it? Unfortunately, yes. When the odds are one in a million,
be that one. Aren't you happy to have that information rattling around in your brain?
Yeah, and it'll be there forever for the rest of your life.
Well, now the odds are stacked against Zach.
He stopped paying his investors back a few weeks ago, and since then, he's been stalling
with excuses.
Zach told them HBO and Netflix are late paying him, and that's why he can't pay his investors
back.
But the investors are losing patience.
They want answers.
More than that, they want their money.
Zach needs someone to vouch for his lies.
Someone on the inside, a lawyer.
But not a criminal lawyer, at least not yet.
He needs an entertainment lawyer,
one who works for Netflix.
To find the perfect guy,
Zach heads to,
where else, LinkedIn.
But Netflix has a lot of lawyers. Zach scrolls through profiles until he finds the person he needs.
Joel Goldberg, title, senior counsel, content acquisition. And then, Zach fires up his trusty old
fake email app. Oh my god, the email scheduling app that literally all scammers somehow have access to,
but no normal person has heard about.
Yep, the app he's been using to cook up texts and emails from supposed business contacts
for almost a decade, starting with billionaire Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz.
His first love.
Well, Zach sends fake Joel an email asking, where is my money?
And in his response, fake Joel, aka Zach, says he's fully aware of the problem Zach has
been having.
And naturally, he'll look into what's holding up the payments ASAP.
He's low-key scripting his own workplace drama.
I mean, can you imagine like sitting at home and sending emails to your self-backed fork?
But it's so crazy that he's doing all of the work
of fiction and acting without ever getting
to actually do it properly.
Yeah, well, fake Joel also has terrible work life balance.
But the email looks real.
It appears to be sent from a Netflix address
and it even has the Netflix logo in the signature.
Zach writes a reply to the fake Netflix email, saying that Netflix's accounting department
had promised payment by the end of the day.
So to recap, Zach is writing an email to himself, but pretending that one of him is a Netflix
lawyer.
Okay, so now his fake self is arguing with his other fake self.
Honestly, this man's an artist, this is performance art, Sachi.
I would see his one-man show.
Well, the email exchange is proof that the problem isn't with Zach.
It's with Netflix.
So Zach forwards this creative writing exercise
to his investors in Chicago and in Las Vegas.
Oh, those guys he owes more than $8 million, too?
Well, at this point, he owes them much more than $8 million,
like much, much more.
Remember those $25,000 a day late fees?
How could I forget?
Zach assures them that he's on the case,
he's working hard to get them paid.
It's just an counting mix up.
These things happen.
It's business. It's annoying an counting mix up. These things happen. It's business.
It's annoying, but their investment is safe.
Zach thinks he's like everyone else in Hollywood.
He's just one box office mash away
from solving all of his problems.
But the reality is, he won't be able to outrun
his investors forever.
Many involved in crypto saw Sandbankman Freed
as a breath of fresh air from the usual Wall Street buffs.
But in just one month, his crypto exchange would collapse.
From Bloomberg and Wondery comes Spellcaster,
a new six-part docuseries about the wild rise and fall of FTX
and its founder, Sandbankman Freed.
Listen to Spellcaster on Amazon Music,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Wondery's new podcast, Disantel,
wades into the glorious mess of celebrity beef.
Each episode explores a different iconic celebrity feud
and asks, what does our obsession with these feuds say about us?
Follow Disantel wherever you get your podcasts.
You can listen ad-free on the Amazon Music or Wondery app.
From Wondery, I'm Sachi Cole and I'm Sarah Haguey. And this is Scanful Insurs.
In our last episode, Zack pursued a double life.
One Zack ran a Ponzi scheme around movie licensing deals, and the other Zack starred in surprisingly
legit movies.
In our finale to this story, people start to catch on that Zack's business deals are as
fake as his movie star credentials.
Zack's facade of Hollywood success comes crashing down, leaving his victims holding the bag.
This is episode three, to live in lie and LA.
In March 2020, the consequences of Zack's long con start coming home to roost.
