Scamfluencers - Marianne Smyth: The Fake Irish Heiress | 214
Episode Date: May 18, 2026For years, globe-trotting con artist Marianne Smyth used her charm to manipulate the people closest to her – including her own daughters. Her scam was a classic: she told people she was an ...Irish heiress with millions on the way, and all she needed was to borrow a little cash to unlock her fortune. People believed her – over and over again. But when she targets reality TV producer Jonathan Walton, she picks the wrong mark. Once he realizes he’s been played, Jonathan doesn’t just walk away – he launches an obsessive crusade to bring Marianne down and get justice for every victim she left in her wake.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Audible subscribers can listen to all our episodes of scam influencers ad-free right now.
Join Audible today by downloading the Audible app.
Sachi, I think about this a lot, not just in the context of the scammers we cover, but just like generally seedy people.
What type of person do you think it takes to really take down a scammer?
I think it has to be someone with the almost unhealthy ability to hold a grudge.
Yes.
Like you have to be so strident and so ready, frankly, to ruin your own life again in the pursuit of justice.
Yes.
Which I think is a noble cause.
That is exactly what I think.
I mean, it's someone who just can't let something go because they're too stubborn.
They are also a little bit crazy, but they have a much stronger sense of justice in a way.
Yeah.
I mean, I think we are those people to some degree.
I mean, hopefully.
Well, today I'm going to tell you about an epic takedown on the,
On the one hand, we have a woman running a classic fake royal scam.
On the other, a victim who falls for her gift because he loves drama as much as she does.
But when he discovers he's been had, it activates his main character syndrome, and he won't
stop until he gets justice and fully upstages her.
It's May 2013, and Jonathan Walton, a reality TV producer, is hosting a party in his
downtown Los Angeles apartment.
Jonathan is in his late 30s, bald with thick eyebrows and a button nose.
He moves through the living room, topping off his guest's wine glasses and restocking the cheese platter.
But this isn't just a regular wine and cheese party.
Tonight, Jonathan has gathered two dozen of his neighbors to join him on a mission.
Their apartment complex has an amazing amenity, a resort-sized pool and a jacuzzi big enough for 20 people.
But because of a legal dispute between their landlord and the owner of a nearby building,
Jonathan and his neighbors no longer have access to it.
Jonathan is mad as hell about this, so tonight he's rallying the troops.
He wants his neighbors to all work together and get their pool back.
A worthy pursuit, I think.
I think so, too.
You show me a pool I'm getting in it.
I would also like a pool.
Well, one of the neighbors at the party is Mayor Steele.
Smith. Mare's in her mid-40s with pale skin, short black hair, and striking blue eyes.
She looks sharp in Jimmy Chew heels, and she introduces herself as an immigrant from the
Republic of Ireland, which explains her faint accent. At one point in the evening, she stands up
in front of everyone and delivers a fiery speech suggesting they form a tenant association to
get the pool back. She says her boyfriend, a big shot lawyer, can help. When Mayer
finishes speaking, Jonathan and his neighbors applaud. As the night goes on, Jonathan grows more and more
enamored with Mayer, although not in a romantic way. Jonathan is gay and happily married. She's
drawn to Maher's charm and her generosity. She offers to get one of their neighbors an interview
at her boyfriend's law firm, and she offers to help another book an exotic vacation through her
job as a luxury travel agent. Here's how Jonathan describes it in his podcast, Queen
of the con.
I fall in love with her that night because more than her charisma, more than her sparkling
conversation and her sophistication and worldliness, she was so kind. She was just so kind.
But as Jonathan gets to know Mayor better, he'll realize that the story she's telling about
herself doesn't quite add up. Mayor claims to come from a wealthy Irish family, and she certainly
lives like a princess. But she says she and her relatives are locked in a heated,
inheritance battle with millions at stake.
Eventually, that fortune will be hers, but in the meantime, she asks Jonathan for help.
Slowly, Jonathan will see Mayer's charm and generosity for what it truly is, an act to draw people
in, gain their trust, and manipulate them into giving her everything they have.
The Irish accent?
Fake.
And Mayer isn't even her real name.
It's Mary Ann.
But Mayer has seriously underestimated her latest marks.
Jonathan is the kind of person who organizes a crusade over jacuzzi access.
So when he realizes Marianne has been lying, and not just to him, but to countless others as well, he'll pull out all the stops to expose her.
And once he goes public with Marianne's lies, her Irish luck may finally run out.
Whether you're exploring your fascinations or discovering new ones, Ottawa has stories that will introduce you to your most fascinating self.
Tap into a whole new world of heated conversations with a saucy romantic series.
Know how true the latest blockbuster movie stayed to the sci-fi story it was based on
or find unexpected reveals through an exclusive true crime podcasts.
However you listen, Audible keeps you fascinated so you can be just as fascinating.
Select any audiobook every month plus exclusive podcasts.
Plans now start at 899.
Audible, be fascinated, be fascinating.
Whether you're exploring your fascinations or discovering new ones,
Ottawa has stories that will introduce you to your most fascinating self.
Tap into a whole new world of heated conversations with a saucy romantic series.
Know how true the latest blockbuster movie stayed to the sci-fi story it was based on,
or find unexpected reveals through an exclusive true crime podcast.
However you listen, Audible keeps you fascinated so you can be just as fascinating.
Select any audiobook every month, plus exclusive podcasts.
Plans now start at 899.
Audible. Be fascinated.
Be fascinating.
From Audible Originals, I'm Sarah Haggy, and I'm Sachi Cole.
And this is scam influencers.
From an early age, Marianne Smith used her charm and charisma to manipulate the people closest
to her, including her own daughters, all in pursuit of making more money.
By the time she reaches middle age and lands in Los Angeles, she's preferable.
affected a story that opens doors wherever she goes.
She tells people she's an Irish heiress about to inherit millions from her wealthy family,
but to access her fortune, she just needs to borrow some cash.
But in Jonathan Walton, Marianne finally met her match.
Jonathan is loyal, hardworking, and some might say obsessive.
And once he realizes he's been conned, he becomes determined to turn her fraudulent pot of gold upside down.
Not just for himself, but for video.
victims all over the world who have fallen for Marianne's audacious con.
Drawing on everything he's learned as a television producer,
Jonathan will launch a come-upance campaign unlike anything we've covered on scam fluencers before.
