Scamfluencers - Guo Wengui: The Temu Trump | 169
Episode Date: July 28, 2025Guo Wengui was a billionaire real estate mogul in China, but when the government cracks down on his empire, he flees to the U.S. From a Manhattan apartment and a luxury superyacht, Guo public...ly decries corruption in the CCP, which earns him devoted friends in the MAGA movement. But behind the scenes, Guo’s media company, crypto venture, fashion line, and fledgling rap career are all masking the fact that he’s ripping off his loyal followers for hundreds of millions. In the end, a disillusioned follower finds the bravery to hold Guo accountable and expose his global grift.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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Hey, Scamfluencers fans, Sarah here.
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universe of scammers that kind of pop in and out of various stories?
Yes, I do.
I feel like it's like the Simpsons extended universe.
Yes.
Where like the same general figures pop up, people are weirdly related to each other,
a lot of the same voices.
It's like the scammer cinematic universe.
Like there's just some people who are always in proximity
to something insane.
Eric Adams, our next mayor. Don't forget.
Oh, gosh.
Well, today I'm gonna tell you about a scammer
who's connected to two scammers we've covered,
Jolo and Proz, and much like those two, the MAGA web connects them all.
It's 2017 and Ya Li is sitting on her couch in Australia watching a news program.
Li is a petite, soft-spoken accountant who moved from China to Australia for university.
She stayed, got married, and had a daughter.
But she still has friends in China
and wants to keep up with Chinese politics.
Today, Li is watching an interview on Voice of America,
an international broadcasting service
funded by the US government.
The guest is Guo Wing-Gui,
a Chinese billionaire real estate mogul.
He fled the country in 2014 and is now blowing the whistle on corruption inside the Chinese Communist Party, or CCP.
Li saw ads for the program while researching CCP corruption and was intrigued.
She turns up the volume to hear Guo's explosive claims.
Guo is in his mid-40s with buzzed hair,
and he's dressed in traditional Chinese robes.
He looks serious and composed.
Guo accuses top CCP officials of staggering corruption.
He describes how the party spies on its own citizens,
and most shockingly, he claims that ultra-wealthy elites,
like himself,
secretly fund China's national security operations.
There have been rumors about this for years,
but no one has ever dared to confirm it publicly until now.
Li has always wanted China to be a democracy,
and as she watches Guo, she thinks,
this guy might actually be able to make a difference.
Then, an hour and 19 minutes into the live interview,
the feed cuts out.
Later, Lee learns the CCP demanded the broadcast
be shut down.
The fact that the CCP is trying to silence Guo
only makes Lee want to hear more.
If they're scared of what he's saying,
then it must be true, right?
This is very Streisand effect, you know?
They're making him even bigger.
Yeah, I mean, of course.
Silencing someone is just like the worst thing you could do
because it will justify anything they're saying.
It's gonna backfire.
Well, Lee starts following Guo on Twitter and YouTube
and watching the rambling monologues he posts every day.
And she's inspired.
She feels called to help Guo
and fight alongside him for the truth.
But what Lee doesn't realize
is the man she's putting her faith in
isn't speaking out against a corrupt regime,
he's building one of his own.
A scheme that involves shadowy nonprofits,
shady crypto deals, and
puts him in league with Steve Bannon.
And soon, Guo's crusade for the truth will turn into a multi-million dollar scam with
a mega megaphone behind it.
If you're overwhelmed by the news cycle, let us help you with that.
I'm Cormac McSweeney. I'm Gurdip Alawalia. And I'm Melanie Ng. If you're overwhelmed by the news cycle, let us help you with that.
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and I'm the host of Wondery's podcast, The Big Flop.
Each episode, comedians join me to chronicle
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who thought this was a good idea? Follow The Big Flop wherever you get your podcasts. biggest pop culture fails of all time and try to answer the age-old question,
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From Wondery, I'm Sarah Haggi.
And I'm Saatchi Cole.
And this is Scamfluencers.
I won't ever learn my lesson, turn my speakers to 11. I feel like a legend.
Guo Wing-Wei is full of contradictions.
He's a billionaire, a whistleblower, a MAGA superfan,
a crypto scammer, and an aspiring pop star.
But his story isn't just a tale of greed and reinvention.
It's also about how a man wanted by an entire government
managed to build a scam empire from a Manhattan penthouse.
One that fleeced his own supporters, laundered millions of dollars,
and pulled in some of the most powerful voices on the American far right.
This is Guo Wen Gui, the Ti Mu Trump.
Long before Guo was a dissident railing against the system, he was a real estate mogul taking
full advantage of it.
It's 2006, a decade before his Voice of America debut, and Guo is pacing back and forth in
his sleek Beijing office.
Think marble floors and full floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the city's skyline.
He's in his mid-30s and already firmly embedded in China's elite.
We don't know much about how Guo got here.
According to The New Yorker, he grew up poor and did a brief stint in prison as a young man, likely for fraud.
But rather than being a setback, prison was a networking opportunity.
Guo met someone who hooked him up with a real estate gig when he got out.
And soon, he was rising in the developer ranks and collecting powerful friends.