Do you remember what March 2020 was like, Sarah?
Oh, yeah, I remember thinking my life was going to end.
Yeah.
It was chaos and despair and confusion and panic.
And that's what it's like for Mallory Horowitz, too.
Plus, she's seven months pregnant.
On top of a global pandemic and imminent childbirth,
Mallory receives an unsettling DM on Instagram.
Sarah, can you describe this account for me?
The username is at God is so fucking good.
That's nice.
Yeah.
And their profile picture is of a graphic called
What Is a Pondsy Scheme?
And their bio includes a phrase,
karma is a bitch.
Not wrong.
So I'm sensing there is a bit of hostility
coming from this account.
Yeah, it's pretty intense.
And the message that she gets is just beyond creepy.
Sarah, can you read that as well?
Yeah, it goes, hey, three exclamation points.
Oh my.
Are you all going to be at Jason Page's funeral?
Zach, Craig, and Phil, I can't wait to meet everyone.
When are you due?
Is your hubby home?
Prayers your way.
Okay, that's not what I was expecting from this karma
as a bitch account.
What the hell does this mean?
Who are these people?
Well, I'm not sure who Craig and Phil are,
but I do know the name Jason Page.
Jason is one of Zack's investors.
And just before Mallory gets this Instagram DM,
Jason is found dead in his home.
His obituary doesn't stay a cause of death,
but there's definitely been speculation around it.
In a later court declaration, Mallory suggests
that Jason may have died by suicide.
Ooh, like by suicide because of the scam?
Well, that's the implication.
And again, it's unclear, but we do know
that Jason was part
of the Vegas group with Jim. He ran a feeder fund that collected money from downstream investors.
He had two kids, and he was in deep. Zach owed his company more than $10 million.
And at this point, Mallory doesn't even know who Jason is, but when are you due and is your hubby home bits
are frightening enough?
So finally, Mallory confronts Zach.
But Sarah, what do you think Zach tells her?
I mean, a part of me thinks like this is the perfect
opportunity for him to come clean
to his extremely patient and trusting wife, but I have a feeling
he does not do that. Well, you better believe he lies through his teeth. But at least, he doesn't
admit that things aren't great. Zach tells Mallory that HBO isn't paying him, and that his investors
are sending him death threats because he can't pay them back. Okay, so for Zach, that is almost honest.
Kind of.
I guess my question here is, does Mallory buy it?
Like, she just saw an infographic on how Ponzi schemes work.
Like, isn't she just at least a little bit suspicious
of what's going on here?
Well, we can't know what Mallory is thinking or feeling
in that moment, but whatever Zach tells her, it's enough.
To her credit, she's seven months pregnant.
There's a pandemic, and the last thing she needs is more stress.
So Mallory accepts the story about HBO,
and she goes back to focusing on their growing family.
Mallory lets Zach off the hook.
As the weeks go by, the pressure on Zach gets more and more intense.
Investors are hounding him, he scrambles for excuses, and for a while, 2020 plays right
into his hands.
He tells Jim Russell, the Las Vegas investor who's the most upset about not getting paid,
quote, the world's falling apart.
It's adding another layer to the nightmare.
You know what, great job, Zach.
To use the pandemic as a cover for your illegal schemes,
it's kind of masterful, in my opinion.
Well, then, in April, Mallory gives birth to their son,
Cameron.
So just as the novelty of the pandemic wears off,
Zach has another excuse to give to his investors. New parenthood. I mean, in some ways, he has two of the pandemic wears off, Zach has another excuse to give to his investors.
New parenthood.
I mean, in some ways, he has two of the most perfect excuses.
Like, yes, there is a pandemic that's undeniable.
And yes, having a kid is pretty challenging.
Yeah.
And I mean, I'm sure Zach loves his kids.
And yes, having a newborn at home does give you an excellent explanation for being flaky.
If his communication is a little spotty,
it's because he was up all night,
changing diapers or giving bottles.
All of those things are important tasks.
