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Fortune telling fraud, also called the bujo or egg curse scam, is a type of confidence trick, based on a claim of secret or occult information. The basic feature of the scam involves diagnosing the victim (the "mark") with some sort of secret problem that only the grifter can detect or diagnose, and then charging the mark for ineffectual ...
William Rockefeller Sr. (1810–1906): an American businessman, lumberman, herbalist, salesman, and con-artist. [4] Two of his sons were Standard Oil co-founders John Davison Rockefeller Sr. and William Avery Rockefeller Jr. George Appo (1856–1930): American fraudster, operated in New York and was involved in green goods scams. Wrote an ...
An incident in late 2008 at a neighborhood bar set Nygaard on the career path of investigating psychic scams. [1] [6] At a happy hour, Nygaard met two women in the medical profession and regaled them with stories about how he had outsmarted con artists and helped their victims. Shortly after leaving the bar, one of the women – a doctor ...
The One Agency BrazilThe daughter of a wealthy Brazilian art collector used fake fortune tellers to convince her mother that family heirloom paintings were possessed and needed to be removed from ...
Dubious psychics are nothing new, but around the time the Psychic Friends Network went bankrupt, telephone-based psychics began peddling their services on the Web. And thanks to the rise of social ...
Gina Marie Marks (born January 25, 1973) is an American psychic and convicted fraudster.Using the pseudonym of Regina Milbourne, [1] she co-authored Miami Psychic: Confessions of a Confidante, a memoir published by HarperCollins in 2006.
The con artist pretends to accidentally drop his wallet in a public place. After an unsuspecting victim picks up the wallet and offers it to the con artist, the scam begins. The artist accuses the victim of stealing money from the wallet and threatens to call the police, scaring the victim into returning the allegedly stolen money.
Stack began an investigation into Rose Marks and family in 2007 before retiring from the Fort Lauderdale Police Department. [3] [5] A subsequent federal investigation, "Operation Crystal Ball", resulted in a sixty-one-count indictment, unsealed on August 16, 2011, charging Marks and eight family members with crimes spanning twenty years.