Difference between revisions of "Confidence game" - New World Encyclopedia

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A '''confidence game,''' also known as a '''con,''' '''scam,''' '''grift,''' or '''flim flam,''' is an attempt to win the trust and confidence of a victim, known as the "mark," in order to de[[fraud]] them. Although general expectation is that con artists are untrustworthy, their particular ability is actually to be able to gain the trust of their victims. They play on people's selfish desires, greed and the desire to obtain much with minimal effort. Victims often do not report con men due to their own complicity in an activity of dubious, if not [[crime|criminal]], nature, and their embarrassment at having been tricked.
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The cleverness of con men often makes them appear sympathetic even after their deceit has been revealed, leading to their popularity as fictional [[hero]]es. Ultimately, though, the confidence game is a deception that leads to criminal results, and its perpetrators deserve no acclaim as they do not embody any characteristics of true human nature.
  
A '''confidence trick''', '''confidence game''', also known as a '''con''', '''scam''', '''grift''' or '''flim flam''', is an attempt to intentionally [[Deception|mislead]] a person or persons (known as the "[[Mark (victim)|mark]]") usually with the goal of financial or other gain.
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==Origin of the term==
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{{readout||right|250px|The term "confidence man" was first used in 1849 about a thief who asked strangers if they had confidence to trust him with their watch}}
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The term "confidence man" (usually shortened to "con"), first came into use in 1849, when the ''New York Herald'' published a story about the arrest of William Thompson, entitled, "Arrest of the Confidence Man." Thompson would approach strangers on the street, talk a while with them, and then ask if they had "confidence in [him] to trust [him] with [their] watch until to-morrow.” The victims would then give Thompson their expensive watches, believing him to be an acquaintance they didn't remember.<ref>''New York Herald,'' [http://chnm.gmu.edu/lostmuseum/lm/328/ Arrest of the Confidence Man.] Retrieved May 29, 2017.</ref>
  
The '''confidence trickster''', '''con man''', '''grifter''', '''scam artist''' or '''con artist''' often works with one or more accomplices called [[shill]]s, who try to encourage the mark by pretending to believe the trickster. In a traditional con, the mark is encouraged to believe that they will obtain money dishonestly by cheating a third party, and is stunned to find that due to what appears to be an error in pulling off the scam they are the one who loses money; in more general use, the term ''con'' is used for any [[fraud]] in which the victim is tricked into losing money by false promises of gain.
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==How confidence games work==
  
Most confidence tricks exploit the [[Greed (emotion)|greed]] and [[dishonesty]] of their victims. Often, the mark tries to out-cheat the con artist, only to discover that the mark has been manipulated into this from the start. 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."{{fact}}
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===The con man===
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The term "con man" may bring to mind images of shady, underworld characters, but reality is quite different. A good con artist needs to appear trustworthy and likable in order to win the trust of his victim. Con artists are [[charisma]]tic, intelligent, have good memories, and know how to manipulate people's hopes and fears. They attempt to blend in, to look and sound familiar, and often work diligently at appearing to be smooth, professional, and successful. A con man may wear an expensive suit and appear to work in a high class office.<ref>North American Securities Administrators Association, [http://www.nasaa.org/2700/how-to-spot-a-con-artist/ How to Spot a Con Artist.] Retrieved May 29, 2017.</ref> Or, conversely, a con artist may put him or herself in a weaker position to play on a victim's sympathies: They may take on the role of illegal immigrant, a likable man down on his luck, or a woman with a small child who needs to use the bathroom. From city official to roofer, the con artist can appear to be just about anyone.
  
However, 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 value of the check to the trickster as cash, which they may do before discovering the [[bounced check|check bounces]]. Another fashionable scenario ([[as of 2006]]) 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.[http://www.fraudaid.com/ScamSpeak/Nigerian/payment_processing_scam.htm ScamSpeak]
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===The mark===
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The "mark," or victim, may also be just about anyone who wants something. Con artists prey on human desires for money, health, happiness, and even the desire to help others. Some may argue that con artists are a sort of [[Robin Hood]], nobly cheating the greedy and dishonest out of their money; hence the old adage, "you can't cheat an honest man." In many cases, this holds true, as many cons exploit the greed and willingness to go "around the law" in their victims. Many cons dangle the prospect of "something for nothing (or very little)" in front of their marks.  
  