Sarah, you and I don't believe in prison.
No, as we've said and as people do not like when we say.
But part of why we don't believe in it is because it doesn't actually work.
I think this is one of those examples of someone who was like lightly doing crime before and then was
incarcerated and then like really learned how to do it. Yeah, I mean put a bunch of people doing
crime together and someone's gonna learn something, right? Listen, teachers teach. Well, today,
Guo is examining blueprints for his latest project.
It's a flashy skyscraper called Penghu Plaza
that he wants done ASAP.
But a stubborn vice mayor is denying his permit.
So Guo picks up the phone and calls in a favor
from one of his most formidable friends, Ma Jian.
Ma just so happens to be a top official
in China's Ministry of State Security,
so he has dirt on everybody, including this vice mayor.
Specifically, Ma has a sex tape of this guy
with his mistress.
Guo reportedly uses it to get the vice mayor
thrown into prison.
He's accused of corruption
and of leading a, quote, decadent lifestyle.
And with the vice mayor gone, Guo is able to get his permit.
OK, being accused of leading a decadent lifestyle is so metal.
Yes, I'm curious as to what counts as decadent, but that's a whole other can of worms.
That's enough. That's a whole episode.
Well, thanks to connections like Ma,
Guo's empire just keeps expanding.
He acquires a large stake in a brokerage firm
and gets into the securities industry.
He moves with his wife and their two children
into a sprawling lakeside mansion in Beijing,
estimated to be worth $230 million.
He has an entire closet just for his hundreds of expensive custom Brioni suits.
By 2014, eight years after his dust-up with the Vice Mayor,
Guo is worth an estimated $2.3 billion,
making him one of the richest people in all of China.
He is thriving in the system.
And that's why what happens next stings so much.
In late 2014, Guo calls out another rival for corruption.
But this time, the fallout gets messy.
The guy tries to flee arrest,
reportedly still in his pajamas,
and a Chinese journalist witnesses the whole scene.
Soon, reporters are sniffing around Guo's operation,
and they find a lot.
Enough for Chinese authorities to start digging
into his relationship with Ma Jian.
The government tolerated Guo's ruthless ways
as long as he was useful to them.
But as soon as his business feuds spilled into public view,
he became a liability.
In January 2015, Guo gets a phone call.
It's Ma's senior aide who frantically informs Guo
that authorities are at Ma's office arresting him right now.
Guo knows this means he's next.
So he books it out of Beijing and flies to Hong Kong,
London, and finally to New York.
He leaves everything behind, including his family.
I love how men will abandon their families.
And that they can.
I love that that's an option for them.
And it's always understood.
It's like, yeah, of course he had to.
He left them to protect them, right?
Of course. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I got it. I saw taken.
Well, from afar, Guo watches his life in China unravel.
Many of his assets are seized or frozen.
His relatives and employees are detained for questioning about him.
And the CCP, which normally censors the news,
allows Chinese newspapers to report on how Guo and Ma blackmailed their rivals
and spied on their enemies.
Guo publicly denies everything, even though it's true.
The same system that made him rich is now bent on destroying him.
But from the safety of Manhattan, Guo makes a decision.
If the CCP wants to cast him as their villain,
then he'll become a worthy nemesis.
He's going to rebrand himself and go from disgraced insider
to fearless whistleblower.
It's January 2017, about two years since Guo fled China.
He could have operated in the shadows while in exile, It's January 2017, about two years since Guo fled China.
He could have operated in the shadows while in exile, but he's not willing to be quietly rich.
Instead, Guo has gotten himself
a $68 million penthouse in New York,
a $37 million yacht,
and the ultimate symbol of proximity to power,
a membership at Mar-a-Lago.
Trump has just been inaugurated,
and Washington is buzzing with anti-China rhetoric.
Guo sees an opportunity to cozy up to a new government
that can protect him against his old one,
and he decides to do something unprecedented.
He's going to speak out against China's oppressive regime,
and he knows just how to do it by starting a YouTube channel.
I mean, I guess I've heard worse ideas, but I'm...
Yeah, I'm a little worried about where this is gonna go.
It's him being like, what's up, guys?
Welcome back to my channel.
Today, we're gonna talk about the definition of fascism.
Well, Guo's earliest videos are no longer on YouTube, but from later reporting,
we know that Guo pitches himself in the videos as an insider turned whistleblower,
someone who's seen the rot inside the CCP firsthand and is ready to expose it.
He basically offers himself up on a silver platter as an ally to people like Trump, who
want to take China down a peg.
He tells his followers that he's quote, from the grassroots, born as a farmer and not afraid
of death.
In the process, Guo gets to rewrite his own origin story and two competing narratives
emerge.
According to Guo, he's always been a heroic dissident.
He says his time in prison as a young man
was for supporting the Tiananmen Square protests.
He claims the police shot and killed his brother
during his arrest and that he's been plotting
to take down the CCP ever since.
But according to the Chinese government,
Guo was imprisoned for his involvement in an oil scam.
We have no way of knowing the truth.
Both sides have incentives to lie.
And the very nature of the CCP's censorship casts doubt over any records they share, which
makes it very easy for Guo to play the victim.
