Scamfluencers - She Got Game
Episode Date: May 22, 2023Peggy Fulford is glamorous, smooth-talking, and runs in the same circles as pro athletes. In the 1990s, she gets into sports money management, signing on superstars like the NBA’s Dennis Ro...dman and the NFL’s Ricky Williams. She treats her clients like family and quickly becomes enmeshed in their lives. But when they discover Peggy’s been using their savings as her own personal piggy bank, she’ll have to finally face the receipts.Please support us by supporting our sponsors.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Sarah, would you say that you're good with your money?
You know what? I'm not bad with it. I'm not doing anything crazy. This is too real of a question, but go on.
Well, I'm great with money because I'm great at spending it.
Get it?
Yeah, if you got it, why not?
Well, today, I've got a story for you that's about the crisis of abundance that comes when
you make a lot of money, especially what happens when you trust that money with the wrong
people.
It's 2011 and the NBA's biggest stars are gathered at the basketball hall of fame in
Springfield, Massachusetts.
The auditorium is packed with legends like Phil Jackson and Scotty Pippin, and they're
here to see Dennis Rodman be inducted and officially named one of the greatest players
in history.
Ladies and gentlemen, Dennis Rodman.
Dennis walked towards a stage wearing a feather-trimmed coat, a silver sequin scarf, and a suit
bedazzled with the names of the Chicago Bulls and the Detroit Pistons.
When he played on those teams, he led them to a combined five NBA championships.
He six foot seven, and his buzzed hair is dyed bleach blonde.
It's a signature look.
Halfway down the aisle, he pauses to lean over and
kiss the cheek of a black woman. She's wearing a shimmering gown and she has a big smile, sparkling
eyes, and butterscotch-colored hair. A description I love is from one of her ex-husbands, who said that
she looks like Halle Berry. She's in her 50s but could easily pass her being a decade younger.
This glamorous woman isn't Dennis' wife, but she has benefited from his fame and his
wealth.
Her name is Peggy Fulford, and she's a regular at Neiman Marcus where she buys designer
shoes, bags, jeans, and of course, lingerie.
She reportedly spends $2,000 a month on face creams alone.
And earlier this weekend, she arrived in the lobby of the Sheraton Hotel in a full-length
fur coat and loaded up two bell hop carts with Louis Vuitton luggage.
Dennis takes a stage and right away he gets emotional.
I didn't put a game for the money.
I didn't put a game for it to be famous.
He thinks his wife, his teammates, and his coaches,
and then he gestures toward Peggy.
Peggy King, Elken King, the family that these guys
are taking care of me these days.
Thank you, Peggy.
Peggy Beams, sitting next to her business partner, Elken.
Together, they run King Management Group,
a money management company for pro athletes like Dennis.
He's their biggest client.
And they've reportedly been in talks to work with other sports legends, like Jim Brown and
Joe Montana.
Peggy's clients love her, she makes them feel taken care of.
But what they don't know is that she's really good at taking care of herself by spending
their money.
She targets rich players who want a manager and a mother figure. But Peggy's days
of whining and dining on other people's tabs are about to come to an end.
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From Wondery, I'm Sachi Cole, and I'm Sarah Haggi and this is Scanful Insurs. Today's story will take us into the rarefied air and bank accounts of sports stars like Dennis
Rodman and NFL running back Ricky Williams.
It's a cautionary tale about how the more money you have, the harder it can be to keep
track of.
But don't worry, this isn't just a world's tiniest violin story about rich athletes becoming
slightly less rich.
It's also about how one woman exploited her client's trust to steal their money and gain
access to the high life.
I'm calling this story, she got game.
To understand how Peggy got tight with pro athletes, we need to go back to the late 90s. Peggy's hosting a party at her house. It's a sprawling five-bedroom estate on a golf course just outside of Atlanta. It's an agated community known for its celebrities. And Peggy lives here with her husband, Dr. Forest King, and three of her four kids.
Forest is a doctor, obviously, and he's also a pretty well-connected guy in the sports world.
He's got ties to general managers in the NBA and the NFL, and this party is packed with rich people
who run in circles with pro athletes
and a few pro athletes themselves.
Recently, Forest has been inspired
to get more involved in the sports business
through money management.
Sarah, do you know what a money manager does?
