List of con artists
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_con_artists
注明:我本人对政治党派和政治观点主义不是最为关注,我本人更为关注的是人类社会最基本的准则和原则,比如正义,自由,公平,民主,人权,诚实,善良,爱心,良知道德等等。其他金钱上的,物质上的,对于我都是其次的考虑。
Donald J. Trump (1946): New York City-based real estate developer, defrauded[52] 7000 enrollees from 2005-2010 through now-defunct Trump University (sometimes also known as the Trump Wealth Institute and Trump Entrepreneur Initiative LLC) which was never an accredited institution of higher education, neither conferred college credit, nor granted degrees, nor graded its students, used high-pressure tactics[53] and misleading claims to sell three-to-five-day seminars billed as "retreats" to courses in real estate, asset management, entrepreneurship, and wealth creation. Settled three Federal class action lawsuits[54][55][56] for US$25 million in November 2017 after being elected President of the United States.[57] He has also defrauded many small-business owners through not paying contracts and telling them through non-legal means they violated their contracts, so as to avoid liability for the statements while keeping the claimants from challenging him due to the prospects of high legal expenses.[58][59] He also lied about his net worth in claiming to own parts of his father's real estate empire which he didn't at the time, in order to get onto the Forbes 400.[60]
Born or active in the 17th century[edit]
- William Chaloner (1650 – 1699): Serial counterfeiter and confidence trickster proven guilty by Sir Isaac Newton[1]
Born or active in the 18th century[edit]
- Gregor MacGregor (1786–1845): Scottish con man who tried to attract investment and settlers for the non-existent country of "Poyais"[2]
- Jeanne of Valois-Saint-Rémy (1756-1791): Chief conspirator in the Affair of the Diamond Necklace, which further tarnished the French royal family's already-poor reputation and, along with other causes, eventually led to the French Revolution[3]
Born or active in the 19th century[edit]
- George Appo (1856-1930): Operated in New York and was involved in green goods scams. Wrote an autobiography and also had a biography written about him which discusses prison conditions and various other socio-economic conditions in the later 19th century.
- Lou Blonger (1849–1924): Organized a massive ring of con men in Denver in the early 1900s[4]
- C. L. Blood (1835–1908) American patent medicine huckster, fraudster, and blackmailer[5]
- Cassie Chadwick (1857–1907) Canadian woman who defrauded banks out of millions by pretending to be the illegitimate daughter (and heir) of Andrew Carnegie[6]
- Eduardo de Valfierno (1850–1931): Argentine con man who posed as a marqués and allegedly masterminded the theft of the Mona Lisa in 1911.
- Lord Gordon Gordon (1840 – 1874) British man who defrauded $1 million from Jay Gould, who was fighting for control of the Erie Railroad.
- Bertha Heyman (born c. 1851) Active in the United States in the late 19th century[7][8]
- Canada Bill Jones (c.1837–1880): King of the three-card monte men[4]
- David Lamar {1877-1934) aka "The Wolf of Wall Street"
- Daniel Levey (c. 1875-?): American swindler and gambler, specialized in passing fake checks and stealing goods under the pretense of brokering sales for their owners
- Victor Lustig (1890–1947): Born in Bohemia (today's Czech Republic) and known as "the man who sold the Eiffel Tower twice"[9]
- William McCloundy (1859–19??) Convicted of selling the Brooklyn Bridge to a tourist.
- Phillip Musica (1877-1938) Tax and securities frauds culminating in the McKesson & Robbins scandal (1938).