A multimedia barrage to expose Marianne and make sure no one else suffers his fate.
This is Marianne Smith, the fake Irish heiress.
It's the early 1980s in Bangor, Maine,
and 12-year-old Marianne Andell is excited to have a friend over.
Marianne welcomes her friend inside a big, beautiful home in a nice part of town and gives her a tour.
But something feels off.
Her friend grows uneasy as she realizes, Marianne doesn't actually live there.
They're in a total stranger's home.
But even when Marianne can tell she's been caught in a lie, she doesn't back off.
In fact, she doubles down, making her friend
pose for a photo with the belongings of the girl who does live there, a girl Marianne claims is her sister.
I know we're not supposed to root for fraud, but that is so funny and instantly iconic for a child to do.
Amazing, amazing.
It's iconic.
And from an early age, Marianne seems almost addicted to lying.
And her lies only get bolder when she's a teenager.
One ex-boyfriend later says that in high school,
Marianne would routinely date older guys,
tell them she's pregnant,
then ask for money for an abortion.
Since the pregnancy was fake,
she just pocketed the cash.
I yet again do not have a problem with this.
If she had just kept the scam at this,
we would not be having this conversation.
I believe in women's wrongs.
I mean, they shouldn't be with the younger girl in the first place, am I right?
It's his fault.
Well, by the time she's,
18, Marianne's parents are fed up with her lives and kick her out of their house. After graduating
high school in 1987, she joins the Navy and is stationed in Florida. But does Marianne's
military service set her on the straight and narrow? Nope. While living in Florida, she's charged
with several felonies, including grand theft and forgery. There isn't much information about these
charges, even in court records, but it seems that Marianne is refining the skill she'll use for the
rest of her life.
A few years later, Marianne moves to Michigan and meets a man named Jeff Welch.
The relationship moves fast.
Marianne gets pregnant and they get married.
In 1989, when she's 20 years old, Marianne gives birth to their daughter Courtney, who is
diagnosed with a genetic disorder called cystic fibrosis.
But she has little interest in being a mom.
By the time Courtney is one, Marianne has moved out, leaving Jeff to raise their daughter
alone. She starts seeing other people, and soon she's pregnant again by another man. In 1991,
she gives birth to another baby girl, Chelsea. Shortly afterwards, Jeff files for divorce,
claiming that Marianne is a pathological liar. A court deems her an unfit mother and awards him
full custody of Courtney. But Marianne retains custody of her younger daughter, Chelsea. And while
Marianne doesn't seem very interested in raising a child, she is ready to start training an accomplice.
It's 2002 and Chelsea is celebrating her 11th birthday. Her mom, Marianne, surprises her with two plane
tickets to Belfast, Northern Ireland. But it's not just a vacation. This is how Chelsea learns
they're moving overseas to start a new life with a guy her mom met online. For Chelsea, this is
just the latest disruption in an already chaotic childhood.
When she was a baby, Marianne left Chelsea with her grandparents in Tennessee.
Then, after nearly five years of no contact, Marianne suddenly comes back into Chelsea's life.
But given Marianne's track record, a judge wasn't about to give her full custody, so Chelsea
had been splitting time between her mom and her grandparents.
But Marianne was determined to get her daughter back full time.
At one point, she even accuses her own father of molesting Chelsea
and tried to gaslight her daughter into believing it actually happened.
From an early age, Chelsea understands that her mother isn't like other adults.
Marianne is physically and emotionally abusive.
She's immature and struggles to hold a job.
But Chelsea notices her mom can turn on the charm when she wants
in order to manipulate people.
Here's Chelsea talking about it,
Years later on the Queen of the Khan podcast.
She's really great at reading people.
You know, she knows what you're looking for, like not just romantically, but when she
talks to people, I've seen it happening like at the flip of a dime.
Like, she knows how to be your best friend.
She knows how to, like, intimidate and scare you very quickly.
Like, she just knows how to get in your head and under your skin.
This is very, uh, mommy dearest.
Yeah.
I feel like I've seen a,
a thousand Law & Order episodes about this exact dynamic.
Sadly, it is a classic dynamic.
And Chelsea listens, as Marianne tells people,
she was once an Olympic-level figure skater.
Other times, Marianne claims she has cancer
and needs help with her medical bills, which isn't true.
And when Marianne announces that they're moving to Northern Ireland,
she tells Chelsea to keep it a secret from her grandparents.
That summer, Chelsea and Marianne fly to Belfast
and move in with Marianne's online boyfriend, Stephen Smith.
Steve is an Irish postal worker who raises greyhound dogs.
Chelsea likes him.
He seems like a good guy.
As far as Chelsea's grandparents know, this is just a temporary visit.
But when fall rolls around,
Marianne makes Chelsea break the news that they're not coming back.
Her grandparents are furious,
but Marianne coaches Chelsea to make it sound like she's happy with this decision.
decision. Plus, it would be complicated and expensive to fight an international custody battle,
so there's not much they can actually do. Maybe they're hoping Stephen will be a positive
influence on Marianne and a source of stability for Chelsea. In October 2003, a little over a year
and a half after arriving in Northern Ireland, Marianne and Stephen get married. Two years later,
Marianne gets a job as a mortgage advisor. But she's not interested in earning.
a paycheck. She has a plan to make more money and she needs her daughter's help.
Over the next few years, Chelsea babysits for some of Marianne's clients, helping her get in their
good graces. But it's all a part of Marianne's new con. Marianne regularly has Chelsea
forge signatures on paperwork for her clients. Marianne tells some clients that she's putting
their money in high-interest savings accounts. Others believe she's investing it in rental properties.
But in reality, she's spending it, swindling her customers out of more than $155,000 in just a few years.
At first, Marianne keeps a scheme going by paying her client's returns from her personal account.
But eventually, the payments stop, and they start to catch on to the fraud.
In 2009, when Chelsea is 18, her mom announces they're leaving Northern Ireland immediately.
Chelsea doesn't know it yet,
but someone has tipped Marianne off
that the Irish police are investigating her.
As Chelsea rushes to pack,
she's horrified to hear Marianne tell Steve
that there's no time to re-home his more than a dozen greyhound dogs.
He'll need to put them all down.
Why do they have to be put down?
Well, there's simply no time to rehome them.
Right, so they all must be slaughtered, I understand.