Sometimes con men rely on naïve individuals who put their confidence in [[get-rich-quick scheme]]s, such as "too good to be true" investments. It may take years for the wider community to discover that such "investment" schemes are bogus, and usually it is too late, as many people have lost their life savings in something they have been confident of investing in.
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However, there are just as many cons that don't depend on greedy or dishonest marks; many scams involving the elderly and "charity" scams often exploit the fear or good intentions of their marks. Some believe that an intelligent, educated person is much more difficult to con, as he or she would more easily recognize an offer that sounded "too good to be true." In actuality, this belief of invulnerability makes one a good target. Good con artists have a great deal of charm and intelligence, and a good con man can make just about anything sound reasonable.
  
==Well-known confidence tricks==
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===The game===
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Types of confidence tricks are limited only by the imagination of the con artists, who are constantly inventing new ways of tricking people out of their money. However, there are two main categories of confidence games: The "short con" and the "long con."  Sometimes called a "street con," the "short con" takes little set up and little time to execute. The "long con," on the other hand, involves much more time to set up, more planning, more money, and often more accomplices. Unlike the short con, though, the long con usually scams the victim out of a sizable amount of cash. The long con is sometimes referred to as a "big store scam," where the "big store" is an elaborately set up fake bank, lawyer's office, betting parlor, and so forth.
  
*'''Scamming a [[art forgery|forgery]]''' involves stealing a rare painting from a private collector and can sometimes involve collecting insurance deductables to enforce the con. A victim's house that has an expensive original painting inside is set on fire by the con artist. During this time, the original is stolen and replaced with a forged one that looks slightly burnt. The next day, the con artist returns, posing as an insurance man. He tells the victim, or "mark," that the painting is salvageable, but a deductible is required. If all goes well, the mark will pay the con man right away. The grifter then makes off with both the money and the painting. The painting will resurface on the market months later as being saved from the fire, and will invariably fetch a higher price because of it.
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Many confidence games are simply variations on "classic" cons. The following are some of the more well known classic short cons:
  
* [[David Maurer]]'s 1940 book ''[[The Big Con: The Story of the Confidence Man]]'', on which the film ''[[The Sting]]'' was loosely based, outlines what is now known as a '''Big Store scam'''. These scams often involved teams of dozens of con artists working together with elaborate sets and costumes.
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*'''The Pigeon drop'''
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In this con, the con artist and the mark, or "pigeon," find a wad of cash in the street that appears to be from an illegal activity, such as [[gambling]] or [[drug]] money. Since there is no way to return the money directly to its rightful owner, the con artist determines, after speaking with a "lawyer (or banker) friend," that if no one claims it within thirty days, the money is theirs. The "lawyer" says that it is best if each of them put up some extra money, as "good faith money," "proof of individual financial responsibility," or "to show that the people involved are above board" to be held by the lawyer until they can split the found cash.<ref>Crimes of Persuasion, [http://www.crimes-of-persuasion.com/Crimes/InPerson/MajorPerson/pigeon_drop.htm Pigeon Drop Theft.] Retrieved May 29, 2017.</ref> Naturally, the mark never sees either their money or the "found" money again.  
  
*The [[badger game]] is an extortion scheme, often perpetrated on married men. The mark is deliberately coerced into a compromising position, a supposed affair for example, then threatened with public exposure of his acts unless blackmail money is paid.
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*'''The Spanish Prisoner''' 
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This con first appeared in 1588, where a man with an attractive young girl approached British nobility, claiming that the girl's father, a British nobleman, was imprisoned in [[Spain]]. The nobleman's identity had to be kept a secret, lest the Spanish discover who their prisoner was. If the mark helped pay the [[ransom]], the freed nobleman would surely reward him, and perhaps even give him the hand of the lovely daughter in marriage. Over the years, this scam has evolved into the popular "Nigerian Email Scam," where marks are asked to help "liberate" funds of wealthy [[Nigeria]]ns.
  
*'''Change raising''' is a common short con and involves an offer to change an amount of money with someone, and at the same time taking change or bills back and forth to confuse the person as to how much money they are actually changing. The most common form, "the Short Count," has been featured prominently in several movies about grifting, notably ''[[Nueve Reinas]]'' and ''[[Paper Moon (film)|Paper Moon]]''. A con artist, shopping at a gas station for example, is given 80 cents in change because he lacks two dimes to complete the sale. He goes out to his car, and returns a short time later with 20 cents. He returns them, saying that he found the rest of the change to make a dollar, and asking for a bill so he won't have to carry change. The confused store clerk agrees, exchanging a dollar for the 20 cents the con man returned. In essence, the mark makes change twice.
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*'''The Glasses Drop and the Flop'''  
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In the "glasses drop," the con man drops a pair of broken glasses where the mark will step on them. The con man then demands that the mark pay for the glasses he "broke." "The flop" is a similar type of scam where con artists use a preexisting injury in the same fashion. An accident is staged, the injury is claimed to be new, and [[insurance]] companies are scammed out of their money.
  