For his fans online, Guo's new narrative makes him a hero.
He quickly gains hundreds of thousands of followers
on Twitter and YouTube, including Western journalists
and even some people in Washington.
By April 2017, Guo's efforts to build up his profile
culminate in his Voice of America interview,
the one Ya Li watched.
It's a big moment.
Guo accuses China's anti-corruption czar of actually being corrupt himself.
And even though the feed gets cut, the damage has been done.
Guo has poked the bear.
But now, the bear is about to come for him, all the way from Beijing,
and right into his Manhattan penthouse.
to his Manhattan penthouse.
The CCP strikes back the very same day the Voice of America interview airs.
At China's request, Interpol issues a red notice
calling for Guo's detention pending extradition
on charges including corruption, bribery, fraud,
money laundering, and even kidnapping and rape.
They release a taped confession
from Guo's old spymaster friend Ma,
who says he took nearly $9 million in bribes
to move Guo's projects along.
And Chinese media starts reporting
about potential scams Guo ran back in Beijing,
like getting a fraudulent $466 million loan
from a state-owned bank
and illegally transferring nearly $300 million of client funds out of his securities firm.
And then, as if the message wasn't clear enough,
four Chinese officials show up at Guo's New York penthouse.
They make Guo an offer.
Come home quietly, and in return, the government will leave his family alone and unfreeze his
assets.
They've even brought Guo a present of sorts.
His wife and daughter.
Oh, that sounds… ominous.
And like they have been kidnapped, perhaps.
Yeah, exactly.
While Guo is thankful to have some of his family back, he knows it's actually more of a threat than a peace offering.
He refuses to cave to their demands,
and in September 2017, he files for political asylum.
He's cutting ties with China for good,
and he's ready to ally himself with people
who hate the Chinese government as much as he does.
The Trump White House.
the Chinese government as much as he does. The Trump White House.
A month later, Steve Bannon, yes, that Steve Bannon,
sits down for lunch with Guo in a hotel suite
in Washington, D.C.
Think paisley headboards, crisp white linens,
and soft cream walls.
Basically the opposite of Steve's vibe.
Even in this fancy setting, Steve shows up soft cream walls. Basically the opposite of Steve's vibe.
Even in this fancy setting, Steve shows up looking like he just crawled out of a basement
lined with conspiracy theory cork boards.
Which honestly probably isn't that far off.
Steve is in a bit of a sticky situation at the moment.
He was recently fired from his job at the White House for contradicting the president.
Plus, the mega-rich family bankrolling his podcast and other media projects are cutting off his funding.
Steve needs cash.
But that's not the only reason why he wants to meet Guo.
When Steve was still in the White House, a number of big names tried to get Guo deported,
including scamfluencer stars Joe Lowe and Prasse Michelle.
But Steve knew Guo could be a valuable asset against the CCP.
For years, Steve has been obsessed with the idea of taking down China, and he's
practically salivating at the prospect of working with Guo, a real Chinese
insider willing to give him all the gossip.
He's even got a tagline ready to market Guo to his audience.
The Donald Trump of Beijing.
Um, well, that makes me sick.
And what I love about the story is how I hate everybody.
Yeah, you can freely hate everyone mentioned thus far.
No one to root for.
Well, Steve was already inclined to like Guo.
But during this lunch, he kind of falls in love.
The two men talk for six hours about everything from China's debt crisis to its military
capabilities to the CCP's corruption.
They're both bombastic, conspiracy-minded, and they love painting themselves as underdogs locked in an existential
battle against dark forces.
Using Steve's influence on the American right and Guo's insider gossip and cash, they vowed
to bring about the demise of the CCP together.
Um, this is two dumb bitches nodding to each other and saying, exactly.
Yes, absolutely.
And it's also just like, you guys are on a date.
They're dating.
Yeah, there's no one gayer than two straight men in politics.
Exactly.
Well, after that lunch, Guo and Steve are basically best friends.
They start popping up on each other's podcasts and online videos,
ranting about the CCP and weaving wilder and wilder conspiracy theories.
They hang out in Guo's penthouse, they party on his yacht, and the following year, they create the Rule of Law Society,
a nonprofit with the mission of gathering evidence against Chinese officials.
It's unclear who suggested the idea for the nonprofit first
or if the idea was a shared fever dream.
But Guo pledges to put $100 million
of his own money into the effort.
He also promises to match small donors' contributions
two to one.
Steve becomes chairman with a $1 million consulting fee
courtesy of Guo.
Of course, Steve gets his payday, but Guo's donation pledge?
It never seems to come through.
Instead, Guo seems to use the fund mainly as a way to amass followers, ones who might
want to invest in future money-making opportunities with him.
Steve thinks he's found the perfect partner,
a fellow outsider who's ready to tear down the system
and isn't afraid to get his hands dirty.
And he's right, because like Steve,
Guo has built an audience of people
who trust and believe in him.
And even if they can't take down the CCP,
they've got the next best thing,
an army of perfect suckers clamoring
to line both of their pockets.
How hard is it to kill a planet?
Maybe all it takes is a little drilling, some mining,
and a whole lot of carbon pumped into the atmosphere.