I mean, I feel like it sounds pretty self-explanatory.
It's someone who knows a lot about finances
and whatever and tells you,
okay, you should invest in this, save this, right?
Yeah, that is kind of what it is, but they also like help them pay their bills
and, you know, sort of just manage their money broadly speaking.
And Forest and Peggy's new company, King Management Group,
they want to help athletes build generational wealth.
And there's a real need for this in pro sports.
Sports Illustrated reported that 78% of NFL players say they're financially stressed just
two years after retiring, and within five years of leaving the game, 60% of NBA players
are flat broke.
I mean, they're not taught how to manage enormous amounts of money that are coming into their
accounts.
And Forest and Peggy probably see their friend Travis Best
as the perfect potential client for their new business.
He's at their party too.
He's a young point guard for the Indiana Pacers,
and he's short for an NBA player, just 5'11,
and he has close-cropped hair and a mustache.
Peggy met him a few years earlier
when he was playing college basketball.
Now he's a big deal NBA player and a celebrity.
He's even co-starred in the Spike Lee movie he got game.
And his salary got a really big bump recently.
He's taking home millions per year.
But Peggy and Forrest think they can help him get
to where he really wants to be,
to have fancy cars, a nice house, and a big family,
just like they do.
So they offer to rep him to take his career and his money to the next level.
And just like that, King Management officially has its first client.
Forest handles the business and Peggy networks.
The couple is on top of the world, but a tragic accident is about to change everything.
It's January 2000, a couple of years after the party at Peggy and Forest's house.
The couple has recently divorced, and Peggy is at a low point.
And then, she gets a phone call from her father that sends her into a tailspin.
She describes the call on BET's American gangster, trap queens. Peggy's mother was in her home in New Orleans when candles somehow caused a fire,
and she couldn't escape in time. The news is devastating to Peggy. Growing up, she often felt as
if her mother was her only ally.
She's alleged that her father was physically
and verbally abusive.
Her younger sister died in childhood of leukemia,
and her older brother was shot to death
outside of his corner store.
But there was one place Peggy and her mom
went to escape, the mall.
They went shopping to forget their problems
and to feel glamorous.
Peggy's mom was her rock.
And after hearing that her mother has died, Peggy has a breakdown and she smashes a glass
door.
She eventually checks herself into the hospital for several weeks, where she later says
that she's diagnosed with mania.
And mania is a word that she returns to again and again when talking about her mental
health.
This is how she described her experience of it on the opportunist podcast.
Everything that you do is to feel better, is to feel good.
You know, you go on either buying spree, a sexual spree, a drug spree.
It's just that I didn't have the right prices.
I have the buying vices. I mean, I do feel pretty bad for her.
Like, it's hard to lose a parent,
especially if they are the only person you have to rely on.
And yeah, I mean, I kind of get it.
Yeah, it's also interesting that she has this awareness
of her spending vice so early.
Yeah, she knows that's her kryptonite.
Yeah. Well, when knows that's her kryptonite. Yeah.
Well, when Peggy leaves the hospital, she makes some major changes in her life.
She takes total control of the money management business she started with Forest, including
the clients and their money.
She returns to New Orleans, determined to build up the company and make it on her own.
And to do that, she'll need clients who are rich
and, in desperate need, a financial help.
About a year after Peggy's breakdown,
Ricky William stands in a sparsely furnished condo
in New Orleans' French Quarter.
He's ripped, with a go-tie and dreadlocks
that hit right around his chin.
He plays running back for the New Orleans Saints, and MTV's Cribs wants to spotlight his condo
in an upcoming episode, so he really needs to redecorate before the cameras arrive.
So he hired an interior designer, who shows up, along with a friend.
Peggy.
Sarah, we actually got to talk to one of Ricky's closest friends, Shantel Cohen, for
this episode, and she was there in Ricky's condo that day.
Here's how she describes her first impression of Peggy.
She's so spunky and she's just like, talking and she's walking fast around the house.
Like, you need to do this, you need curtains here.
And we're like, okay, well, who is this lady?
She just took over the room and she was very confident.
Peggy did more than take over the room.
She took over the interior design gig.
You know, until now, I didn't even consider
that they staged their homes for cribs.
You know, I just wanted to keep the magic of cribs
in my mind and now it's gone.