- George C. Parker (1860–1936): U.S. con man who sold New York monuments to tourists, including most famously the Brooklyn Bridge, which he sold twice a week for years[10]
- Charles Ponzi (1882–1949): "Ponzi scheme" is a "get rich fast" fraud named after him[11]
- Soapy Smith (1860–1898): Jefferson Randolph Smith II organized bunco and crime boss in Denver and Creede, Colorado, and Skagway, Alaska, in the 1880s and 1890s[12]
- Adele Spitzeder (1832-1895): German actress that arguably was the first to perpetrate a ponzi scheme between 1869 and 1872 when she defrauded thousands of people by promising them 10% return of interest monthly which she paid with the money of new investors
- William Thompson (fl. 1840–1849): U.S. criminal whose deceptions caused the term confidence man to be coined[13]
- Ferdinand Ward (1851–1925): American swindler whose victims included Thomas Nast and the former U.S. President Ulysses S. Grant.[14]
- Joseph Weil (1875–1976): American con man[15]
- Fernando Wood (1812-1881): U.S. Congressman, Mayor of New York City, and a con artist who defrauded his brother-in-law and three others of $20,000 in a scheme involving the charter of a ship to sell goods during the California Gold Rush.[16]
Born or active in the 20th century[edit]
- Bernie Cornfeld (1927–1995): Ran the Investors Overseas Service, alleged to be a Ponzi scheme[17]
- Ferdinand Waldo Demara (1921–1982): Famed as "the Great Imposter"
- Susanna Mildred Hill, perpetrator of the “lonely hearts scam”
- Harry Jelinek (1905–1986): Czech con artist alleged to have sold the Karlstejn Castle to American industrialists.
- Sante Kimes (1934–2014): Convicted of fraud, robbery, murder, and over 100 other crimes along with her son Kenneth Kimes, Jr.[18]
- David Lamar {1877-1934) aka "The Wolf of Wall Street"
- Don Lapre (1964–2011): American TV pitchman known for peddling various get-rich-quick schemes
- Daniel Levey (c. 1875-?): American swindler and gambler, specialized in passing fake checks and stealing goods under the pretense of brokering sales for their owners
- David Hampton (1964–2003): American actor and impostor who posed as Sidney Poitier's son "David" in 1983, which inspired a play and a film, Six Degrees of Separation
- Gaston Means (1879–1938): American con-man and associate of the Ohio Gang
- Jerry Tarbot {?–?} Claimed he was amnesic victim of World War I
- Edgar Laplante (?–1944) Claimed to be "Chief White Elk." Stole from aristocratic European women and gave away large quantities of the money in cash. Presented to Mussolini as a visiting foreign dignitary. [19][20][21]
- Alvin Clarence "Titanic Thompson" Thomas (1892–1974): Gambler, golf hustler, proposition bet conman
- Natwarlal (1912–2009): Legendary Indian con man known for having repeatedly "sold" the Taj Mahal, the Red Fort, the Rashtrapati Bhavan and the Parliament House of India[22]
- Riley Shepard (1918-2009): Country musician who used numerous pseudonyms to break the terms of his recording contracts and defraud investors.[23]
- Charles Ponzi (1882–1949): Italian American businessman and con artist
- Lou Pearlman (1954–2016): Former boy band impresario, convicted for perpetrating a large and long-running Ponzi scheme[24]
- Reed Slatkin (1949–2015): American investor and co-founder of EarthLink
- Alan Conway (1934–1998): American con man best known for impersonating film director Stanley Kubrick
Living people[edit]
- Frank Abagnale, Jr. (1948): U.S. check forger and impostor turned FBI consultant; his autobiography was made into the movie Catch Me If You Can.[25] Abagnale impersonated a PanAm pilot, a doctor, a lawyer, and a teacher to illegally make over $2.5 million[26]
- Gilbert Chikli (1966): Impersonated French foreign defence minister Jean-Yves Le Drian using silicone masks on video conference software to appeal to politicians and business executives for money. Fraudulently obtained €55 million.[27]
- Sergio Cragnotti (1940): Former Italian industrialist and president of a football team who masterminded the Cirio bankruptcy
- Ali Dia (1965): Senegalese semi-professional footballer, duped the manager of Premier League team Southampton into signing him after posing as World Player of The Year George Weah in a phone call in which he gave himself a fake reference[28]
- Marc Dreier (1950): Founder of attorney firm Dreier LLP. Convicted of selling approximately $700 million worth of fictitious promissory notes, and other crimes[29]
- Kevin Foster (1958/59): British investment fraudster, convicted of running a Ponzi scheme[30]
- Randy Glass, who defrauded jewelry traders and became involved in the entrapment of undercover arms dealers.[31]
- Robert Hendy-Freegard (1971): Briton who kidnapped people by impersonating an MI5 agent and conned them out of money[32]
- James Arthur Hogue (1959): U.S. impostor who most famously entered Princeton University by posing as a self-taught orphan[33]
- Brian Kim (1975/76): Hedge fund manager who pleaded guilty to a Ponzi scheme, passport fraud, and other crimes[34][35]
- Steven Kunes (1956): Former television screenwriter convicted for forgery, grand theft, and false use of financial information;[36] he attempted to sell a faked interview with J. D. Salinger to People magazine[37][38]
- Rudy Kurniawan (wine connoisseur and collector) (b. 1976): Pulled off the biggest wine scam in history. Famously consigned several lots of Clos St. Denis from Domaine Ponsot from vintages long prior to any recorded production of Ponsot wines from that vineyard.
