History
The first known usage of the term "confidence man" in English
was in 1849; it was used by American press during the United
States trial of
William Thompson. Thompson chatted with strangers until he
asked if they had the confidence to lend him their watches,
whereupon he would walk off with the watch; he was captured when
a victim recognized him on the street.[1]
The term 'scam' is often used to describe the 'confidence
trick' employed by a 'confidence man'. The origin of this word
is thought to come from the Irish phrase 'S cam ι (pron.
s'cam ae) meaning 'it is a trick'
[2]
Vulnerability to confidence tricks
Persons of any level of intelligence are vulnerable to
deception by experienced con artists. Confidence tricks exploit
human weaknesses like
greed,
dishonesty,
vanity, but also virtues like
honesty,
compassion, or a
naοve expectation of good faith on the part of the con
artist.
Just as there is no typical profile for swindlers,
neither is there one for their victims. Virtually anyone can
fall prey to fraudulent crimes.
Certainly victims of
high-yield investment frauds may possess a level of greed
which exceeds their caution as well as a willingness to
believe what they want to believe. However, not all fraud
victims are greedy, risk-taking, self-deceptive individuals
looking to make a quick dollar. Nor are all fraud victims
naive, uneducated, or elderly.[3]
Confidence tricksters often rely on the greed and dishonesty
of the mark, who may attempt to out-cheat the con artist, only
to discover that he or she has been manipulated into losing from
the very beginning. This is such a general principle in
confidence tricks that there is a saying among con men that "you
can't cheat an honest man."[4]
Nevertheless, some tricks depend on the honesty of the
victim. In a common scam, as part of an apparently legitimate
transaction, the victim is sent a worthless check, which the
victim then deposits. The victim is then urged to forward the
apparent value of the check to the trickster as cash, possibly
keeping a small portion of the money as a commission, which they
may do before discovering the
check bounces. Another fashionable scenario (as of 2006)[citation
needed] has the victim recruited as a
"financial agent" to collect "business debts." Paper checks are
not always involved: funds may be transferred electronically
from another victim.
Sometimes con men rely on naive individuals who put their
confidence into
get-rich-quick schemes, such as "too good to be true"
investments. It may take years for the wider community to
discover that such investment schemes are
bogus.
By the time they are discovered, many people may have lost their
life savings to something in which they have been persuaded to
invest.
The confidence trickster often works with one or more
accomplices called
shills, who help manipulate the mark into accepting the con
man's plan. In a traditional confidence trick, the mark is led
to believe that he will be able to win money or some other prize
by doing some task. The accomplices may pretend to be random
strangers who have benefited from successfully performing the
task.
Notable con artists
Born in the 18th century
-
Gregor MacGregor (17861845) Scottish conman who tried
to attract investment and settlers for a non-existent
country of
Poyais[5]
Born or active in the 19th century
Born or active in the 20th century
Living people
-
Brian Jared Smart (1977) - Utah con man and former
member of AIM associates in Anaheim California Smart move
his family of 8 to LEHI Utah and was charged by the Security
Exchange Commision with the creation of a PONZI scam on the
day Madoff was set to prison for life. The action is pending
in the federal court of UTAH, and is being covered by the
UTAH media.
-
Bernard Lawrence Madoff (1938) - American businessman
and former chairman of the NASDAQ stock market who admitted
running a $50 billion
Ponzi scheme. He started the Wall Street firm Bernard L.
Madoff Investment Securities LLC in 1960 and was its
chairman until December 11, 2008, when he was arrested and
charged with securities fraud.
-
Bon Levi (1943) - Aka Ron the Con and Ronald Frederick.
Arguably Australia's most notorious conman who has tricked
Australian and US citizens out of millions of dollars by
enticing them to invest in scam franchise businesses. He has
been jailed both in Australia and the United States.
-
Casey Serin (1982) - self-confessed mortgage fraudster
who became the "poster child" of the housing bubble.
-
Clifford Irving (1930) US writer, best known for an
"authorized autobiography" of
Howard Hughes that turned out to be a hoax
-
Kevin Trudeau (1963) US writer and billiards promoter,
convicted of fraud and larceny in 1991, known for a series
of late-night infomercials and his series of books about
"Secrets 'they' don't want you to know about."