When you see what's left,
it starts to look like a crime scene. Are we really safe? Is our water safe? You destroyed our
town. And crimes like that, they don't just happen. We call things accidents.
There is no accident. This was 100% preventable. They're the result of
choices by people. Ruthless oil tycoons, corrupt politicians, even organized crime.
These are the stories we need to be telling about our changing planet.
Stories of scams, murders, and cover-ups that are about us and the things we're doing to
either protect the Earth or destroy it.
Follow Lawless Planet on the Wondry app or wherever you get your podcasts.
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and ad free right now by joining Wondry Plus
in the Wondry app, Apple podcasts or Spotify.
We acting bad, bad, bad, bad.
We ain't trying to hurt nobody.
For decades, he was untouchable.
I've gone from Harlem to Hollywood.
But now it's all coming undone Sean combs the mogul as we know
it is over he will never be that person again even if he's
found not guilty of these charges.
I'm Jesse Weber host of law and crimes the rise and fall of
Diddy the federal trial a front row seat to the biggest trial
in entertainment history. sex trafficking racketeering prostitution allegations by
federal prosecutors that span decades and witnesses were
finally speaking out.
The spotlight is harsher the stakes are higher and for did
there may be no second chances you can listen to the rise and
fall of did the federal trial exclusively with one 3 plus
joined one 3 plus in the one 3 app spotify or Apple podcast
right now.
It's 2018 and 10 be out is at home in New Jersey when he gets
served with a defamation lawsuit.
Ting is in his 40s with thin rectangular glasses and a resting serious face.
He's a Chinese dissident who fled his home country in 2014 and is now a visiting scholar at NYU.
But he isn't being sued by anyone in the CCP, he's being sued by Guo.
Ting knows why Guo is coming after him.
Guo has built a sizable following with Chinese expats,
but Ting isn't one of them.
In fact, the year before he published a bombshell report
about the real Guo.
He dug into Guo's past in Beijing,
detailing the schemes and shady dealings
that made him rich in the first place.
Then he went after Guo's so-called whistleblowing, arguing that his allegations of CCP corruption
were, at best, exaggerations, and at worst, total fabrications.
Tang pointed out Guo's pattern of narcissism, sensationalism, and authoritarianism.
And he didn't shy away from mentioning
the serious rape accusations Guo's faced,
which Guo has consistently dismissed and denied.
We should note that Ting himself has publicly apologized
for an alleged attempted assault that took place
before his report was published.
Ting also hit at the heart of Guo's whole persona, questioning if Guo was even a real
dissident.
Ting pointed out that while Guo loved ranting about corrupt officials, he was conspicuously
soft on Chinese President Xi Jinping, the literal head of the CCP.
Guo often praised Xi and once wrote a fawning letter to party leaders after they visited
him in New York, offering to use his, quote, influence and resources to support Xi's agenda.
Ting came to the conclusion that Guo was nothing but a liar out for his own gain.
Can you read what Ting later told the New York Times about Guo? He said, quote,
This is like a scamfluencer's manifesto.
This is the thesis statement of the scamfluencer.
Yes, that is exactly it. He's saying this guy's a scammer
and he just wants money from people, which, sure.
Guo's defamation case against Ting
gets dismissed pretty quickly.
The whole saga leaves Ting even more committed
to speaking out against Guo.
But as Guo's scam empire expands,
it's gonna take more than one critic to bring him down.
Empire expands, it's gonna take more than one critic to bring him down.
It's June 2020, three years after Guo and Steve first met.
Today, they're on the deck of Guo's yacht, standing in front of the Statue of Liberty. They're flanked by blue flags they've designed themselves.
It's an appropriately theatrical backdrop
for the big announcement they're about to make
on a live stream, a self-proclaimed new Chinese government.
It's called the new federal state of China,
and Guo and Steve claim it's destined to overthrow the CCP.
Here is a screenshot, Sachi.
All right, well, it's these two idiots on a boat.
Um, Gwo is in a suit and Steve Bannon looks like he's going to a fishing conference.
Uh, and they are standing in front of the Statue of Liberty.
This is stupid, and I hate it.
Yeah, I mean, didn't she say, bring me your hungry or tired all that?
She doesn't want this. She wants to be left alone.
She does not want this. They are not hungry. They are not tired. They are not huddled masses. They're on a yacht. Well,
Guo chants, take down the CCP in Mandarin, while Steve looks slightly stiff and awkward,
seemingly not understanding what Guo's saying. Eventually, Guo switches over to English. Then
Steve joins in a bit late. At the end of their grand declaration, Guo switches over to English. Then Steve joins in a bit late.
At the end of their grand declaration, Guo actually signs their founding document in
his own blood.
Steve, apparently not quite as much of a diehard, politely declines that part.
All of this spectacle fires up the people watching at home.
But it's just the tip of the iceberg because behind the scenes,
Guo and Steve have been laying the groundwork
for something much bigger and shadier.
Just two months earlier, they launched another venture,
a video streaming news company called GTV.
Guo says that GTV can use cutting-edge Israeli technology
to bypass China's sensors and
give Chinese citizens access to outside information.