- Anthony Lasarevitsch (1985): Impersonated French foreign defence minister Jean-Yves Le Drian using silicone masks on video conference software to appeal to politicians and business executives for money. Fraudulently obtained €55 million.[39]
- Simon Lovell (1957): English comedy magician, card shark actor and con man
- Jho Low (1981-?): Claimed to be an financial expert and trusted by Malaysian prime minister, Najib Razak, in managing 1MBD, a Malaysian sovereign wealth fund. He abused his position and stole billions of US dollars, causing Malaysia to end up in heavy debt and further devaluation of its currency.[40]
- Bernard Madoff (1938): Former American stock broker and non-executive chairman of the NASDAQ stock market who admitted to the operation of the largest Ponzi scheme in history[41]
- Gina Marks (1973): American "psychic" con artist.[42]
- Matt the Knife (1987): 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 crime family[43][44][45]
- Drunvalo Melchizedek (1941): American author who scams people by pretending to have access to special knowledge by channeling the god of Egyptian Mythology Thoth
- Barry Minkow (1967): Known for the ZZZZ Best scam[46]
- Richard Allen Minsky (1944): Scammed female victims for sex by pretending to be jailed family members over the phone[47]
- Ian Mitchell: Posed as an heir of a wealthy Jamaican family and defrauded investors of hundreds of thousands of dollars.[48]
- Jim Norman (musician) (2009): Used the ESPAVO Foundation and Thrum Records to defraud millions of dollars in a cross-border advance fee scam, and was eventually convicted of conspiracy to commit wire fraud[49]
- Christophe Rocancourt (1967): French con artist who scammed affluent people by masquerading in turn as a French nobleman, the heir to the Rockefeller family or family member of a celebrity.
- Steven Jay Russell (1957): Georgia police officer who impersonated several individuals to escape from a Texas prison; embezzled from the North American Medical Management corporation; inspired the movie I Love You Phillip Morris[50]
- Ong Kean Swan (1982): Ran multi-level pyramid schemes in China, Malaysia, Singapore and Taiwan, walked away with an estimated US$35 million.[51]
- Calisto Tanzi (1938): Former Italian industrialist and president of Parmalat, which he led to one of the costliest bankruptcies in history
- Donald J. Trump (1946): New York City-based real estate developer, defrauded[52] 7000 enrollees from 2005-2010 through now-defunct Trump University (sometimes also known as the Trump Wealth Institute and Trump Entrepreneur Initiative LLC) which was never an accredited institution of higher education, neither conferred college credit, nor granted degrees, nor graded its students, used high-pressure tactics[53] and misleading claims to sell three-to-five-day seminars billed as "retreats" to courses in real estate, asset management, entrepreneurship, and wealth creation. Settled three Federal class action lawsuits[54][55][56] for US$25 million in November 2017 after being elected President of the United States.[57] He has also defrauded many small-business owners through not paying contracts and telling them through non-legal means they violated their contracts, so as to avoid liability for the statements while keeping the claimants from challenging him due to the prospects of high legal expenses.[58][59] He also lied about his net worth in claiming to own parts of his father's real estate empire which he didn't at the time, in order to get onto the Forbes 400.[60]
- Alessandro Zarrelli (1984): Italian Amateur footballer who posed as a fictitious Italian Football Federation official offering a professional player (himself) for a cultural exchange to various clubs in the United Kingdom; he signed with one club and trained with several more[61]