-
Frank Abagnale (1948) former US con artist, check
forger and impostor; his autobiography,
Catch Me If You Can, was made into a movie[13]
-
Gert Postel (1958) German medical con, a simple
postman who for decades pretended to be a medical doctor,
worked from 1995 for almost 2 years as a psychiatrist in a
small province hospital in
Saxony
-
James Arthur Hogue (1959) US impostor who most
famously entered
Princeton University by posing as a self-taught orphan[14]
-
Robert Hendy-Freegard (1971) British con artist who
kidnapped people by impersonating an
MI5
agent and conned them out of money; he was convicted in 2005[15]
-
Matt the Knife (1979) American born con artist, card
cheat and pickpocket who, from the ages of approximately 14
through 21, bilked dozens of casinos, corporations and at
least one Mafia family out of untold sums[16]
-
Lou Pearlman (1958) US businessman and entertainment
mogul, currently serving time for operating a
Ponzi investment scheme
Psychopathology
See also
Further reading
-
Blundell, Nigel (1984) [1982]. The World's Greatest
Crooks and Conmen and other mischievous malefactors.
London: Octopus Books.
ISBN 0-7064-2144-2.
-
Ford, Charles V. (1999) [1999]. Lies! Lies!! Lies!!!: The
Psychology of Deceit. American Psychiatric Publishing,
Inc..
-
Maurer, David W. (1940). The Big Con: The Story of the
Confidence Man and the Confidence Game. New York: The
Bobbs Merrill company.
ISBN 0-385-49538-2.
-
Maurer, David W. (1974). The American Confidence Man.
Springfield: Charles C. Thomas, Publisher.
ISBN 0-398-02974-1.
-
Ball, J. Bowyer; Whaley, Barton (1982). Cheating and
Deception. New Brunswick (USA), London (UK): Transaction
Publishers.
ISBN 0-88738-868-X.
-
Sutherland, Edwin Hardin (1937). The Professional Thief.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
ISBN 978-0-226-78051-1.
References
-
Karen Halttunen, Confidence Men and Painted Women,
p 6
ISBN 0-300-02835-0
-
Daniel Cassidy: "How the Irish invented Slang", page
244, CounterPunch Press, 2007,
ISBN 978-1-904859604
-
crimes-of-persuasion.com Fraud Victim Advice /
Assistance for Consumer Scams and Investment Frauds
-
A Conversation with James Swain
online
-
"Document of the Month January 2005". The Scottish
Executive. January 2005.
http://www.scotland.gov.uk/News/News-Extras/docJan2005.
Retrieved on 19 August.
-
"Arrest of the Confidence Man". New York Herald.
1849.
http://chnm.gmu.edu/lostmuseum/lm/328/.
Retrieved on 19 August.
-
Maurer, David W. (1940), The Big Con: The Story of
the Confidence Man and the Confidence Game, Bobbs
Merrill,
ISBN 0-7869-1850-8
-
"For You, Half Price". The New York Times. 1849.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/11/27/nyregion/thecity/27brid.html?ex=1290747600&en=d5b19f580f176c64&ei=5090&partner=rssuserland&emc=rss.
Retrieved on 19 August.
-
Weil, Joseph (1948), "Yellow Kid" Weil: The
Autobiography of America's Master Swindler,
Ziff-Davis,
ISBN 0-7812-8661-1
-
Zuckoff, Mitchell (March 8 2005), Ponzi's Scheme: The
True Story of a Financial Legend, Random House,
ISBN 1-4000-6039-7
-
Johnson, James F.; Miller, Floyd (1961), The Man Who
Sold the Eiffel Tower, Doubleday
-
"The Fund Industry's Black Eye". Brian Trumbore,
StocksandNews.com. 2002-04-19.
http://www.stocksandnews.com/searchresults.asp?Id=1047&adate=4/19/2002.
Retrieved on 19 August.
-
Frank W. Abagnale Jr.; with Stan Redding (1980). 'Catch
Me if You Can'. New York:
Simon & Schuster.
ISBN 0-671-64091-7.
-
"Princeton 'Student' Gets Jail Sentence". The New
York Times. 1992-10-25.
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E0CE0DD153FF936A15753C1A964958260.
Retrieved on 19 August.
-
"Fake spy guilty of kidnapping con". BBC. 2005-06-23.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/nottinghamshire/4114640.stm.
Retrieved on 19 August.
-
Amorosi, A.D. (2007-01-16),
Just Do It, The Philadelphia City Paper