GTV quickly becomes a platform for Steve's War Room podcast, and of course, Guo becomes
a frequent guest.
But GTV isn't just a media project, it's also a massive investment scheme. Guo targets Chinese expats and dissidents worldwide who want democracy in China.
And, supposedly as a way to raise funds for this movement, he sells them unregistered
stock offerings in the company.
Which is completely illegal.
But don't worry, he explicitly promises investors, quote, I will not let you lose any money, which is also illegal.
And this isn't the only outlandish promise he makes.
He also claims that if his fans donate to his movement,
they will definitely be approved for asylum in the US.
So all of this stock offering stuff is super illegal.
The promises are illegal.
But promising that in exchange for money,
you will get asylum approval is bullshit
and also fundamentally at odds
with how immigration is supposed to work here.
Yeah, I mean, it's a fantasy that's too good to resist.
More than 5,500 people invest in shares of GTV,
raising over $450 million for the company.
To be clear, that's roughly $82,000 worth of stock
per person that goes fleecing.
People aren't just thinking this is a fun investment,
they're pouring in their life savings.
But Guo doesn't invest this money into GTV as promised.
Just days after closing the stock offering,
he takes $100 million of it
and invests in a high-risk hedge fund instead.
Guo may have lost his place in Beijing,
but in exile, he's building a new kind of empire.
It's a pyramid scheme disguised as a movement,
and it's funded entirely by the dreams
and the life savings of the very people
he's claiming he will save.
It's August 2020,
just a couple of months after the big announcement.
Guo and Steve are off doing their own things.
Guo is probably in his Manhattan penthouse,
while Steve's actually using Guo's yacht
for a little R&R.
But then, Guo hears the news.
Steve Bannon was arrested off the coast of Connecticut
on this $28 million luxury yacht
owned by an exiled Chinese billionaire.
That was ABC News' David Muir breaking the story
that the Manhattan DA is charging Steve
with defrauding hundreds of thousands of donors
in his 2019 campaign to build a wall
along the U.S.-Mexico border.
You might think that watching his bestie get arrested
would scare Guo straight.
But if anything, it does the opposite.
In the days that follow, Guo doubles down.
He posts a triumphant video on social media
claiming that GTV has a $2 billion market value.
The Department of Justice later claims that Guo is lying and that the company has no real
revenue.
Around the same time, Guo decides to get into a new scam-prone industry, crypto.
Guo creates his own cryptocurrency exchange.
He claims it's all backed by 20% gold, although he never proves this.
And since Guo's cryptocurrency can only be used
on his exchange, if it ever folds,
the coins will be utterly worthless.
Guo reportedly rakes in at least $500 million
through his cryptocurrency venture.
This is the most depressing episode of Scanfluenencers Bingo, because it's really hitting every square,
and it is so predictable and so upsetting.
It's so crazy how easy it has been to scam using crypto.
It's like it'll never compute how simple it kind of is.
No one is learning their lesson.
With all this cash pouring in,
Go does some interesting things.
First, he starts releasing music.
He's got songs like,
Dear Mama, I'm Ending the CCP,
H-Coin to the Moon,
and Take Down the CCP,
which briefly hits the number one spot
on the iTunes charts in September of 2020.
He also releases music videos and we have to actually watch this one for his song called
The Hero.
Okay.
Well, the song is very bad.
Oh, it's terrible.
It defies explanation.
The video.
Okay. So he is wearing, like, full hype-east apparel.
There's a lot of leather vests,
black T-shirts happening, weird sunglasses.
And he is rapping poorly in front of a big plane,
a big private jet,
and then a bunch of sort of anonymous, smoky rooms.
Oh, he's holding a...
what appears to be
a flaming lightsaber at some point.
This is what happens when little boys have money.
It is, and you know what?
I'm always blown away by how people can have everything,
and yet they'll still want to be a part of the arts
for some reason.
Well, Guo doesn't stop there, by the way.
He launches an apparel line called G Fashion,
where you can buy a more than $2,000 button-down shirt
emblazoned with the word Ivermectin across the front.
And yes, that is a veterinary anti-parasite drug
that conspiracy theorists claimed could cure COVID.
He also rolls out a high-end membership program
called G ClubClub.
There's an initiation fee, plus yearly membership fees costing up to $50,000.
In exchange, you get what Guo's website describes as a quote,
exclusive high-end membership program offering a full spectrum of services
and a gateway to carefully curated world-class products, services, and experiences.
Woe claims publicly that he's got 25,000 members plus millions more who want to join.
In reality, he has less than 6,000 active members.
And of course, none of those membership benefits seem to be real. And yet, over the next two and a half years,
Guo reeks in $250 million in G-Club initiation and membership fees.
So just to tally that all up,
Guo's got more than $400 million worth of investments in GTV,
then another $500 million from his crypto scheme,
plus the nearly 250 million dollars
he'll eventually bring in from G-Club.
We are well over a billion dollars in fraud,
and Guo is nowhere near done.
What is the point of that much money?
Like, at a certain point you have to just be losing track of the level of fraud you're
committing, and now it's just about, like, being a dick.