But these excuses, global and personal
can only buy Zach so much time,
especially with Jim Russell sending him messages
day and night.
Jim wants documents, emails, anything to confirm the payment terms from HBO.
But Zach finds a way out of forging more documents in this case.
What he says to Jim is that his lawyers have advised him to stop forwarding emails
or sensitive info from HBO without their consent.
He says it could be considered a breach of confidentiality
and could slow down the whole process
of getting their money back.
Okay, here's my question, Sachi.
Why hasn't Jim taken Zack to court yet?
Like, what is stopping him?
It's been so long.
Honestly, I have no idea.
I feel like if I was that rich,
I would have sued this person like 10 times over,
but Zack keeps feeding him crumbs.
There's good news on the way.
He can share more soon, but not yet.
This back and forth drags on for months.
And then finally, in October 2020, Zach tells Jim he's got good news.
He has a new, final contract with HBO.
He's just waiting for HBO to execute.
Jim seems relieved. He writes to Zach,
I appreciate how hard you have worked on this. It looks like we're finally over the hill.
So at this point, we know this is not real. But what can Zach do at this point? Like,
was he actually doing anything to try and make it right and pay his investors back?
Like, also, I'm just shocked Jim believes any of this.
Yeah, I mean, I don't know what he could really do at this point.
The new contract with HBO isn't real.
But Heming and Haing over fake legal details
buys Zach a few more months.
Zach updates Jim on partial payment clauses,
escrow accounts, et cetera.
Jim's lawyers keep working on it,
and Zach keeps giving updates that make it sound like
the ball is moving forward.
But as Zach gives news of incremental progress, the pressure builds.
He just doesn't have the money.
And then in December, Jim asks to talk on the phone, like immediately.
And Zach says he's in Big Bear,
and that there's a crazy snowstorm.
He has horrible service. Could Jim just send an email?
Oh my God. You know, when people would make the phone seem like it's crackling with a piece of paper.
Yeah, they'd like crinkle a gum wrap next to him. I'm in the mountains.
Zack spends his holidays dodging phone calls and coming up with these feeble excuses.
And little does he know that Jim, though persistent,
is not actually his biggest threat.
Another investor is about to make a move.
And it sets off an absolute firestorm
at one of the companies he's been impersonating.
In late 2020, Zach gets discovered by someone at Netflix, but not in the way that up-and-coming
actors hope for.
You know what?
You saw that one?
You saw that coming.
Melinda Lemoine is in the first few weeks of a new job as director of content litigation
at Netflix when an unusual case crosses her desk.
It's a subpoena.
That's not unusual.
I mean, Melinda can handle subpoenas in her desk. It's a subpoena. That's not unusual. I mean, Melinda can handle subpoenas
in her sleep. Before Netflix, she spent 17 years rising to partner at an LA law firm,
mostly dealing with commercial litigation in the entertainment industry. She's got blue eyes,
an infectious smile, and real courtroom presence. Thanks to her time studying theater at Barnard,
her love of the arts runs deep.
So this Netflix job is pretty much perfect for her. Yeah, exactly. But this subpoena, it's weird.
It's from lawyers representing a Chicago area asset manager named Marty Kaplan.
Marty's a finance executive who invested millions in one in M.M.
Ooh! And his lawyers want documents relating to one and M.
And to Zach Horowitz.
But Sarah, those documents, they just don't exist.
They don't exist, they're not real. Nothing's real.
Nothing's real.
And when a Netflix lawyer tells them as much,
Marty's lawyers come back with something bizarre,
and it gets Melinda's full attention.
It's a contract between one in MM and Netflix,
or at least it looks like one,
because when Netflix's lawyers look into it,
no such contract exists in their system.
In fact, no one in accounts payable
has ever heard of one in MM.
Oh, and Marty's lawyers also forward the emails
between Zach Horowitz of one in MMM and Joel Goldberg,
a lawyer at Netflix.
Oh my God, fake Joel.
Okay, this is so juicy.
I know.
It's happening.
It's happening.