Well, you know, I am here to ruin everything you've ever loved.
But Ricky is a really big deal NFL player.
He won the Highsman Trophy, which is awarded to the single most outstanding college football
player in the U.S. and he was drafted into the NFL 5th overall by the Saints.
But the contract Ricky signed with the team has been called one of the worst in NFL history.
Even though he got an $8.8 million signing bonus, most of his yearly salary
is based on his performance, and he doesn't live up to expectations. He's not playing
great and he's leaving a lot of money on the table. But, about a year later, Ricky is
traded to the Miami Dolphins. He plays better, but he's stumbling into other problems.
He tests positive for cannabis, twice.
And he says that he smokes to alleviate social anxiety,
but it's forbidden by the NFL.
And now he's facing hefty fines.
And Ricky is starting to wonder,
does he even want to play football anymore?
So, at 27 years old, he retires from the game.
And he sets out on a journey of exploration.
He tours Europe with Lenny Kravitz, he strolls through Tokyo at night, and he visits Bob
Marley's hometown in Jamaica.
He feels like the right decision, until one night, a few months into his world travels,
he catches an NFL game on TV.
He's in the lobby of his hostel in Chiang Mai about to catch a tuk-tuk to go out for the
night, and he later describes this moment on his podcast, curious questions with Ricky He's in the lobby of his hostel and Chiang Mai about to catch a tuk tuk to go out for the night.
And he later describes this moment on his podcast, curious questions with Ricky Williams.
In this moment, I had like this, I need to go home like panic feeling.
It was just too crazy for me that it was this little town and this little hostel that no one there even watched football.
Yeah, I mean, if I was confused about my life,
I would absolutely see that as a sign
that would make me go crazy.
Like you're in Thailand where they don't really watch the NFL
and a football game is on TV in your hotel lobby.
That's crazy.
Yeah, I mean, he's also 27.
That's a really young age to be retiring.
And so he gets on the first flight back to the US
and he unretires.
He's ready to get his life back on track starting with his finances.
Because here's the thing, Ricky actually has a toddler at home with his girlfriend, Kristen.
He has a family to support, and he only has a few more years of healthy playing time.
And Sarah, guess who he turns to for financial help?
I'm guessing it's Peggy.
That's right, it's Peggy Fulford.
Ricky has actually kept in touch with her ever since she
redecorated his condo.
They bonded over their struggles with mental health,
and they've gotten really close.
Peggy actually drove Ricky and Kristen
home from the hospital when they had their baby,
just two months after the crib's episode aired.
Peggy even moved
to Fort Lauderdale after Ricky was traded to Miami to stay close to him. She's a good friend,
and Ricky thinks she can help him be smarter with his money. So, in 2007, he asks Peggy to become
his business manager. He also signs over power of attorney to her, which gives her the authority to act on his behalf financially, to file taxes, open bank accounts, and transfer money.
You know, I've never been in a position where I've come into extreme wealth by any means,
but I truly just couldn't imagine even if this was someone I trusted and loved with my
whole heart, like just signing that over to anyone,
like not even because I don't trust them,
but it's like anything could happen.
Like why would I do that, you know?
Yeah.
Well, here's a twist.
Peggy insists on not being paid.
She says she's already plenty rich.
She's invested well,
and she married a series of wealthy men.
She just wants to help a close friend
build generational wealth.
It must seem like the answer to Ricky's prayers.
He's trusting her with his money and his future.
And he's just one of several pro athletes
who are putting all their trust and their money
in Peggy's hands.
Around this same time, Dennis Rodman and his manager pull into the driveway of Peggy's
6,000 square foot Fort Lauderdale Mansion.
It's on a street dotted with palm trees near a private country club.
The house is built on a man-made canal.
It is street parking out front and boat parking in the back.
It also has a private dock, a four car garage,
and of course, an elevator.
Dennis retired from the NBA seven years earlier,
but he still has incredible earning power.
He gets paid to DJ and Centro pay,
play basketball in Japan,
and appear on reality shows like the apprentice.
I sent you out, I wanted you to prove something, Dennis,
but you didn't prove it.
You let me down.
You let yourself down.
You let your team down.
Dennis, you're fired.
Absolutely.
But he hasn't managed his money very well.
He owes a lot in back taxes, and he's a big spender.