Well, you know what, Saatchi?
Just like his buddy Steve Bannon, Guo takes his followers' well-intentioned donations
and of course starts spending it on himself.
According to court documents,
here are just a few of his purchases during this time.
Nearly $1 million worth of rugs,
a $4 million custom Bugatti, that's a car,
and a $3.5 million Ferrari, which is also a car.
Right, thank you.
Two mattresses worth $36,000 each,
a $140,000 piano,
a 50,000-square-foot mansion in New Jersey.
And here's a picture just in case you're having a hard time
imagining what 50,000 square feet looks like.
Okay, so 50,000 square feet is a castle on acres and acres and acres of land with a swimming pool and like a fountain.
It's an enormity of property. Nobody needs as much space.
This is like the, this is the X-Men castle.
I was actually going to say it kind of looks like on TV when there's an exclusive boarding school or something.
Yeah, it's very Hogwarts. Yep. Well, Guo puts some of these purchases under the names of a few family members in an effort
to minimize any legal blowback for him.
He even has a so-called war chest, $150 million he can put toward any legal battles.
And Guo isn't just using his followers for their money, he also orders them to shut down and harass anyone who questions him.
In December 2020, Guo's followers picket the house of Ting Biao, the academic who published
that scathing article about Guo's past in China.
They spend two months at Ting's house, protesting every day.
Ting and his family aren't harmed,
but some of the dissidents Guo targets
are physically assaulted with Guo's followers
kicking and beating them up.
But Guo might be preparing for battle
with the wrong enemies,
because while he's fixated on government agents
and political attacks,
the real threat is much closer to home.
Most of his followers still can't see the cracks in the foundation, and political attacks, the real threat is much closer to home.
Most of his followers still can't see the cracks in the foundation, but Guo is about
to test their faith and their loyalty.
It's late 2021, and while Guo is rolling in Bugattis, Ya Li is in Australia, staring
at a legal document she doesn't want to sign.
Lee has been a fan of Guo since his Voice of America interview.
After he and Steve Bannon launched the Rule of Law Society, she volunteered her skills
as an accountant and translator.
She's risen through the ranks to become a director and has been in contact with Guo
on WhatsApp groups.
Sure, they've never met, but they talk like family. He calls her Sister Mulan, and she calls him Brother Seven.
As far as Lee's concerned, Guo's flashy businesses are necessary to fund the fight against the CCP.
She's actually helped him run a loan program to sell more shares of GTV after the first
round sold out.
The idea was that more supporters could continue to invest by sending money to one of Guo's
local quote, farms, online hubs run by trusted volunteers like Li.
The farm signs a loan agreement with the supporter, then sends the money to Guo's company.
In return, the supporter is promised GTV shares.
The Justice Department later claims that Guo raised
about $150 million through his farm program.
Li is convinced that she's doing the right thing
by helping Guo, but the document in front of her
is making her uneasy.
It's a promissory note that says she sent money
to a company she's never even heard of.
She doesn't want to lie,
but one of Guo's lawyers really wants her to sign it.
So she tries justifying the lie to herself.
Maybe she forgot or made a mistake.
If Guo says that's where the money went,
then she should trust him.
So she signs a note and tells herself it's for the cause.
Besides, Guo would never steer her wrong, right?
Oh, I have a feeling Guo would steer her super duper wrong.
Maybe a billion dollars wrong even. Yeah.
At this point, Lee is just in too deep.
She doesn't consider the possibility
that Guo might be doing something sketchy.
But soon enough, she'll realize that Guo criticizing
the CCP for corruption is just the pot
calling the kettle black.
And when she does, she'll turn from one of Guo's most devoted
followers into one of his most dangerous adversaries.
MUSIC
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By 2000, AOL was so powerful, it bought media giant Time Warner.
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The dot com crash?
Culture clashes?
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And I feel like I let you
In September of 2021,
Guo's media company, GTV, finally gets hit with official charges
from the SEC.
The investors in GTV realized they'd never seen any return on their investments or any
of the other promised benefits.
And when they tried to get their money back, they couldn't.
So they made some calls to the authorities. The SEC accuses Guo of illegally selling unregistered cryptocurrency and stock in GTV.
Guo's companies agree to pay $535 million to settle the whole thing, but don't admit
to or deny the allegations.
GTV's news site tries to downplay the charges afterward, but no matter how Guo tries to play it, it's a major blow.
And it's only the beginning
because ghosts from his past start reappearing.
Back in Beijing,
Guo took out massive loans to build his real estate empire.
Loans he never repaid.
Now they're coming due at the worst possible time. A New York court orders Guo to pay back $116 million in debt and interest for a long-defaulted loan.
The judge bars Guo from selling or relocating any of his property until the matter's settled.
But Guo ignores this order and moves his yacht into international waters.
The judge finds him $500,000 per day until he returns the yacht, which he doesn't do.
So within a few months, he racks up $134 million in fines, nearly $20 million more than he
initially owed.
I mean, that's a lot of money, but he already owes so much money and he stole so much money. That's like, what's a $20 million fine?
It's true. It's numbers on a screen.