Alter Egos are colliding.
So Melinda hadn't been on the job that long,
so she doesn't know all of her coworkers.
But when she checks, she finds out
Joel Goldberg doesn't work for Netflix anymore.
He'd already left by the time
he was supposedly emailing with Zach.
Oh my God, is this entire scheme gonna collapse
because Joel Goldberg didn't update his LinkedIn?
This is all the faults of LinkedIn. Update your LinkedIn. Actually, don't update your LinkedIn.
Moralistry's never used LinkedIn.
One of Melinda's colleagues writes back to Marty's lawyers and they drop a huge bomb.
The documents they sent are fake and she says that the fact that they have these bogus contracts is of grave concern to Netflix.
She demands to know where they came from.
So that quote, we can understand what further actions we need to take.
And pretty soon, those further actions signal the beginning of the end for Zach's acting career.
And his finance career.
Zach Corowitz and Zach Avery are about to face
their brutal downfall.
Sarah, get your popcorn ready.
Oh, it's finally happening.
It is.
And I feel like a...
Let's get it.
It's a Friday afternoon in early February.
After months of back and forth between Netflix's lawyers and Marty Kaplan's lawyers,
Netflix is ready to mount an all-out defensive attack.
Melinda Lemoine, our hero, sends a cease and desist to Zach.
And Zach's lawyer, telling him to stop impersonating their employees
and forging emails and contracts.
The next Monday, Zach's lawyer writes back a single sentence.
Oh, Sarah, this is brutal. Are you ready?
Yeah.
This is to inform you that K and L Gates
is no longer representing one in M.M.
Oh, my god.
Zach's shit is so messy, his lawyer's like, bye.
Yeah.
It finally happened.
Zach got straight up dumped by his lawyer.
His real lawyer?
Yeah, a real person's like, no, no, no, no, no.
Zach's house of cards is seriously
on the verge of collapse.
Sarah, I feel like you know Zach pretty much as well
as anybody could.
What do you think he does next?
Okay, I have to recalibrate my mind.
Okay.
In Zach logic, he doubles down, triples down,
quadruples down, whatever it is.
He's like, no, I did nothing wrong.
Yeah, 100%.
That's exactly what he does.
He writes back to Melinda, and it's really good.
So here's what he says.
First and foremost, apologize for any delay in response
and the fact that these unfortunate allegations
are being discussed at all.
I am looking into that matter and have informed
any and all parties that may have been involved
of the situation.
Thank you.
Okay, I am looking into that matter by that he means when he fabricated all these deals, and emails, and the millions of dollars
he took from people, it's you.
It's his whole business.
This is all you.
You created these characters.
Sarah, be chill.
Everything's cool.
He's looking into it.
He's putting on the whole cool and collected act,
at least over email.
But there are signs that he's starting to grasp
how bad the situation actually is.
He and Mallory start having serious conversations
about moving.
They both agree that they don't want to raise a family in LA,
and they even take a trip to Austin
to see if it might be a better fit.
Plus, they talk about Nashville too. I love that they're trip to Austin to see if it might be a better fit.
Plus they talk about Nashville too.
I love that they're like,
we can't have a baby here in this city.
Yeah, these people are gonna influence our kids.
We can't raise children in the city, guys.
It's so unethical.
It's so, who knows, he's gonna influence them.
And we don't know how sincere he is
about not wanting to raise a family in LA,
but he does seem pretty fucking serious
about getting the hell out.
He and Mallory actually put their house up for sale.
The asking price for the house is $6.5 million.
And with HBO and Netflix still holding out on Zach,
they need that money.
The house he bought with nothing.
This is the house that nothing built.
Zach hopes that he can leave LA quietly
and maybe some of his problems behind,
but his investors are sick of being jerked around.
They're starting to take action
and the consequences are about to escalate
from strongly worded emails to a whole lot more.
So in February of 2021,
Zach is facing fire from all sides.
There's Jim Russell from Las Vegas
who's texting him on the daily.