Yeah, it's a, it's a real thing.
really an all-or-nothing scenario somehow. Chelsea gets on a plane back to the U.S. with her mom and
stepdad haunted by the thought of those dogs. But fleeing Ireland finally gives Chelsea a chance
to start over. After they land, she reunites with her grandparents and cuts ties with her mom.
And she's not the only one. Eventually, Stephen does the same. He leaves Marianne and joins Chelsea
and her grandparents. They're all tired of
Mary Ann's lies and abuse.
Chelsea is finally free of her mother.
But Marianne is getting a fresh start too.
She's about to launch an audacious new scam, this time with a Northern Irish twist.
It's a hot June evening in 2013, and Jonathan Walton is hanging out in the barbecue area
of his L.A. apartment complex with his neighbor, Mayor Smith.
It's been a few weeks since they met during Jonathan's campaign to get their pool back,
and in that short time, Jonathan and Mare have grown close.
Mayor, or Marian, is in her mid-40s now.
She tells John she's originally from Ireland and loves to share her culture.
She serves him home-baked Irish soda bread and Irish tea
and offers him expensive Irish whiskey.
When they go up to her apartment,
she shows him a framed copy of the Irish Constitution hanging on the wall
and points to a signature she claims
belong to her great, great uncle.
This is a little much.
I mean, I feel like if you're trying to lie
about something you should maybe not lie so grandiosly,
it's like saying, like, I'm American.
My father was John F. Kennedy.
Yeah, he was John F. Kennedy
and also come in for the traditional meal of hot dogs
and deep-fried something.
Like, it just wouldn't happen that way, you know?
Jonathan has worked on show.
shows like American Ninja Warrior and Shark Tank,
so he's used to meeting new people
and hearing sometimes outrageous background stories.
He's all ears as Mayor explains that her uncle helped found independent Ireland
and that she's descended from Irish royalty.
She says her father was a leader in the Irish Republican Army
and was assassinated by a British spy.
She even claims that as a child,
her grandmother taught her to make Molotov cocktails to throw at the British.
I just want to say this doesn't track at all.
Yeah, I mean, none of this makes sense.
But again, like, I guess when it comes to white history,
I'm not going to ask a lot of questions, Sarah.
Yeah, but I'd be like, wait, weren't the super rich people not in the IRA
and throwing Maldov cocktails?
Maybe, maybe they were the particular upper class.
That was a part of the revolution.
I'm open to hearing more.
Sure, sure.
I mean, exactly.
What I'm going to do, say your dad wasn't in the IRA.
Yeah.
You want to say that to an Irish person? Pass.
Well, Jonathan doesn't know much about Ireland,
so he has no idea that Ireland doesn't actually have a royal family.
Mare tells Jonathan that in addition to being royal,
her family is very wealthy, and that tracks.
It's obvious Mare has money.
He's seen her closet, which is filled with hundreds of pairs of Jimmy Choo's shoes.
He estimates she has more than a quarter of a million.
dollars worth of footwear.
Mayor tells Jonathan that, although she doesn't need to work, she has a job to stay busy.
She sells luxury vacations to Pacific Islands like Tahiti and Fiji.
As the summer goes on, Jonathan and Maher start hanging out all the time, and he falls even
more in love with her fun, frank personality.
She often shares stories about her sex life with her lawyer-boyfriend, who also happens to be a local
politician and married.
Jonathan loves the drama
and he feels honored to be part of her inner circle.
Yeah, I mean, so would I.
Gossip is gossip.
It's gossip and he works in reality TV.
He loves hearing people's stories.
Of course, he's going to be eating this up.
Eventually, Merrick can find something more serious.
She tells Jonathan,
she's about to inherit five million euros from her uncle.
There's just one problem.
Her spiteful cousin, Finten, is trying to cut her out of the will.
Mayor shows Jonathan text messages from Finten loaded with Irish swear words and threats.
Jonathan can relate.
Some members of his own family reacted badly when he told them he was gay,
so he understands what it's like to be on the outs with family.
He feels genuine sympathy for her.
I mean, this is really how scam artists work,
is they kind of find the one thing to make you feel for them.
and they pull you into their web, and then you as a normal person have normal human feelings for them,
and then you're stuck.
Yeah, I think she sees that he's a true empath.
And not long after, Mayor shows him a message from her lawyer in Ireland.
He says there's a stipulation in her uncle's will.
Mayor won't get any money if she's ever convicted of a felony.
It's oddly specific, but at this point, Jonathan is so bought into this friendship that he doesn't question it.
Instead, it makes him worried for mayor.
Jonathan warns her that her family might try to set her up to disqualify her inheritance.
After all, he's heard so many wild stories about what they're capable of.
Like the time when she was a kid, and her cousins convinced her that Tylenol pills were candy,
she nearly overdosed as a result.
She says they weren't even sorry afterwards.
Mayor brushes off his concerns.
But just a few weeks later, in July 2014,
Jonathan gets a call from her, and she sounds frantic.
Through her tears, she tells him he was right.
She's just been arrested for stealing $200,000 from the travel company she works for
and causing more than $150,000 in damages.
This is exactly what Jonathan feared.
His friend has just been framed by her horrible Irish family.
and Jonathan is the kind of person who shows up for the people he loves, no matter the cost.
While mayor sits in a jail cell, Jonathan springs into action.
He starts Googling bail bondsmen, but before he can make a move,
he gets a call from mayor's lawyer-boyfriend who will call Andrew.
Andrew tells Jonathan that he'll front the money for mayor's bail,
but because he's married, he can't have his name on any of the court documents.
So Jonathan agrees to handle it.
While he's filling out the paperwork,
he notices an unfamiliar name,
Marianne Elizabeth Smith.
That's when he learns that his friend's legal name
isn't actually mayor.
But he figures mare is just a nickname for Marianne.
Jonathan pays the $4,200 bail bond fee with his debit card,
and early the next morning, Marianne is released.
He picks her up and takes her out to breakfast.
She promises she'll pay her.
pay him back asap. The next day, Andrew shows up at Jonathan's door with an envelope full of
$100 bills totaling the entire amount of her bail. Mary Ann may have lost her job, but she
definitely isn't cutting back on her spending. She tells Jonathan she has to move. She's too
embarrassed to live where her neighbors saw her get handcuffed. So she upgrades to a luxury
complex that costs almost $6,000 a month. There's an actual
movie theater in the building where she invites Jonathan to watch 50 Shades of Grey.