Yeah, it's not real to him.
And also, like, I do like when people take advantage of maritime law.
International waters, you can do whatever you want.
It seems so obvious. That's how it works. If you make it out there, you can do whatever you want.
It seems so obvious.
That's how it works.
If you make it out there, you can have anything.
That's just pirate law.
Well, Guo claims he doesn't have the money to pay off his debts.
He might have been a billionaire once, but now he has very few assets in his own name.
His companies and family are the ones who own it all. So he files for bankruptcy.
In the filing, he places his personal net worth between 50 and 100 thousand dollars.
And of course, he blames the whole thing on the CCP. Not long after, in March of 2022,
Guo has no choice but to shut down GTV.
Sachi, can you read his dramatic social media post?
Yeah, he wrote,
Dear comrades in arms,
GTV has been completely shut down
at 12 in the morning yesterday
due to the massive tampering of data
by the communist party hackers.
This feels like a similar strategy to like earlier in the episode
where he was saying that he was basically being censored
and that he couldn't speak freely.
But it also seems like this strategy is not going to work again here.
He's gone to that well too many times.
No, of course not.
But also like, what else does he have, right?
Even though the wheels of justice sometimes move slowly,
they do eventually catch up to Guo.
In March of 2023, a year after he files for bankruptcy,
U.S. authorities show up at his Manhattan penthouse
with a warrant for his arrest.
He's charged with defrauding more than 5,000 investors
out of more than a billion dollars,
along with wire fraud,
securities fraud, bank fraud, and money laundering.
Guo pleads not guilty, but if a jury disagrees, he's staring down decades behind bars.
And after years of playing his enemies against one another, Guo is about to face some betrayal
of his own.
Not long after Guo's arrest, Yali has one of his lawyers in front of her, once again
demanding that she sign a piece of paper.
This time, it's an affidavit that says she authorized a transfer of funds from one of
Guo's companies in the British Virgin Islands.
But she didn't.
And an affidavit feels different
than anything she's been asked to sign before.
Lee doesn't want to lie to a court
and potentially get sent to prison herself.
The lawyer straight up threatens her.
He says if she doesn't sign the affidavit,
she'll have to personally pay Guo back
for every dollar in the company account
if it's seized by authorities.
All $38 million.
It's also heavily implied that if she doesn't do this, she's no longer welcome in the movement.
This ultimatum finally makes Li see through Guo's allure and realize the whole thing's a scam.
She shouldn't have to commit fraud to keep fighting the anti-communism fight.
She's so angry and ashamed she fell for Guo's lies.
She worries that Guo's other followers
might hurt her in some way, but she refuses to back down.
So she calls the US authorities
and tells them everything she knows.
A year later, in June 2024,
Lee travels to New York to take the witness stand
during Guo's trial.
She stares down the man she once believed was a hero.
Good for her.
Finally, someone to root for.
Yeah, I mean, took her long enough, but sure.
Listen, you gotta take what you can get
in some of these episodes.
CALLIE Well, she is extremely nervous.
Not because she might go to jail.
She signed a non-prosecution agreement so she wouldn't be charged for any crimes she committed while working for Guo.
But the courtroom is packed with Guo's devoted supporters.
People who once called her Sister Mulan, but who now see her as a
traitor.
And now they know her real name and her real face.
She has no idea what they might do to her if she's the reason Guo goes down.
But Li knows she has to tell the truth, for herself and for her family.
So she walks the court through everything she knows.
And it is a lot.
She had so much access and oversight of Guo's funds and financial moves
that she's central to the prosecutor's case.
Using Lee's information, the prosecution lays it bare.
Guo treated his followers' money like a personal piggy bank.
Multiple fraud schemes all funded his life of yachts,
penthouses, and club memberships.
They say he used Steve Bannon
to boost his own notoriety and fame,
knowing full well that they were peddling lies.
But Guo's lawyer paints a very different picture.
He says, Guo is a political dissident
who was under constant threat.
He had to hide his money so the CCP couldn't steal it
and leave him destitute.
The argument seems to be that he had all his followers' money
in a safe place,
just not the place they thought their cash would be.
Uh, wha?
Ha ha ha!
I don't think that's a great legal argument.
I don't know that I would buy that.
That doesn't make any sense.
It makes no sense.
I definitely took your money, but I put it somewhere safe as like, specious at best.
It's crazy.
And you know what?
The jury doesn't buy it either.
They find Guo guilty on nine of the 12 charges against him.
Guo takes the decision in stride.
He gives a soft smile to his supporters in the room,
some of whom get emotional and start crying.
Then he hugs his lawyers and shakes their hands.
Guo is currently at the Metropolitan Detention Center
in Brooklyn, awaiting sentencing in September 2025.
As for Steve Bannon, he's never been charged
in connection to this case.
Trump pardoned him back in 2021
before his own fraud trial could begin,
the one about soliciting funds for building the border wall.
But that didn't save Steve entirely.
Just before Guo's conviction, Steve reported
to a federal prison to serve a four-month
sentence for defying a congressional subpoena.
He was released last October.
In March, the Trump administration cut off funding for Voice of America, the very outlet
where Lee first saw Guo and believed he might be the real deal.