There's Marty Kaplan from Chicago
who is triggered alarms and Netflix
about Zach's phony contracts.
And now another battlefront opens up.
Scott Cohen, a businessman in Irvine, California
who's $15 million deep in the scam.
Scott is in his 50s, and he's the father
of six-year-old twin boys.
Apart from investing in movie deals and real estate,
he runs a coffee company.
And they have carts on college campuses,
but with the pandemic, the coffee car business is struggling.
Zach has been stalling Scott, just like the others, with excuses about payment delays and
delivery structuring and corporate mergers and all this red tape. And at this point, Scott is at
his wit's end. He's been waiting 13 months without seeing a single dime from Zach.
Again, I am just impressed that Zach's been able to bullshit all these guys for so long.
Like, we're talking over a year with zero payments.
Yeah.
And it's not just about Scott, because Scott recruited some of his friends to invest too.
In all, he's got a group of 35 investors who want to know what the fuck is going on.
He suspects that something sketchy is happening with Zach.
So Scott does something quite drastic.
He sends an email to the Securities and Exchange Commission
and he writes,
people are beyond the point of me managing them
and they are really in need of answers.
Scott just doesn't see another way
and he's about to bring the full force
of the US government down on Zack's head.
Things are going from really bad to unfathomably worse.
So, 2,000 miles across the country in Chicago,
Jake Wonderland has been struggling
to manage his own downstream investors.
All those people he recruited to give money to one in M.M.
Do you remember Jake?
Yeah, he was Zach's friend from college.
He went to go visit him and was his first investor.
So like a totally normal guy who worked in finance.
Yeah.
And Zach made Jake a lot of money.
Yeah, he quit his day job to focus on one in M.M. right?
Yeah, he did.
And so Jake and a few of his Chicago finance bro friends, they formed an entire company
just to pull money to invest in one in M.M.
Oh, they raised tens of millions of dollars.
And the investors they found weren't like all high-flying finance types, they weren't
super rich, they convinced their friends and family
that this was a sure bet.
So people handed over life savings and retirement funds,
everything they had.
Oh my God.
And I mean, they did because Jake saw returns.
Yeah, he did.
But now, Jake and his partners are struggling
to answer questions about what happened to that money.
They've been stalling, passing on explanations from Zach
and emails from Netflix.
They're providing constant updates
and promising them that things will work out.
Yikes.
They keep telling them they're going to get their money back.
But by the end of February, Jake and his buds
are at the end of their rope.
It really starts to sink in.
They know that they've been conned.
I guess at this point, I'm wondering,
like, did they just realize this?
Or was it something they kind of inherently knew
this, like, for a while at this point?
Because things weren't adding up for, like, what, the last year?
Yeah, I mean, I don't know when Jake realized it,
but I do kind of understand why it took him so
long to get there. I mean, Zach was one of Jake's oldest friends. You know, they went to each other's
weddings, they've been doing business together for more than seven years, and Zach had made Jake
a ton of money. Yeah, it wasn't like he didn't see returns. So I'm sure it was really hard to wrap his
head around the idea that his old friend was like a straight-up liar.
And also, like, Jake was in finance.
So admitting that you got snowed and by one of the oldest finance cons in the book, I wouldn't
want to say that out loud.
Yeah, and then there's all the friends and family who took him at his word and who trusted
him with their life savings because he trusted Zach.
Ooh, that's a big one.
So for Jake, to admit that he was being conned,
he also has to admit that he was a part of the con.
So on top of breaking the trust of everybody he knows,
he knows that people are gonna sue his ass off.
Yeah, I mean, Jake's gotta be in a dark place
at this point.
Oh, he is.
But get this.
The minute Jake and his partners ask their lawyers to investigate one in MM, it takes
them a singular calendar day to figure out that Zach has been running a Ponzi scheme.
Oh, that can't feel good.
One day.
Do you feel bad for Jake?
Yeah, I think I do, because that's a betrayal
on so many levels, right?
His friend betrayed him, and then his friend also used him
as like a tool to fuck with other people.