Mary Ann's felony case is about to begin, and Jonathan remains convinced she's innocent.
After all, she keeps showing him emails from her lawyer who says the case is bogus and should be
thrown out. Jonathan loves and trusts his friend, so he's not looking at her situation the way
he would as a TV producer, picking apart inconsistencies and asking tough questions. And
Instead, he's all in and ready to fight for his friend, but he has no idea that soon he's going to be fighting for something else entirely, his own money and his reputation.
I'm Leon Nafeck, best known as the host and co-creator of podcasts Slow Burn, Fiasco, and Think Twice Michael Jackson.
I'm here to tell you about my show, Final Thoughts, Jerry Springer, whose name is synonymous with outrageous guests, taboo confessions, and vicious on.
stage fights. But before the Jerry Springer show became a symbol of cultural decline, its namesake
was a popular Midwestern politician and a serious-minded idealist with lofty ambitions. Through dozens
of intimate and revealing interviews with those who knew Springer best, I examine Springer's lifelong
struggle to reconcile his TV persona with his political dreams and aspirations. Named one of the
best podcasts of the year by The New Yorker and Rolling Stone, Final Thoughts, Jerry Springer, is a story about
How we make them, how we justify them to ourselves, and how we transcend them or don't.
Listen wherever you get your podcasts.
Or binge the whole series ad-free right now on Audible.
Start your Audible subscription in the Audible app.
I'm Leon Nafeck, best known as the host and co-creator of podcasts, Slow Burn, Fiasco, and Think Twice, Michael Jackson.
I'm here to tell you about my show, Final Thoughts, Jerry Springer, whose name is synonymous with outrageous guests, taboo confessions, and vicious.
on-stage fights. But before the Jerry Springer show became a symbol of cultural decline, its
namesake was a popular Midwestern politician and a serious-minded idealist with lofty ambitions.
Through dozens of intimate and revealing interviews with those who knew Springer best,
I examined Springer's lifelong struggle to reconcile his TV persona with his political dreams
and aspirations. Named one of the best podcasts of the year by The New Yorker and Rolling Stone,
Final Thoughts, Jerry Springer, is a story about choices, how we make them, how we justify them to ourselves, and how we transcend them or don't.
Listen wherever you get your podcasts or binge the whole series ad-free right now on Audible.
Start your Audible subscription in the Audible app.
It's August 2014, just a month after Marianne's arrest, and she's taking a work call at her new job while Jonathan is listening in.
She puts the call on speaker and introduces herself as Mayor Anya.
Then she asks the caller if they are ready for a reading.
That's right, Marianne has reinvented herself yet again, this time as a psychic.
She tells Jonathan she's always been a little bit clairvoyant.
The gift runs in her family.
She says her great-great-grandmother gave readings for world leaders
and her sister uses her psychic ability to help German police find missing children.
I think it's really amazing that her scam is progressing so fast.
I mean, she went from being Irish, and then she was Irish royalty,
and now she is able to access the dead or another dimension.
Yes, and Marianne can tell that Jonathan is impressed.
He tells her, it seems like she's really helping people out.
That's exactly what Marianne needs to hear,
because there's a lot she hasn't told him.
She did need that travel agency job,
and she really was stealing from her clients.
But Jonathan believes her version of events completely.
So now Marianne levels up.
She tells him she's been working for a 1-800 psychic line,
but the pay is terrible so she starts her own business.
Then she asks if he'll help make her a promotional video.
And as expected, he says yes.
My name is Mayor Anya, and I'm an empathic psychic.
I've always had a gift since I was a little girl.
It materialized throughout my childhood, and I didn't really understand what it was.
I would always know things were happening before they happened, and everyone would laugh at me.
Listen, I love woo-woo nonsense.
I recently got my tarot read by some lady who told me that I was being a pigeon when I actually need to be a rat.
Lots to consider there, but I do think people who pray on those who are.
seeking answers from the dead are like a unique kind of evil.
Like it is so unkind.
It is so manipulative.
It really takes advantage of people in a vulnerable spot.
Yeah, I feel like it's also an extra kind of fucked up to want to scam people and then
have them be so grateful to you.
Like, this is a huge ego boost for her too.
Almost overnight, Marianne builds a steady stream of satisfied clients and a Yelp page full
of glowing reviews.
As her following grows, Marianne's.
starts telling her clients that what they really need is life coaching. And luckily, she's a
certified life coach. Clients begin opening up to her, sharing their fears, their vulnerabilities,
and their personal details. Mary Ann uses all of this to her advantage. One of her biggest
scores come from a pair of real estate investors in New York who pay her $20,000 a month to tell
them what buildings to buy and sell. But when her advice stops paying up,
off, they cut her loose. So Marianne makes a final play. She tells them her daughter has cancer and needs
$60,000 for an experimental treatment to save her life. The investors wire her the money and she promises
to pay them back, but she never does. In reality, Marianne doesn't have a daughter with cancer,
but she does have a daughter with cystic fibrosis. Courtney, the child she lost custody of as a baby,
grew up in Michigan with her dad, got married, and started a family.
Eventually, she reconnected with Chelsea, the younger half-sister she hadn't seen for years.
After Marianne returned from Northern Ireland in 2009,
she tried to patch things up with Courtney, taking her on an expensive vacation and sending her money.
But it didn't work, especially after a bunch of angry Irish mobsters turned up at Courtney's door,
threatening to kill her family and demanding to know where Marianne was.
There's a lot about what Marianne does that is awful and really cruel,
but going after your daughter, who you mostly abandoned,
trying to get her back into your good graces through money
isn't going to work, especially if it comes after the mob has come after you
because your mom owes them something.
Yeah, it is really sad and tragically Courtney died
her illness in 2012 when she was only 23.
It's not clear how Marianne reacted at the time,
but when she met Jonathan a year later,
she showed him urns in her apartment
that she said contained Courtney's ashes.
Every year, she mourns with Jonathan
as they mark the anniversary together.
In 2015, about a year into her career as a psychic,
Marianne starts a go-fund me
using a picture of Courtney and her baby
to raise money for other.
their families affected by cystic fibrosis.
Marianne's friends and clients donate almost $17,000
with the understanding that Marianne will send the money
to a foundation researching the disease,
which, obviously, she does not do.
By now, Marianne is making a substantial living
scamming the people who come to her for psychic guidance.
Her own future is about to get a lot more complicated.