One friend remembers a time he brought $60,000 in cash to a nightclub, just, you know, in case.
And according to BET's American gangster, Dennis met Peggy through her son, Elkyn, who worked
as Dennis' road manager. Now, Elkyn's running King Management Group with his mom, and he's hooked
Dennis up with her to help Dennis manage his money. Only Elkain apparently doesn't disclose that
Peggy is his mom. He reportedly says that she's his sister. I imagine that neither of them
want to shatter the illusion that Peggy's been creating, that she's a full decade younger than
she really is. She lies about other things too. She tells potential clients that she went to Harvard
and had a successful career on Wall Street.
Peggy welcomes Dennis and his manager inside her mansion,
and she immediately talks herself up.
She says that she'll get Dennis' taxes sorted,
pay off any debts he owes, and of course,
help him build generational wealth.
What she doesn't mention is that she's making payments
for her fabulous house and her fabulous clothes
and her fabulous cars
using Dennis Rodman's money.
Though Peggy has married a series of wealthy men,
including her current husband and anesthesiologist,
that isn't the only way she's supporting her taste
for the finer things in life.
She's starting to rip off her clients,
transferring money from their bank accounts
to shell accounts that she controls,
and then she spends every single cent.
Peggy's getting away with all of this by treating her clients like family, but her fabulous
life is built on betrayal, and the lies are piling up.
Peggy's charm and good luck will only get her so far.
only get her so far. It's 2009 and Peggy is hosting a lavish wedding reception for Ricky and Kristen in the backyard
of her four-lotterdale mansion.
It's a beautiful night. Chantelle remembers it as a really happy day. Even after her speech was interrupted by an uninvited guest, Dennis Rodman. I'm trying to ignore him like, no, what, what,
no, you know it. Finally, I was just like, okay, he's not going to stop. He talked about Ricky for
a little bit, but thank Peggy a lot throughout the speech.
Peggy has become so close with Ricky and Kristen
that she insisted on hosting the reception herself.
And when the wedding is over,
Peggy charges the Williams' 60 grand,
which is double what the reception actually cost.
Ricky and Kristen, they don't suspect a thing.
They trust Peggy completely. They don't even
get financial statements that show where their money is going. So, with power of attorney and without
any checks and balances, Peggy steals freely. Of course, Dennis and Ricky aren't the only victims.
In 2010, Travis Best gets a letter from the IRS saying his taxes haven't been paid for several
years.
Travis is the NBA player who co-starred in he got game and he was Peggy's first client.
And when Travis gets this IRS letter, he's confused because he wired Peggy $1 million
specifically to pay his taxes.
He knows something is up.
So after more than a decade of working with her,
he decides to cut ties with Peggy. But he's embarrassed. So he keeps this chapter of his life private
for a while. It isn't easy to admit when something like this happens. Meanwhile, Peggy uses her
clients' money to pay for real estate in Houston, New Orleans, Oakland, and Fort Lauderdale. Plus, luxury cars, designer fashion,
and very fancy creams.
She's finding comfort and escape in consumerism,
something she's done since she was a kid.
Peggy has built her career working in the background
for celebrities, but now she's ready
to claim the spotlight for herself.
About a year after Travis Fierce Peggy,
she's plotting the next step in her career, reality TV fame.
She puts together a sizzle reel to show TV networks
what a reality show based on her life would look like.
In a clip from the reel, Peggy seeded on a golden yellow
she's all done up.
And then she does what she does best.
She sells herself.
These guys need a lot of hair, you know.
They're just big shoots with lots of money.
And I bring a lot of love, I bring a lot of concern, and I bring a lot of knowledge
because I do kids.
Oh my god, that is so condescending.
Like, oh, these guys are just like big babies, and I'm the only one who can momm them.
Yeah.
But here's the thing about Peggy.
She knows how compelling her story is.
She's a black woman killing it in an industry dominated
by white men, and her clients are household names.
She suggests a title that is such a chef's kiss,
the Peggy Show, of course.
This sizzle reel ends up in front of development executives
at BET and VH1.
BET orders a pilot of the Peggy Show,
but it doesn't get picked up.
TV's hard, but the sizzle is a perfect encapsulation
of Peggy's life at this time.
All glitz, all glamour, but all on the surface.
There's nothing underneath.