That can't feel good.
And I do get it.
It's like how would he know if he's getting returns?
It seems like Zach was really strategic
about who he sent money to and who he didn't.
I do feel the exact same way. I think there were a lot of points where Jake could have seen like,
this is a bit weird. He could have looked into it, especially because Zach's career never popped
off. Yeah, but I do feel so bad for him. I mean, he got flost and he ended up flossing a bunch of
very innocent people as well. So, well, no matter what, Jake realizes he has to tell his investors.
On March 1st, Jake and his partners send an absolutely wrenching email.
I cannot imagine.
Like, I write for a living.
I have no idea where I would begin in writing an email like this.
But here's what they say.
Very recently, as part of our ongoing efforts to address one in M.M.'s non-payment, we learned
information that leads us to believe one in M.M. deceived and defrauded its investors.
This development is obviously very serious and deeply troubling.
The email continues, we are extremely distressed as we expect you will be too.
Yeah, I honestly do not envy Jake in this position at all.
Like, what are you even supposed to say?
There's no good way to say it.
No, thoughts and prayers.
Thoughts and prayers.
Well, Jake is absolutely reeling from having to let his friends and family know
that all of their savings have disappeared.
He gets another email and it's from Zach.
Sarah, can you read a quote from it?
Yeah.
One in MM is not in a position to cover the full cost of litigation, so options on the
table are sharing the financial burden with investors.
Is he saying what I think he's saying?
Yeah, man.
Zach is asking him for more money to sue Netflix and HBO for non-payment.
No.
Yes.
Jake reads the email again and again.
And finally, in disgust, he hits the forward button.
Because at this point, Jake has finally, finally,
given up on his friend.
And he's about to turn to the highest authority
yet to bring Zach to justice.
He sends Zach's email to the FBI.
Oh my god.
I feel like a...
It's April 6, 2021. The day the FBI raids Zach and Mallory's house at 6am.
Yeah, I remember when he first told me the story, I didn't know how to feel, but now I'm
kind of relieved and also shocked that it took this long.
Well, all of the lives have finally caught up to Zach.
The FBI dragged the entire horror with its clan out of bed and changed their lives forever.
They searched the house for evidence.
They handcuffed Zach and hold him in the backyard for an hour.
Then, they lead him away as Mallory and the kids watch it all
confused and entiers.
Okay, that's really crazy.
Like, these people are innocent as far as we know.
They have no idea what's going on.
They're children involved.
And I'm wondering, does the FBI actually find any money?
Like, did Zach have some of his cash stored in floorboards
or in some of those toilets they weren't using?
Oh, Sarah, I have some news for you.
Oh God.
If you had to guess how much money do you think he had,
like liquid
in his personal bank account, let's say? Honestly, he at one point boasted $40 million. So
like, after all this, there has to be at least like hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Uh, well, at this point, he has about $3,000 in his personal bank account. No, he doesn't. Yeah. And his one in M.M. accounts have less than $4,000.
Oh my God.
That is nothing.
He didn't even take cash out and hide it like other,
you know, this is not like a narco situation.
Like there's no money.
Ooh.
But I have even worse news.
No.
It's really bad for Mallory.
Yikes.
Their house was sold and it's an escrow.
So their assets are now frozen.
Mallory doesn't even have a car.
And she can only access one checking account
that doesn't have Zach's name attached.
Are you ready to hear how much is in that account?
No.
I'm gonna tell you anyway.
In that account, she has just $100 and 75 cents.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
And she used to work.
Like, she did have her own money at some point.
Yeah.
And now she only has $100 and 75 cents.
Like, what happens to her now?
Luckily, Zach's family lives nearby.
Zack's mom and sister and brother-in-law came to the house
to be with her and the kids.
And then she goes to stay at Zack's mom's condo the next day.
And that is where she starts piecing everything together.
So this is when she ends up finding out her entire life
for the last 10 years has basically been alive.