It's late 2016, more than two years since Jonathan's good friend mayor was arrested.
Her case has been moving slowly through the legal system,
and Jonathan has continued to stand by her.
Then one day, she comes to him with another plea for help.
She shows him emails from her lawyer,
claiming the court has frozen her bank accounts as part of her felony case.
She says her vengeful Irish family bribed a district attorney in L.A.
to make sure she can't access the money.
In the meantime, she needs help paying her bills.
She asks Jonathan if he can lend her some cash to live on
until she can get back into her accounts.
While Jonathan's not exactly loaded, he knows she is,
so he's confident she'll pay him back.
Plus, when he lent her money for her bail bond,
he got paid back the next day.
And at this point, they've been super close friends
for more than three years, so he says yes.
Over the next few months, Jonathan gives Mayor more than $20,000.
But while he's happy to help, his husband is starting to have doubts.
He's been supportive of their friendship so far,
but starts questioning why this supposedly rich friend keeps needing money.
Jonathan defends Mayor insisting that her family is trying to destroy her.
I mean, you know I'm not going to defend husbands,
but this might be a rare case where the husband is right,
and can see it clearly because he's not in it.
Yeah, I mean, someone has to kind of put their foot down at some point.
Then, in early 2017, Mayor has an even bigger ask.
She says she needs around $55,000 to get her case dismissed.
It's a lot of money, but it would clear her name for good.
So Jonathan takes a deep breath and agrees to let her use his credit cards to settle the bill.
Afterwards, they celebrate with a champagne toast.
The nightmare is finally over.
But just a few days later,
Mayor tells Jonathan she's going to jail again.
She explains that the judge didn't like her using his credit cards
to cover her costs.
He considers it money laundering.
So he sentenced her to 30 days in the L.A. County jail as punishment.
Jonathan is stunned, but he isn't familiar with the criminal justice system.
He trusts Mayor, so he accepts this bizarre explanation.
For the first two weeks, Mayor calls Jonathan every day from prison.
But when he asks to visit, she tells him she's too embarrassed.
Jonathan won't be deterred.
By now, Mayor should know he doesn't do things halfway.
He schedules a visit through the sheriff's website,
and while he's on the site, he sees her case history.
And that's when he learns that Marianne Elizabeth Smith didn't get her case.
dismissed. She pleaded guilty to stealing $200,000 from the travel agency, and she's serving time
for felony grand theft. Oh, this is a brutal thing to find out about someone that you have
defended. And now your husband is right. So Jonathan is freaking out. What else doesn't he know
about his supposed best friend? He goes to the courthouse and asks for all the records related to
mayor's case. He pours through the documents, his hands shaking. And there it is,
undeniable proof that mayor stole from the travel company by having customers send their
payments directly to her personal PayPal account. The $55,000 he loaned her wasn't for court
fees. It was for restitution. Jonathan goes home to his husband and sobs uncontrollably in his
arms. He can't believe his best friend could do this to him and that he fell for it.
At this point, Jonathan decides to talk to mayor one last time. He wants to hear what she has to say
for herself. So when she's released two weeks later, Jonathan drives up to the L.A. County
women's jail to pick her up. Jonathan is furious, but he manages to keep it together. He unfolds a piece
of paper where he's outlined what he wants to say and confronts his former friend.
He also secretly records the conversation on his iPhone.
Here's an excerpt he shared on his podcast, Queen of the Khan.
You've been scamming us out of money this whole time.
I have not, sorry.
You have.
Okay.
Yeah, you're not going to, you're busted.
Okay.
So from here on in, we're not friends.
Okay.
So I only want to see you or hear from you when you have a payment for us.
Okay.
until this money is paid off.
You're busted.
Good luck.
Oh, you're busted.
Imagine your friend telling you you're busted?
I'd never recover.
He got her ass.
Yeah.
Mayor starts to cry,
but she never admits to scamming him.
The next day, Jonathan goes to the police.
They try to tell him he doesn't have a case
because he gave her the money willingly,
but Jonathan brought receipts in the form of emails,
text messages, and bank records that show how mayor lied to defraud him.
The officer finally agrees to take his statement after learning that Jonathan is a producer on Shark Tank.
He's been trying to pitch an idea to the show for years.
Ah, perfect.
That sounds exactly right, and I can't wait to know what the invention is.
It was a scrub daddy.
Now I'm joking.
Jonathan isn't willing to wait around for this investor slash cop.
He decides to investigate the case himself.
He sneaks into a law school library and runs background checks on their online research accounts on Marianne Smith.
He even hires six private investigators in cities where Marianne has lived.
And very quickly, the truth comes into focus.
Marianne isn't from Ireland at all.
With a pit in his stomach, Jonathan realizes there were no revolutionary ancestors,
no Irish grandmother teaching his friend how to throw Molotov cocktails,
and no evil Irish cousins plotting against her.
The woman he once loved like a sister fabricated an entire family to take advantage of him.
On top of the betrayal, Jonathan is facing serious financial damage.
He's on the hook for tens of thousands of dollars in interest,
on his credit cards.
Now, he's ready to take matters into his own hands,
and he's determined to make his former bestie
pay for what she's done.
It's spring 2017.
Jonathan is sitting at his computer,
still reeling after learning his friend scammed him out of more than $70,000.
He doesn't want anyone else to go through this.
Jonathan works in reality TV,
so he knows how to tell a story.
and he's not afraid to go public in the most dramatic way possible.
So he logs into blogspot.com and starts drafting a good old-fashioned blog post.
And Jonathan knows just where to start with Marianne's latest boyfriend.
By now, she and Andrew the politician have split up,
and she's currently dating a man named Bob.
Jonathan has never met this new boyfriend and doesn't even know his last name,
but he does have a photo of Bob that Marianne texted to him when they were still friends.
Jonathan posts Bob's picture on his blog, along with the caption,
I know his name is Bob, I know he's an engineer in Newport Beach,
and I know he's getting scammed.
Jonathan hits Publish and hopes that his warning will reach Bob.
In the meantime, other people find the blog,
and Jonathan's inbox starts to fill up with messages from Marianne's victims
all over the United States.
Then, in May 2017,
Jonathan gets a surprising phone call
from the Northern Ireland police.
They tell him they've spent a decade looking for Marianne.
He's shocked.
For the first time in two months,
Jonathan feels hopeful.