Even though in her pitch, she
swears to protect her clients against would-be scammers, the reality is she's the one robbing
them. Yeah, I would love to know the mental gymnastics she did in her head to be like,
you know what? Yeah, I'm taking this extra money from them, but it's actually a good thing
because people would be taking more value, wasn't helping them. I mean, listen, Delusion is a hell of a drug.
And Peggy has created a maternal disciplinary attitude
towards Dennis Rodman's financial management.
When she opens an account under his name,
she makes herself the account manager.
Instead of helping him create a budget,
Peggy cuts Dennis off from his own resources.
She won't even let him have a debit card.
Later, his friends
talk about times when they'd have to buy his groceries because he didn't have the cash.
And when he complains, she tells him it's for his own good. Peggy also takes this disciplinary
and attitude towards his alcohol abuse. She says his drinking just proves how much he needs
her help. But meanwhile, her son, Elkin, reportedly joins Dennis on benders that can sometimes go on for days.
And over the years, Peggy's operation grows much more complex.
She opens more than a dozen shell corporations registered in multiple states to launder her clients' money.
They have names like Dennis Rodman Group LLC,
Dennis Rodman Group and Associates LLC names like Dennis Rodman Group LLC, Dennis Rodman Group
and Associates LLC, and Dennis Rodman Inc. But Peggy's free ride can't last forever. Even
her clients who see her more as family can't ignore all the red flags that she's throwing
down.
In 2012, Dennis Rodman is in an orange county courtroom for a hearing to adjust his
child's upper rate. The year before, his ex-wife had filed a declaration claiming that Dennis had
missed payments and that he owed her more than half a million dollars. And Dennis' team says
that was under Peggy's purview, which she's denied. It's actually been a weird couple of years
for Dennis financially.
One day, the electricity at his Florida condo
shuts off because of unpaid bills.
Payments lapsed on his $5 million
life insurance policy, and his ex-wife got calls
from the doctor's office saying the premiums
had been paid on their children's healthcare plans.
These were all payments that Peggy was supposed to be handling.
Okay, so now it's getting to a different level of serious
where I mean, it's making Dennis Rodman
to be some type of deadbeat that he's not
because he's, you know, being told by Peggy,
yeah, yeah, I'm like dealing with all this.
Yeah, exactly.
And in court, Dennis' lawyer is trying to demonstrate
that Dennis' income is much more modest
now than when the child support plan was initially put in place.
The lawyer outlines some of the recent expenses listed on Dennis' American Express statement.
That's one of the only financial documents Peggy provided for this hearing.
But one of the charges makes Dennis stop in his tracks.
A thousand dollars at Victoria's secret.
Dennis knows immediately that this was definitely not one of his purchases.
Dennis's agent, his lawyer, and all the people close to him have reportedly raised their
concerns about Peggy, and he's defended her up until now. But finally, he's had enough.
Dennis is furious. He turns to Peggy's son
Elkin for answers, but Elkin doesn't have any, or at least not any good ones. But when
Dennis and Peggy finally talk, she calms him down. Dennis considers Peggy and Elkin family,
and he doesn't want to just turn them away. But these unpaid bills and unusual charges
are adding up. And some of Peggy's
other clients are about to come face-to-face with the stone-cold reality that she's been
living large on their dime and leaving them with nothing.
In the summer of 2012, Kristin Talschontantal that she got a letter from the IRS.
She and Ricky are being audited.
They owe $375,000 in back taxes.
And they're really confused.
I mean, Peggy was supposed to take care of all of this.
Ricky retired from the NFL a few months earlier, this time for good, which means there's been
a major slowdown in their cash flow and in Peggy's too.
Shantal told us that she and Kristen got on the phone to talk it out.
That was our two, three hour conversation and we just started going backwards with red flags basically, you know, and his first child's mom, no child support. What, where has the child support payments been?
Why are you not being able to
go get groceries?
Why is your car being reposed?
That year, Kristen was going to
take her kids to school and
discover that the family car
had been repossessed.
When Kristen asks Peggy
about the car payments,
of course, she just talks her
way out of it.
Here's what Shantelle recalls
from her conversation with
Kristen. Every time Kristen would ask, recalls from her conversation with Kristen.
Every time Kristen would ask,
it was like, oh, Kristen, let me take you to dinner.