Yep. The SEC tells her that he's accused of running a Ponzi scheme, and that the movie
deals were never real, that he never actually worked with Netflix, or with HBO, or with
Howard Chalz.
Oh my God.
She starts to think about all of the stalling, the excuses, all of the lies that span the
past decade.
She combs through her memory, trying to determine what was real and what wasn't.
And now she just feels sick.
After Zach's arrest, Mallory also starts getting threatening text messages from numbers
she doesn't recognize.
Oh, God.
One of them says, don't let that scum take you on the run and destroy Jackson
Cam even more than he already has. That is scary. Like this person knows her kids' names and is
using like these nicknames. Yeah, it's pretty. It's pretty bad. The next one goes right to the point.
It just says, you're next. That's so cruel. And I do understand being someone who was victimized by Zach and thinking,
like, yeah, his wife obviously knew how could she know that she was sleeping beside a
total stranger. But it's so crazy. Like, you don't send that to someone.
Well, naturally, Mallory is now ready to leave town. Zach is in prison for two and a half weeks
before posting a $1 million bond.
When he gets out, Mallory makes him stay at an Airbnb.
He watches her pack all her things and boxes
and ship them to Indiana.
And on May 1st, he drives Mallory and their kids
to the airport.
They fly to Indiana to move in with Mallory's parents.
A month later, Mallory files for divorce.
In the court papers, she says Zach has been deceiving
and manipulating her and everyone around him.
He is not the person I believed he was, she says.
Their whole life together was a lie and act.
And it's now come to a bitter end.
Oof.
We're going to Fast War at a few months, Sarah,
to October 2021.
Mm-hmm.
Zach is in court.
He pleads guilty to one count of securities fraud.
And according to reports,
he's actually soft, spoken, and cooperative.
Wow, turns out Zach knew how to act this whole time.
Well, four months later, Zach is in court again.
It's the big moment so many people have been waiting for.
He's finally going to be sentenced for his crimes.
Zach stands before the judge in a sharp blue suit
and a black mask covering his face.
His lawyers argue that, yes, he made mistakes,
but he shouldn't have to miss watching his kids grow up.
They also ask the judge to consider his mental health and addiction issues.
Oh, yeah, because he and Mallory fought about his like drinking and
aterol and Xanax habits.
But yeah, I mean, that usually doesn't lead people into, you know,
security giant Ponzi scheme.
Yeah, it's a rarity.
According to court documents,
Zach is now in a recovery program.
But some of Zach's victims speak in court.
One of them is Scott Cohen,
the guy who reported Zach to the SEC.
Sarah, can you sum up some of his testimony?
Yeah, Scott says he had to file for bankruptcy.
He's struggling to support his two young sons.
He's on food stamps. He lost
everything to Zach, and his other business was shut down due to the pandemic. He says Zach's
just another Bernie made off. Oh, that is dark. I mean, is he wrong? He's not wrong. Like, he lost
everything he built because of Zach. Well, the prosecutor actually reads out a couple victim impact statements
and all of them are so heartbreaking
because everyone just lost everything they had.
The last victim statement is from a 64 year old
who lost 1.4 million.
Can you read that one too?
Ooh, sure.
They wrote,
I've had to return to work to afford food and shelter.
I will never be able to earn that amount of money back by working.
Part of that money was an inheritance from my mother's passing.
I am emotionally distraught.
I cry every day and have stopped seeing friends or family
because of the shame of this financial loss
and have now severe distrust of other human beings.
If it was not for my spiritual beliefs,
I would have committed suicide.
It's awful.
Literally all of it is awful.
I can't read any more of these.
This is so messed up and that's like,
a lot of the focus initially is of course
on the people who are investing millions and millions
of dollars into this.
But for a regular person to lose all this money, that is...
It almost seems like he didn't even think about the fact that he was like taking people's
retirement funds and the money that they would use to take care of themselves and their
children.
No, it's so brutal.
Yeah, it is.
Well, in the end, the Judge Order's Act to pay $230 million in restitution to more than 250
victims.