The Northern Ireland police might actually hold her accountable
for her crimes.
He immediately sends them all the evidence he's gathered.
Then, a few weeks later in June 2017, Jonathan is sipping coffee on a Sunday morning while watching the news.
He sees a story about people forgetting their email passwords, and he's hit with a memory.
About two years ago, Marianne gave him her email password.
She was having trouble getting into her account and asked him to help.
When he types in the password, it works.
He's just unlocked a massive trove of everything.
Jonathan discovers that Marianne created 23 email addresses linked to her main account,
each tied to a different persona to support her scams.
These include her fake lawyer and Irish cousins, but also celebrities like Jennifer Aniston.
Then Jonathan finds an email that makes his jaw drop, because for once, it doesn't contain
any lies.
In April 2011, one of Marianne's old friends warns her that she,
she's wanted in Northern Ireland.
The email includes a link to a Facebook post from Stephen Smith,
the postal worker Marianne married,
and then divorced shortly after she made him kill all his dogs.
Jonathan clicks on the post and sees that Stephen is asking for help finding Marianne,
and urging anyone with information to call the Northern Irish police.
I don't understand people who don't Google their friends.
Like, you make a new friend, you do a cursory Google.
And then he would have known that she made her ex murder all of his dogs.
Yeah.
Imagine finding that part out through a Facebook post, like already knowing this bitch is crazy and then being like, wait, she made her ex-husband kill 10 greyhounds?
For no reason.
For no good reason.
Well, Jonathan immediately reaches out to his police contact in Northern Ireland.
And a few months later, in late 2017, extradition proceedings begin.
Around the same time, the LAPD finally assign an investigator to Jonathan's case.
Marianne thought she'd left her crimes behind in Belfast.
But thanks to Jonathan, she's about to run out of four-leaf clover.
Over the next several months, Jonathan's blog keeps spreading
and he identifies more victims spanning all over the United States and Northern Ireland.
He shares every new detail he finds with the LAPD.
But Jonathan's quest for justice starts to take a toll on his mental health.
He's losing sleep and often ducks out of work to keep investigating.
His friends are worried about him.
And his husband is upset about how all-consuming Jonathan's obsession with bringing Marianne to justice has become.
The relationship that wasn't real is starting to damage the one that is.
Yeah, I mean, this is tough.
But, like, if you are in that kind of a friendship,
that fundamentally changes how you look at your life and your other relationships.
It's really hard to get over that and just be like, okay, no worries.
I don't have to rethink what I did or what I accepted and what this person did to me.
It's hard to move on from.
Yeah, it's really difficult.
And I also would be obsessed if someone I trusted was a prolific international scammer,
especially since Jonathan's efforts are actually paying off.
Because this is when he gets a phone call from Bob.
Mary Ann's latest boyfriend.
Bob found Jonathan after his ex-wife
Googled Mary Ann's name.
Their children would be spending time with her,
so she wanted to know more about this woman.
And once she found Jonathan's blog,
she sent Bob the link.
Bob says Marianne has been helping him get
a better custody arrangement with his kids.
She told him she works as a child custody case investigator
so she understands the system.
She also connected him with a private investigator
to dig up dirt on his ex, which Bob can use against her in court.
Apparently, what the PI found was incredibly damning.
Bob's ex was allegedly running a BDSM club out of her home.
But going through Mary Ann's emails,
Jonathan figures out this is all a lie.
The private investigator is just another persona she fabricated.
Bob found Jonathan just in time.
By this point, his relationship was serious enough
that he was considering putting Marianne on the title of his two homes.
After speaking to Jonathan, Bob confronts his girlfriend with a printout of Jonathan's blog posts.
Marianne doesn't say anything.
She just gets in her car, drives away, and never talks to Bob again.
I hate how much I love that as a coping mechanism.
I didn't know you could do that.
Yeah, I mean, the thing is, Marian can do anything she wants.
If she just wants to turn around and never talk to someone again,
she's going to turn around and try to never talk to them again.
Thanks to the additional evidence from Bob's case, things finally move.
In April 2018, the district attorney charges Marianne with grand theft by false pretense
for swindling Jonathan out of nearly $100,000.
She's been arrested at her latest hideout,
a group home for the mentally ill,
where, naturally, she's scamming one of the residents.
He's an elderly military vet,
and Marianne is trying to marry him
so she can access his government benefits.
Jonathan's case slowly chugs through the system
with the trial scheduled to begin in January 2019.
But about a month before it's set to start,
he sees a strange ad in his mailbox.
It's from a lawyer asking if he needs help
with a restraining order that's been filed against him.
That's right, Marianne is accusing him.
Jonathan of stalking her.
It's a last-ditch attempt to disrupt the trial.
If it works, he could be barred from testifying in the courtroom for Marianne's safety.
But Jonathan's lawyer tells him there's a loophole.
If he's never officially served, a judge can't grant the restraining order.
So for several weeks, Jonathan and his husband take the back entrance in and out of their
apartment.
When processed servers pound on their front door, they pretend they're not.
not home. It's been nearly two years since Jonathan found out his former friend was scamming him.
And now that he's got some momentum, he's not going to let any more of her lives delay his day
in court. Whether you're exploring your current fascinations or discovering new ones,
Ottawa has all the stories that will introduce you to your most fascinating self.
Tap into a whole new world of heated conversations with a saucy romanty series.
Become your friend group's sci-fi expert on the latest
Blockbuster Book to Screen Adaptation, or find unexpected reveals through the exclusive episodes
of a viral true crime podcast. However you choose to listen, Audible keeps you fascinated, so you can be
just as fascinating. All in one easy app, with plans now starting at 899, you'll get access to over
900,000 audiobooks and podcasts, including trending bestsellers, the hottest new releases, and
exclusive podcasts you won't find anywhere else. Sign up now to become a member and get any
audiobook every month plus exclusive podcasts.
Plans now start at 899.
Audible.
Be fascinated.
Be fascinating.
Whether you're exploring your current fascinations or discovering new ones,
Ottawa has all the stories that will introduce you to your most fascinating self.
Tap into a whole new world of heated conversations with a saucy romantic series.
Become your friend group's sci-fi expert on the latest blockbuster book to screen adaptation.
Or find unexpected reveals through the exclusive.
episodes of a viral true crime podcast.
However you choose to listen, Audible keeps you fascinated so you can be just as fascinating.