*'''Coin collecting scam''' is a scam that preys on inexperienced collectors, coins or otherwise. The con man convinces the mark by stating that a low-priced collection is worth a greater amount. The coin collector then buys the entire collection thinking it is actually valuable. This scam is most commonly found on the internet auction site, [[eBay]].
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*'''Pig in a Poke'''  
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One of the oldest cons, this scam dates from the late [[Middle Ages]]. The con man would sell a suckling [[pig]] in a bag (or "poke") to an unsuspecting customer. When the victim reached home, he would open the bag only to find that his "pig" had mysteriously become a [[cat]]. This confidence game may have given rise to the phrases "let the cat out of the bag," "you got left holding the bag," as well as the adage "never buy a pig in a poke."
  
*'''Online casino scam''' is a newer type of scam, dealing with online gambling. Many websites post advertising about some math student that has discovered a "wonderful" method or program to beat online casinos; the method is nothing but a [[martingale (betting system)|martingale]] that is proven not to work. To improve the scam, the advertiser cites anonymous people that are supposed to have won using his/her method, or put fake amounts behind their claims. The "method" can reportedly be purchased for a low price, considering the sum that could be won back. Of course, when a mark tries to buy the method, they find out that no pamphlet is coming in the mail.
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*'''The Fiddle Game'''  
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In this con, a shabbily dressed "musician" leaves his [[violin|fiddle]] as collateral in a restaurant, claiming to have left his money at home. While he is getting his money, another accomplice comes by and offers to purchase such a "rare" [[musical instrument|instrument]] for a large amount of money. When the musician returns, the restaurant owner offers to buy the fiddle for a lesser amount of money, thinking that he will be able to sell it to the accomplice and make a tidy [[profit]]. In need of money, the musician reluctantly sells his "beloved instrument." Naturally, the accomplice never returns, and the restaurant owner is left having paid a tidy sum for a nearly worthless fiddle.
  
*Another relatively recent type of scam is a '''[[romance scam]]''' which involves fraudsters targeting lonely and vulnerable men and women on Internet dating sites and then actively cultivating a romantic relationship, which often involves promises of marriage. However, after some time it becomes evident that the Internet "sweetheart" is stuck in his home country, lacking the money to leave the country and thus unable to be united with the mark. A wide variety of reasons can be offered for the fraudster's lack of cash, but rather than just "borrow" the money from the victim, the con man normally declares that they have checks which the victim can cash on their behalf and remit the money via a non-reversible transfer service to help facilitate the trip. Of course, the checks are forged or stolen and the fraudster never makes the trip. Instead, all that the hapless victim ends up with is a large debt and an aching heart.
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*'''[[Three-card Monte]]'''  
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"Three-card monte," or "Follow The Lady," is essentially the same as the probably centuries-older "shell game" or "thimblerig." The trickster shows three [[playing card]]s to the audience, one of which is a queen (the "lady"), then places the cards face-down, shuffles them around and invites the audience to bet on which one is the queen. At first the audience may be skeptical, so the "shill," or accomplice, places a bet and the con artist allows him to win. This is sometimes enough to entice the audience to place bets, but the trickster uses sleight of hand to ensure that they always lose, unless the con man decides to let them win to lure them into betting even more. The mark loses whenever the dealer chooses to make him lose.
  
*Many religious '''[[cult]]s''' have been described by their critics as confidence tricks. It is alleged that their aim is to obtain money from their followers by deception. It can often be unclear, however, if a cult leader is actually trying to con the group's members, or honestly believes his own claims.
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*'''Change Raising'''
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"Change raising" is a short con generally performed at the cash register of a store. The con artist performs several money exchanges involving finding the correct change to pay for a purchase ("Wait, I do have a ten; could you give me two fives instead?"), with the end result that he walks out of the store with more money than he had coming in, leaving a vaguely confused clerk wondering if everything made as much sense as it seemed to.
  
*The '''deceptive contest''' relies on a real contest whose true objective is to sell the victim a low-value item at a high price. The mark sees an advertisement asking poets to submit their poems to a poetry competition. A few weeks later, a return letter announces that the mark's poem has been selected by the judges to advance to the "semi-finals". (The mark may be asked to travel to a distant city at his own expense in order to "participate" in the semi-finals.) As per the contest rules, the poem is published in a hard-cover anthology once the contest has concluded. The mark is encouraged to order the book, at a high price, perhaps with extra costs for personalization. The scam is that many &mdash; perhaps one in every four &mdash; contestants reaches the "semi-finals" and it appeals to their [[vanity]] to buy a low-quality book for a high price.
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The above list is only a sampling. Confidence games are continually evolving and subject to many variations and refinements, and con artists are continually seeking to improve their swindles. Some con artists prey upon the lonely, seeking out marks through internet dating sites, convincing men and women to "loan" them money so they can come visit. Ironically enough, some con artists find people who have already been conned, telling them that, for a fee, they can recover most of the money that the victim lost. The [[internet]], partly because of its accessibility and anonymity, is a popular place for scam artists.
  