Oh, Kristen, let me take you to the mall
and try to get Kristen's mind off of it.
So it was a mind-playing game for sure.
But now, with these IRS letters,
it's finally clear to Kristen and Chantal that Peggy is
untrustworthy.
Kristen calls Charles Schwab's financial services firm, where Peggy claimed to have invested
millions of their dollars.
And Sarah, there are no funds in their names.
She calls the bank where Peggy had opened their accounts, but she's denied access.
Kristen begins to realize that Peggy has been lying to them
this whole time.
She starts to wonder what else Peggy has been lying about.
So she asks a friend who went to Harvard
to check the alumni database.
And you know what, there's no record of Peggy.
Oh my God, Peggy's getting caught.
Peggy's getting caught.
In December 2013, Kristen and Ricky sue Peggy's getting caught. Peggy's getting caught. In December 2013, Kristen and Ricky sue Peggy and file a temporary restraining order against
her.
Their lawsuit alleges that Peggy transferred at least $6 million out of a joint account
opened in Kristen and Ricky's names without their knowledge.
It also alleges that when Kristen discovered the transactions and tried to contact Peggy
about them, Peggy ended all communication.
Peggy's losing control of some of her closest clients
and friends, and this civil lawsuit
is about to draw serious media attention.
And once law enforcement gets involved,
Peggy's free willing days of spending other people's money
will finally come to an end.
By early 2015, Dennis is more enmeshed with Peggy and her family than ever. Peggy's son,
Elkin, actually went with Dennis to North Korea two years earlier to visit Kim Jong-un.
Dennis had been invited to play an exhibition game and signed some autographs,
something he had done countless times all over the world since his retirement.
and some autographs, something he had done countless times all over the world since his retirement.
Sarah, you can see Elkyn sitting behind Dennis
and Kim Jong-un in this picture from the visit.
Oh my God.
Okay, so this photo, you know, it's obviously Dennis,
any city beside Kim Jong-un,
and there's like a bunch of people behind.
And I've seen this photo before, Satchi.
Yeah.
And I've always been like,
I wonder who that other random black guy is? And I never really this photo before, Satchi. Yeah. And I've always been like, I wonder who that other random black guy is.
And I never really interrogated it more,
because the initial image was already too much to absorb.
But now that I know, it's like, oh my god, my mind is blown.
But here's the thing.
Any bonding Dennis and Elkin may have done on this trip go sour.
When Dennis learns that Elkin is actually Peggy's son,
not her brother,
which is what he'd been led to believe this whole time. That deception crushes him.
Dennis finally fires Peggy and his lawyer sends her a letter accusing her of stealing from Dennis
and of lying about graduating from Harvard. This is big news. TMZ runs with a headline that says, Dennis Rodman brutally fires Biz Manager. She's a total fraud.
When TMZ reaches Peggy for comment, she tells them,
the whole letter is crazy and bogus.
I've been with him through thick and thin.
And then, she calls him an alcoholic drunk.
Not long after Dennis fires Peggy, the FBI comes calling.
Agent James Hawkins actually started looking into Peggy's business about two years earlier.
After reading an article in the Houston Chronicle about Kristen and Ricky's lawsuit.
That suit fell apart, but when Agent Hawkins starts digging into financial records,
he sees potential for a criminal case.
He plans to file an indictment and arrest Peggy.
But first, he wants to talk to Dennis.
So he boards a flight from Houston to Fort Lauderdale. He brings a stack of financial documents to
a meeting with Dennis and his team. And Dennis is quiet at the meeting, only really speaking up when
he's asked any questions. Agent Hawkins says he's never seen a fraud case this complicated in 30 years at the FBI.
Peggy has 85 bank accounts.
He doesn't know how much money was stolen from Dennis, but he guesses it was around the million
dollars.
And on December 16th, 2016, Peggy is arrested on eight counts, including money laundering,
wire fraud, and mail fraud.
The evidence is damning, so Peggy takes a plea deal.
She pleads guilty to one count of interstate transportation
of stolen property for having transported $200,000
of a client's money from Montana to Texas.
A judge sets Peggy free on a $25,000 bond to a weight sentencing,
but Peggy's gonna Peggy. So even with jail time
likely on the horizon, she goes out hunting for a new mark.