All in one easy app, with plans now starting at 899, you'll get access to over 900,000
audiobooks and podcasts, including trending bestsellers, the hottest new releases, and
exclusive podcasts you won't find anywhere else.
Sign up now to become a member and get any audiobook every month, plus exclusive podcasts.
Plans now start at 899.
Audible. Be fascinated, be fascinating.
I feel like a legend.
It's January 2019, almost two years after Jonathan learned the truth about Marianne,
and he's finally stepping into an L.A. courtroom to testify against his former best friend.
Jonathan takes a stand wearing a black button-down shirt,
and as he testifies, he is visibly pissed.
He explains the financial impact Marianne scams how.
on him. He tells a court that after he maxed out on his credit cards, he was drowning in
interest fees as high as $2,000 to $3,000 a month. And ultimately, he had to file for bankruptcy.
Jonathan gets so worked up, the judge has to stop him a few times to tell him to calm down.
Three of Marianne's other victims testify as well, including Bob, her ex-boyfriend.
But the real start witness is Chelsea, who's
She's now around 28 years old.
She flies in from Tennessee to testify against her estranged mother, and her description of her
mom is scathing.
My mother, my entire life, has been a compulsion wire and has often fabricated stories that
no one else can corroborate.
I think that she's a very troubled person who has used her.
intelligence malignantly.
And the things that she has been accused of, I'm absolutely disgusted by.
Pretty damning.
Hard to argue with the daughter's very clear-eyed assessment of their mother in this case.
Yeah, I mean, it's so sad she had to do that.
In the end, after just three hours of deliberation, the jury finds Marianne guilty.
The judge describes her as an invariable.
veteran thief and a sociopath and sentences her to five years in prison.
Jonathan is elated.
Justice has finally been served.
But with the whole world about to go into lockdown,
Marianne won't stay in prison for long and her new scams will have her dancing with the literal devil.
In December 2020, nearly two years into Marianne's five-year prison sentence,
Jonathan hears that she's been released.
At this time, COVID is raging, and to slow the spread of the virus,
California decides to set thousands of nonviolent offenders free.
Marianne takes this opportunity to go on the run again.
Jonathan has no idea where she is,
but he wants to prevent her from scamming anyone else.
So in 2021, he produces and hosts a true crime podcast about Marianne called
Queen of the Khan, which becomes a huge hit and brings in a huge lead.
A listener tips off Jonathan that Marianne is living in a remote part of Maine.
She's reinvented herself yet again, and this time she's calling on a morning star.
That's right, Sachi.
Mary Ann has a brand new scam invoking Satan himself.
Not long after she got out of prison, Marianne started a brand-new scam.
satanic church. She calls herself a high priestess of Satan named Lucia Belia and charges people
hefty sums to cast spells for them. Jonathan manages to get a video from one of her satanic ceremonies.
Sachi, I am going to need you to describe this. And let's watch this right now.
Listen, I always think it's funny when someone's doing something kind of like witchy or weird
and they're wearing like Buddy Holly glasses,
which is what she's wearing.
She appears to be in a black cloak.
She's in the dark surrounded by red curtains and candles,
and she is summoning the devil who she says is already here,
but she is summoning him.
Yeah, you know, it's really insane for a lot of reasons
also because, like, it just looks like a child's reenactment
of summoning Satan.
It's like dark room, the crazy lighting.
It's so insane.
Yeah.
Jonathan has stayed in touch with the police in Northern Ireland,
but their extradition efforts have stalled.
But when he sends them this satanic video,
along with Marianne's address in Maine,
the process starts moving again.
In February 2024, the cops knock on Marianne's door.
She begs them not to extradite her,
claiming she defrauded a major figure in the IRA
and will be murdered if she returns to Northern Ireland.
But they ignore her and put her on a plane to Belfast.
Marianne will finally have to face the music for her crimes.
Her Irish jig is about to be up.
It's September 2025, and Jonathan is about 20 miles south of Belfast.
He's going to court again.
Marianne is finally on trial for defrauding her clients almost 20 years ago
when she worked as a mortgage advisor.
Jonathan got justice, and now he wants her Irish victims to get theirs.
That's why he's flown out here to watch her trial.
But Marianne's lawyer is trying to keep him out of the courtroom,
arguing that his popular podcast is preventing her from getting a fair judgment.
I mean, as a member of the press, that's not an argument that I'm especially sympathetic to,
because if you don't want people to think poorly about you,
then don't do things that are reportable.
I mean, don't do something that.
would make an amazing podcast, first of all.
Yeah, listen, if you end up on a podcast, it's probably your fault.
Yeah, there are a lot of them, and to get one to be popular is a lot of work,
so that means you kind of earned it.
It's actually really hard, and we should know,
so you probably have a crazy story if it's happened.
So Jonathan steps into the courthouse lobby,
where Marianne's victims give him hugs,
thanking him for his work, bringing her to justice.
Soon after, the judge grants him permission to silently
observed the trial, and he takes a seat inside the courtroom next to Marianne's other victims.
For the next three days, he watches them take the stand in tears as Marianne sits stone-faced,
refusing to make eye contact with anyone. She doesn't testify. After only 20 minutes of deliberation,
the jury finds her guilty of conning four people out of more than $155,000. The judge sentences her to
four years in prison, which gets reduced to three years and four months after her months
in U.S. custody are factored in.
Jonathan feels like this is too lenient.
Marianne is scheduled to be deported back to the U.S. after serving her remaining time,
and he's sure it won't take long before she reinvents herself yet again.
But there's at least one happy ending here.
Through the podcast, Jonathan helped Marianne's daughter Chelsea identify her birth father.
He'd always wondered about his daughter and had looked for her,
and after the podcast was released in 2021, they finally reunited.
In 2025, Jonathan published a book about his experience called
Anatomy of a con artist.
And his podcast, Queen of the Khan, has come out with more seasons exposing more scammers.
As for Marian, she's probably searching for another pot of gold.
She'll just have to be very careful about,
about picking her next rainbow.
Sachi, I feel like often someone figuring out there's a scam
clearly happens a bit too late in the story.
And although Jonathan did get scammed,
it felt kind of nice to see someone take a scammer really seriously for once.
Yeah, I really enjoyed the dogged pursuit of getting revenge on an old friend.
Yeah, I really understand how consumed he was with this story.
Like, if I think about someone I've known ever,
who I'm not in contact with anymore.