* In a '''drug dealer scam''', the con man pretends he or she is selling illegal drugs and sometimes uses intimidation as part of the scam. Usually the victim hands over the money and is told to wait until the dealer comes back with the product. They never do. Some fake drug pushers will give out bags full of things such as [[acetaminophen]], herbs, etc.
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==How con artists avoid the police==
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Many victims of confidence games are embarrassed to admit they fell victim to a scam, feeling foolish and stupid for being taken in by the con artist's game. Sometimes, the con artist is so convincing with the pitiful tales he tells the mark about his family, children, and so forth, that, even though the mark knows he has been swindled, he still feels bad for the con man and fails to report him. Other times, the con artist will manipulate the situation so that the mark cannot go to the [[police]] without admitting that he has committed a [[crime]]. Because of this surefire way to escape [[punishment]], many confidence games include a minor element of crime. For example, the victim may be encouraged to use money concealed from the [[tax]] authorities to invest in the con artist's scheme; if they go to the authorities, they must reveal that they have committed tax fraud. Similarly, the mark who buys a stolen television off the back of a truck, only to find he has bought an empty case filled with bricks, cannot report the seller without admitted to attempted purchase of stolen goods. Illegal [[pornography|pornographic]] images, pirated software, and [[bootlegging|bootleg]] music, [[drugs]], and firearms are all good candidates for [[fraud]].
  
*'''Fake cripple''', homeless or other "down on your luck" scam. Some people suspect that the panhandler in a wheelchair, the woman with kids along the freeway off-ramp or the homeless vet might just be scamming. In India in 2006, three doctors were investigated for offering to sever limbs in order to increase public sympathy toward their clients.[http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/10958642/]
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==Famous con artists==
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*'''Frank Abagnale''' was one of the world's most famous con men, as well as one of the youngest. Between the ages of 16 and 21, he cashed $2.5 million in [[forgery|forged]] checks, scammed free flights by posing as an airline pilot, and successfully passed himself off as an [[attorney]], a [[college]] professor, and a [[pediatrics|pediatrician]]. At 21, he was apprehended by the French police, and served a total of five years in the [[France|French]], [[Sweden|Swedish]], and [[United States|U.S.]] [[prison]] systems. He was released on the condition that he use his skills to assist the federal government with fraud prevention, and currently lectures extensively at the [[FBI]] Academy. His best selling book, ''Catch Me if You Can,'' was later made into a film starring [[Leonardo DiCaprio]] and [[Tom Hanks]]. He has received accolades for his contributions to fraud prevention, and was made national spokesperson for the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) in 2004.<ref name=abagnale>www.abagnale.com, [http://www.abagnale.com/aboutfrank.htm  About Frank Abagnale.] Retrieved May 29, 2017.</ref> On his website, Abagnale says, "I consider my past immoral, unethical, and illegal. It is something I am not proud of. I am proud that I have been able to turn my life around and in the past 25 years, helped my government, my clients, thousands of corporations and consumers deal with the problems of white collar crime and fraud."<ref name=abagnale/>
  
* The '''Fiddle Game''' is a variation on the [[pigeon drop]]. A pair of con men work together, one going into an expensive restaurant in shabby clothes, eating, and claiming to have left his wallet at home, which is nearby. As collateral, the con man leaves his only worldly possession, the [[violin]] that provides his livelihood. After he leaves, the second con man swoops in, offers an outrageously large amount (for example, $50,000) for such a rare instrument, then looks at his watch and runs off to an appointment, leaving his card for the mark to call him when the fiddle-owner returns. The mark's greed comes into play when the "poor man" comes back, having gotten the money to pay for his meal and redeem his violin. The mark, thinking he has an offer on the table, then buys the violin from the fiddle player (who "reluctantly" sells it eventually for, say, $5,000). The result is the two con men are $5,000 richer (less the cost of the violin), and the mark is left with a cheap instrument. (This trick is also detailed in the [[Neil Gaiman]] novel ''[[American Gods]]'' and is the basis for [[The Streets]]' song ''Can't Con an Honest John''.)
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*'''Joseph Weil,''' also known as "The Yellow Kid," was born in 1877, to a [[Germany|German]] grocer, lived for 101 years, and theoretically made millions of dollars by cheating his fellow man. His exploits partially inspired the film ''The Sting,'' starring Robert Redford and Paul Newman.
  