And I feel like a...
It's Marty Gruss season in 2018, and Ray Thompson is a New Orleans to visit his family. He's a 64-year-old aerospace engineer who builds F-15 fighter jets in Saudi Arabia.
He sports a well-groomed go-tie, fluctued with gray hairs.
He has a daughter, three grandchildren, and two gray grandchildren.
And while he's back in New Orleans, he runs into an old acquaintance, Peggy.
They catch up for a bit, and then Peggy makes an offer.
She says she wants to get him in on a lucrative opportunity, starting an emergency room management
business in Phoenix.
Ray is intrigued.
Hurricane Katrina hit him hard.
He basically lost everything, and he was out of work for over a year before he found
a job overseas.
This could be a chance to come home for good.
So he gives Peggy 25 grand.
But when he asks for paperwork or a business plan, she says that she doesn't have it on hand.
And I have to remind you, she has pled guilty to a crime and is out on bond awaiting sentencing.
This kind of takes me back to earlier in this episode where she's talking about how like
shopping became this weird manic addiction for her, where it's like how could she possibly
do this?
She's a well-known person at this point. TMZ covered everything that is so brazen in such an unhinged way.
Yeah, Peggy's coping mechanism is scamming. And then one day, several months after this deal, Peggy just shows up at his house, really shaken up.
She's vague about the details, but she says that there are some legal problems with her ex-husband.
What Rae doesn't know is that there is a warrant out for Peggy's arrest.
In the time since Peggy took the plea deal, she's gone missing.
Peggy was supposed to have been living with her father, but he says that she hasn't
lived with him for six months.
Rae says that if she's done nothing wrong, it'll all get cleared up.
And he even drives her from New Orleans to Houston to turn herself in.
It's only after he drops her off that Ray Googles her,
and he finds out that Peggy's been accused of running a huge scam.
And thanks to Ray, Peggy is back in the hands of the law,
and she'll have to face her victims one last time. [♪ Music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background bezel over $2 million from him. But like Kristen and Ricky's suit, his was dismissed.
Travis decides not to address the court
at the sentencing hearing.
But Kristen does.
She speaks on behalf of herself and Ricky,
who is now her ex-husband.
And she says that Ricky's too busy to come.
He had to start a second career
after Peggy stole all of his money.
On the stand, Kristen talks about the time
Peggy posed as Ricky's wife and then filed for
more than $300,000 in fraudulent tax refunds and stole the money for herself.
Peggy addresses the court, saying she accepts full responsibility for her actions.
She apologizes to everyone who was hurt, and she says that she suffers from mania and that
she never did anything intentionally.
Things just spiraled out of control.
But the US Attorney reveals that not only had Peggy continued scamming while out on bond,
she was still using two of Dennis Rodman's bank accounts.
Peggy gets the maximum sentence that her plea agreement allows 10 years in prison.
The conservative estimate of what she stole is $5.7 million. She owes 1.3
million to Travis Best, 1.2 million to Dennis Rodman, and 3 million to Ricky Williams.
She's currently five years into her sentence in Alabama, and on her release date in 2026,
she will be 67 years old. Elkin, Peggy's son and longtime business partner
was never criminally charged,
and he maintains that he did not know about Peggy's fraud.
And meanwhile, Peggy's victims have been working hard
to earn back what they've lost.
In 2021, Ricky started a cannabis company,
Heisman, like the Heisman trophy, the H.I.G.H.
Do you get it?
And Ricky's also gotten big into astrology.
You can actually schedule a reading from him on his website.
I mean, he has to do what he has to do at this point.
Like, I hope he's happy in whatever endeavor he's pursuing.
How could he not be happy if he owns a cannabis company called Heisman?
Yeah, that's very true.
What else is there?
True.
Well, Travis Best started the Travis Best Foundation,
which supports young people in the Springfield, Massachusetts
area, and he also got into the cannabis game.
He was announced as a co-owner of a Springfield
dispensary in 2021.
Dennis Rodman has revisited North Korea a bunch of times,
including the summit between Kim Jong-un and President
Donald Trump in 2018.
And just last year,
Dennis appeared on a reboot of the surreal life,
where a bunch of celebrities live in a house together
and argue, it's my favorite show, obviously.
The second act for these athletes have, thankfully,
included many lucrative opportunities.