Like, I am Googling the shit out of them
to see what they're up to these days.
Forget someone who scanned me out of whatever,
$100,000 plus dollars,
who I trusted.
I would never let it go.
I would introduce myself with,
hello, my old friend took all this money from me.
I'm kind of glad that Jonathan found a way
to make it lucrative for himself.
It's pretty rare that you can take your experience
and turn it into your own podcast
that becomes successful and then write a book,
Everyone wants to make content ultimately.
And oftentimes the scammers are the ones who make the content in the end because everyone wants
to hear from a scammer.
But it is kind of nice to see a victim create the content and also go through the process
of investigating it himself.
Like, I don't think there would ever be justice without Jonathan.
Like, I don't think a lot of the people she scammed had the resources.
It's hard to come back from something like that and also to have the tenacity to
pursue someone who wronged you that way.
And it is crazy that, like,
she had been scamming her whole life
and it took one guy.
Well, I think it's also a testament
to why you shouldn't turn
on your closest allies.
She probably would have gotten away with it
for a lot longer
if she didn't do this to the person
who loved her most,
knew her best, was defending her.
You know, she was pulling scams
on a lot of men who she was dating,
but you know who's not going to let you get away with it?
Gay best friend.
That is a huge factor.
Like, I think she underestimated that sacred bond.
The sacred bond between some weird lady and her gay best friend, which...
Yes.
I know intimately.
And I'll tell you what, I would never do anything to Rudy Lee because he would murder me
and march my head around town and make fun of my shoes.
Yeah, I think the fact that she got her ex-husband to put...
down 10 of his greyhounds, that to me says, you know, maybe this woman can summon Satan low-key.
Just that every single person in her life was one of her victims, basically.
Is it really shocking that she then said she can summon Satan instead of being a normal Etsy witch?
Yeah, I mean, I'm just offended by that because, like, the devil's busy.
Yeah, exactly.
Do you know how busy the devil is?
There's a lot of evil people still alive.
and he has meetings.
Yeah.
I mean, listen, it took an entire apartment building
full of old people to summon the devil in Rosemary's baby.
You're telling me, this woman can do it on her own.
That's exactly right.
And I guess she didn't see that movie.
I think one of the big lessons is you should be suspicious of unexplained international wealth.
I mean, yeah, that's the big one.
I also think it's hard to tell if someone's real rich or not,
because rich people are weird.
They live in weird worlds.
and they all have like weird lives and family drama.
And that's just the way things are when you have money.
I think there needs to be an education program for people who are normal
and have never met really, really rich people before maybe.
Because like there's no universe where someone with access to millions of dollars
will be asking a regular ass person for help.
Real rich people will just borrow from the bank or from other rich people.
They're not going to borrow from.
you and your middle-class wallet.
It feels like Jonathan was predisposed to our friend Mayor because he had this like reality
TV bent.
But at the same time, that meant Mayor was in like way more danger with him because if there's
anybody you don't want to upset, it is a reality television producer.
Like, if she had scam just a regular person, they're not going to make a podcast.
At best, it's some well-placed tweets.
But she angered somebody with access and the means of production.
Huge mistake. This is honestly why I think people stay away from us, Sarah. We are one episode away
from changing someone's life. A hundred percent. I also think it's kind of the excitement of getting
to know someone like mayor where there's a type of nutso that you only see on reality TV of like
crazy rich people that is very alluring to be around if you like a good story. You know,
it's like, yeah, I love crazy women. I love when someone is rich and crazy.
and like harried and going like all the time.
But it does come with consequences.
That curiosity comes with consequences.
And we see this here.
Listen, I really think the lesson is go for it, make friends with a weirdo,
find a real housewife and become their bestie.
But do not give them a single red scent.
It's kind of like being an adrenaline junkie.
You have to know what your limit is.
Yeah, listen, you can get in a fight with a housewife.
You should have a public grievance with.
them make a thousand podcasts about your friends. That's fine. But do not give them any money.
Yeah, agreed. You know what? And the other lesson is that if you have to have a husband,
you should also be a husband because if you're not, it's going to go bad. Yeah. Husbands only for
husbands. Follow Scamfluencers on the Audible app or wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen to
all episodes of Scamflincers ad free by joining Audible. From Audible originals, this is Mary-Anne's
Smith, the fake Irish heiress for scamfluencers. I'm Sarah Haggy. And I'm Sachi Cole. If you have a tip for us
on a story that you think we should cover, please email us at scamfluencers at audible.com.
We use many sources in her research. A few that were particularly helpful were Jonathan Walton's
book, Anatomy of a con artist, and his podcast, Queen of the Khan. She wasn't an Irish heiress.
She was from Bangor, Maine by Emily Burnham for the Bangor Daily News, the Hollywood producer,
the heiress and a very personal quest for justice by Katie Kilkenny for the Hollywood reporter
and reporting from the BBC.
Susie Armitage wrote this episode, additional writing by us, Satchie Cole, and Sarah Hagee.
Olivia Briley is our story editor.
Our senior producers are Sarah Eni and Jenny Bloom.
Our associate producer is Charlotte Miller.
Our managing producer is Desi Blaylock.
Fact-checking by Kalina Newman.
Sound design by James Morgan.
Additional audio assistance provided by Augustine Lim.
Our music supervisor is Scott Velasquez for Frieson Sink.
The executive producer for Audible is Jenny Lauer Beckman.
The head of creative development at Audible is Kate Knaven.
The head of Audible Originals North America is Marshall Louis.
The chief content officer is Rachel Giazza, copyright 2026 by Audible Originals LLC.
Sound recording, copyright 2026 by Audible Originals LLC.
I'm Razor Jeffrey, and in the new season of
of the spy who, we tell the story of Dr. A. Q. Khan, the spy who sold nuclear secrets to Iran.
He was the scientist's spy who stole nuclear technology from the Netherlands and used them to give
Pakistan a bomb. But he didn't stop there. He became a black market atomic salesman,
a fix-it man for rogue states seeking nuclear weapons, including Iran, Libya, and North Korea.
And that left the CIA and MI6 in a race against time to put him out of business
before the world's most wayward regimes
get hold of the world's most destructive weapons.
Follow the Spy Who now, wherever you listen to podcasts.
You can also listen to the full season of the Spy Who sold nuclear sequence to Iran
early and ad-free on Audible.