In the end, Guo wasn't taken down by the Chinese government. He was taken down by his own believers.
While Guo awaits sentencing, don't be surprised if any of these players pop back up in the chaos.
U.S.-China relations are like a geopolitical reality show where no one knows what's coming next.
Least of all, the people actually running the show.
what's coming next. Least of all, the people actually running the show.
[♪ music playing, fades out.
Sachi, I think the question I have here is,
scam aside, do you think that Guo was actually a dissident?
It's tricky because everybody in this story
is kind of using each other for this, like,
political proxy war.
But I have real doubts that anybody who's on Steve Bannon's
side is like a freedom fighter.
Like it just doesn't compute.
This person is too rich and too evil for me to be like,
yeah, yeah, this is a dissident.
And generally, when you think of an activist or a dissident
or someone going against the government,
they're not fleecing people out of billions of dollars.
Yeah, how he was able to rack in millions from people,
like hundreds of millions of dollars
that accumulated to over a billion dollars
from regular people is insane.
And it also like really brought me back to this time
where Steve Bannon was everywhere.
Like you couldn't ever escape his disgusting face.
And that nothing ever really happened to him.
I mean, didn't he go to jail and then get out?
Yeah, but like, that's nothing compared to...
Yeah, no, I agree. Listen, these stories are riddled
with people who do not face any consequences to their actions.
And like, how odd that the trifecta is
Jolo, Pras, Michelle, and then Guo.
Like what a weird triad and what a strange group of people
to be connected across borders and governments
and political anxiety and xenophobia and Donald Trump.
Yeah, it's almost like, I know we always talk about
how easy it is to get money from people,
but he must have been so persuasive
that he was able to live this extremely lavish life
that he flaunted if he was not hiding.
And these people still were like,
well, but he is a victim.
He's a victim and he's also like our Malcolm X or something.
Like I'm just like so shocked by it all
that it worked so well.
Yeah, it is really a testament to how easy it was.
He really just asked people for money
and they gave it to him.
Another thing that I find fascinating
is how willing people can be to sign documents.
Yeah, people don't read their contracts.
They just assume that no one is out to fleece them.
And I have some news from you as one of the hosts of a podcast
about people who fleece other people.
There are a lot of people who want to fleece you.
Yeah, it's hard to not be super paranoid
any time you get asked to sign something.
But also, they're so long.
These documents are so long.
Sarah, read the contracts.
What do you think the lesson here is for you?
Oh, I don't think there's a lesson in here for me.
No, I don't think so either.
I don't think there's really a lesson for us.
Yeah, I don't think you and I needed
to learn anything here today.
I think it's just kind of like,
if you make $500 million on a crypto scam,
pay for a better music video.
Money can't buy you class, Sarah.
I don't know if you've heard that song.
I think that is a lesson.
That is a lesson.
Money can't buy you class,
and I feel like elegance is learned, you know?
Sure is, my friend.
Money can't buy you class.
Loving scam influencers? Get exclusive episodes and early access to new ones all ad free on
Wendree Plus. Join now in the Wendree app, Apple podcasts or Spotify. Before you go,
help us out by taking a quick survey at wendree.com slash survey.
This is Guo Wen Gui, the Ti Mu Trump. I'm Sarah Haggie.
And I'm Saachi Cole.
If you have a tip for us on a story that you think we should cover, please email us at
scamfluencers at wondery.com.
We use many sources in our research.
A few that were particularly helpful were How a Tycoon Linked to Chinese Intelligence
Became a Darling of Trump Republics by Evan Osnos for The New Yorker, The Undoing of Guo
Wen Gui,
Billionaire Accused of Fraud on Two Continents
by Michael Forsyth and Benjamin Weiser
for The New York Times,
and She Was a Top Supporter of a Right-Wing Mogul.
Now, She's a Star Witness Against Him
by Dan Friedman for Mother Jones.
Alex Burns wrote this episode.
Additional writing by us, Sachi Cole and Sarah Hagge.
Eric Thurm is our story editor.
Fact-checking by Meredith Clark.
Sound design by James Morgan.
Additional audio assistance provided by Augustine Lim.
Our music supervisor is Scott Velasquez for Freesawn Sync.
Our managing producer is Desi Blaylock.
Our senior managing producer is Callum Clues.
Janine Cornelow and Stephanie Jens
are our development producers.
Our associate producer is development producers. Our associate
producer is Charlotte Miller. Our producer is Julie McGruder. Our senior producers are
Sarah Enney and Janine Bloom. Our executive producers are Jenny Lauer Beckman, Marshall Today is the worst day of Abby's life.
The 17-year-old cradles her newborn son in her arms.
They all saw how much I loved him.
They didn't have to take him from me.
Between 1945 and the early 1970s, families shipped their pregnant teenage daughters to maternity homes
and forced them to secretly place their babies for adoption.
In hidden corners across America, it's still happening.
My parents had me locked up in the godparent home against my will.
They worked with them to manipulate me and to steal my son away from me.
The godparent home is the brainchild of controversial preacher Jerry Falwell, the father of the son away from me.