But Peggy's just one extreme example
of how pro-sports stars are especially vulnerable
to shameless scammers.
Sarah, did this story make you feel bad
for people who make obscene amounts of money
for playing sports?
Yeah, it actually did,
and I'm not even being sarcastic.
I think it's like Peggy kind of knew that there's this whole thing
about athletes and them not knowing how to manage their money
and how they give way too much money to people.
And you know, she was here to bridge that gap
and I can guarantee they trusted her also
because she was a black woman
and not some random white guy.
Like she understood the kind of stuff they went through.
Yeah, there's something especially Iki about the fact
that Peggy was saying to them over
and over again, I'm here to help you build generational wealth.
Yes.
Because she really seemed to understand the racial elements and the professional elements
of these young black men who are trying to pull themselves out of whatever circumstances
they're in to have a better financial life, to build an empire for their children.
And she was offering them a path forward.
This is how you're gonna be able to survive forever
off of the money, the back breaking, you know, labor
that you have to do when you're 24,
and that money can last until you're dead.
Fully, and then she just took it.
There is something also about Peggy
that is just like so tragic, you know?
It's not that I feel bad for her really.
And she did so many things that were so avoidable.
Because clearly she had some sort of charm and charisma
to get herself in these circles in the first place.
She could have done anything else.
But the fact that she just like,
compulsively kept doing crazier and crazier things
is just like, what, like, why are you doing this?
Just stop.
Like it's over Peggy.
Yeah.
And also, it seems like she really knew who to target
with a scam where it's people who are kind of vulnerable
in this way.
Like Dennis Rodman always had this reputation
of being very hotheaded and impulsive and the crazy guy
on the team and it really seems like she was able to pray on the right types of athletes that were
especially lost and vulnerable. Yeah, like Ricky's in Chiang Mai trying to figure his life out.
Travis is really young because nobody's doing and Dennis is like perceived as erratic.
So if he hires someone like Peggy,
it kind of gives him this patina of respectability
in the public.
And it is really interesting to think about how people
talked about Dennis Rodman's finances
and the way that he spent his money
and his child support issues.
Yeah, exactly.
And it's, I had never heard of Peggy until now.
In my mind, it was just like, oh yeah, Dennis Rodman was this crazy guy.
But, you know, there's like a whole other layer here that I didn't know about at all.
And it's just like, wow, it's so easy to pray on famous people in these vulnerable positions,
where they're like, okay, I'm suddenly rich now.
What, like, it's hard and it's really sad.
I feel like this bummed me out in a way
I wasn't necessarily expecting.
Did you learn any lessons today, Sarah?
Yeah, it's that anyone who enters your life suddenly
and creates this level of intimacy.
And then it's like, you know what?
You don't even need to hire me.
I'm gonna volunteer to be your, like,
basically right hand person.
To me, that's just like, mm.
I just don't trust anyone who puts themselves
in a caretaking position for someone
they don't have like a real history with
unless that's their job, you know?
Well, I feel like I learned that my total lack
of athletic ability has protected me in more ways than one.
And I'm proud of the fact that I can't do anything physically ever.
Maybe it's a good thing also that I've never been able to do anything athletic,
and also that I'll never have millions of dollars.
Wow, what a relief.
It honestly is so happy to be someone with a normal income.
I'm glad you found comfort today.
Be rich sucks.
Bull of Dodge!
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that you think we should cover, please email us at scamfulinsorsatwondery.com.
We use many sources in our research.
A few that were particularly helpful were the Opportunist Podcast hosted by Hannah Smith,
BET's American Gangster, Trap Queens, CNBC's American Greed, the sports illustrated story
she won Athletes Hearts and Rob them blind by Alex Pruitt,
and The Runaway by Chris Jones in Esquire. Just like a forward wrote this episode,
additional writing by Us, Sachi Cole and Sarah Hagi. Our senior producer is Jen Swan.
Our producer is John Reed. Our associate producers are Charlotte Miller and Lexi Peary.
Our story editor and producer is Sarah Annie. Alison Windintrob and Eric Thurham are our Story Editors.
Our Coordinating Producer is Desi Blaylock.
Sound Design is by Sam Ada.
Fact checking by Will Tavlin.
Additional audio assistance provided by Adrian Topia.
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you