Prosecutors call the Ponzi scheme a crime of staggering magnitude.
Zach turns to the judge in tears.
I hope you consider the whole man, not just the atrocious decisions that got me here.
I lost my way.
Understatement of the year, you lost your way. You engineered this.
Zach Horowitz is sentenced to 20 years in prison for running a $650 million Ponzi scheme.
Oh my God. I mean, I'm what about Zach Avery? Oh, well, you know, they say there's no such thing
as bad press, and he's certainly getting the fame
he always craved, but it's just too bad.
It's for running the biggest Ponzi scheme
in Hollywood history.
[♪ music playing in background, playing in background,
playing in background, playing in background,
Sarah, you know what time it is?
It is time for our Zach Avery movie marathon.
No, it isn't.
I keep telling you, I'm not doing that with you.
All right, well, you will watch one of his movies.
I promise you that.
It is time to run this whole thing
through our scam influencer index.
So for people playing along at home,
our index is based on both scam and influence.
So that means the size and complexity of the scam
and the influencer reach.
Oh, I like this game, even though there's no real way to win.
So on a scale of one to a hundred,
where do you feel like Zach falls on our index?
So one is like a drooling baby could do it
and a hundred is like the smartest,
super villain in the world could only pull this off.
You know what, Zach, as embarrassing and corny
and like stupid to us as he is,
he did manage to somewhat pull off
the largest Ponzi scheme in Hollywood history that we know of.
And we're talking about an industry that is rife with scams
and he was able to get hundreds of millions
of dollars from people.
So based on that alone, as far as the scam goes,
I'm giving it a 90.
I was gonna actually say the exact same thing.
I am curious though what you think about influence.
Like, you know, his movies never really popped off
nor did his acting career.
I mean, the funny thing is, is that he did all this work to be a famous actor and no
one even knew he was one.
Like everyone just thought he was a business guy.
Yeah, he never got anything based on his own skills or talent.
Yeah.
I mean, he never auditioned and they were like, we want you.
It was because he invested in something or he knew someone. And even in being like a super rich person,
he still couldn't find a way to buy a role
in a movie that didn't suck.
Yeah, Nora was he even able to improve
on his acting skills.
Like we saw that review where they were like,
he's like a black hole in this movie
or whatever.
The personality vacuum.
Yeah, I mean, for influence,
I'd probably give it like a 40.
Yeah, because he was clearly good enough to convince other people to keep giving him
money, but he didn't convince anybody that he was talented.
Exactly, and I feel like that's kind of the thing that he could never do.
As much money as he got from people, he could never truly convince anyone that he had
any sincere skills.
Well, we're gonna cover a whole lot more scams in future episodes about people who are not at all who they seem.
And until then, always, always, always keep your own checking account.
And if a billionaire emails you, no, he didn't. He did not email you. No.
No, we didn't. He didn't.
He did not know you.
No.
Hey, prime members, you can listen to ScanFluencers, AddFree on Amazon Music.
Download the Amazon Music app today, or you can listen AddFree with Wondery Plus and Apple
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Before you go, tell us about yourself by completing a short survey at Wondery.com slash
survey.
This is episode three of our three part series, the Hollywood Ponzi scheme.
I'm Sachi Cole and I'm Sarah Haggi.
We use many sources in our research.
A couple that were really helpful
were Michael Finnegan's LA Times article
and Nathan Vardy's Forbes magazine story
and just a quick note about our scenes.
In most cases, we can't know exactly what took place,
but everything in our show is grounded in research.
Susie Armitage wrote this episode,
additional writing by us,
Sachi Cole and Sarah Haggy.
Jen Swan is our senior producer.
Brian Taylor White is our producer.
Charlotte Miller is our associate producer.
Sarah Enny is our story editor. Our senior story editor is Rachel B. Doyle. Our
audio engineer is Sergio Enriquez. Adrian Tepia provided audio assistance. Our
sound design is by James Morgan. Our executive producers are Janine Cornelow,
Stephanie Gens, and Marshall Luey. For Wundery.