*[[Get-rich-quick scheme]]s are so varied they nearly defy description. Everything from fake franchises, real estate sure things, how-to-get-rich books and wealth building seminars, self-help gurus, sure-fire inventions, useless products, chain letters, fortune tellers, quack doctors, miracle pharmecuticals, charms and talismans are all used to separate the mark from his money.
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*'''Victor Lustig''' was born in [[Czechoslovakia]] in 1890. Lustig had 45 known aliases, nearly fifty [[arrest]]s in the United States alone, and was fluent in five languages. In 1922, he posed as "Count" Lustig from [[Austria]], and conned a [[bank]] out of $32,000 by switching envelopes. Upon capture, he used the long train ride to convince his captors that, not only should they let him go, but that they should also give him $1,000 for the inconvenience of being arrested. Lustig's most famous con, however, was the sale of the [[Eiffel Tower]]. In 1925, Lustig invited five scrap iron dealers to meet with him in a hotel, and auctioned off the famous landmark to Andre Poisson, who used a [[bribe]] to seal the deal. Lustig traveled to Austria and kept a close eye on the [[Paris]]ian [[newspapers]]. When no mention was made of the scam, Lustig determined that Poisson had been too ashamed to admit he fell for such a scheme and had never reported it. Lustig promptly headed back to Paris and sold the Eiffel Tower a second time, after which the victims did go to the [[police]], forcing Lustig to leave Europe and head to the United States. In 1934, Lustig was arrested for [[counterfeiting]], and served time in [[Alcatraz]] prison. He died of [[pneumonia]] in 1947, at the age of 57.<ref>Jeff Maysh, [http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/man-who-sold-eiffel-tower-twice-180958370/ The Man Who Sold the Eiffel Tower…Twice.] ''Smithsonian Magazine''. Retrieved May 29, 2017.</ref>
  
*The '''glasses drop''' is a scam in which the scammer will intentionally bump into the mark and drop a pair of glasses that have already been broken. He will claim that the glasses were broken by the clumsiness of the mark, and demand money to replace them.
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*'''Gregor MacGregor''' was a [[Scotland|Scottish]] conman who, in 1822, tried to attract investors and settlers for a non-existent country of "Poyais." Poyais, he claimed, was a fertile "Garden of Eden" on the [[Caribbean]] coast of [[Central America]], with an efficient, European-style government. Successfully duping not only land investors and adventurers, but also bankers and aristocrats, MacGregor's scam ended with 250 settlers left stranded on the "beautiful" islands of Poyais. Instead of [[cotton]] growing wild and European-style cities, they found forest, swampland, [[malaria]], and [[yellow fever]]. Before they managed to find passage back to England, approximately 180 were dead from tropical diseases.
  
*'''[[Hydrophoby Lay]]''' was a scam popular in the 1920s, in which the con man pretended to have been bitten by the mark's (possibly rabid) dog.
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*'''Phillip Arnold and John Slack,''' were perpetrators of the 1872 "Great Diamond Hoax" in San Francisco. Through a series of deceptions, the pair sold over a half-million dollars in Colorado land and stock shares to wealthy businessmen. In addition to the use of bags of "found" [[diamond]]s, they also "salted" the potential "diamond mine," scattering diamonds, [[ruby|rubies]], [[sapphire]]s, and [[emerald]]s where they would be likely to be discovered by potential investors. The hoax was discovered by Clarence King, a [[geology|geologist]] leading a government survey team. When he heard about the diamonds found in Colorado, he feared that missing such a large diamond deposit would result in the loss of his funding, and immediately took a team to Colorado to investigate. When King found that the only gems that turned up were only several inches below the surface, and only underneath previously disturbed ground, he promptly notified the investors. The investors pleaded with him to stay silent long enough for them to sell their stock to others, but King refused and the hoax was exposed.<ref> Robert Wilson, [http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-great-diamond-hoax-of-1872-2630188/ The Great Diamond Hoax of 1872.] ''Smithsonian Magazine''. Retrieved May 29, 2017.</ref>
  
*'''[[Insurance fraud]]''' the con artist tricks the mark into damaging, for example, the con artist's car, or injuring the con artist (in a manner that the con artist can exaggerate). The con artist fraudulently collects a large sum of money from the mark's insurance policy, even though they intentionally caused the accident.
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*'''Jefferson "Soapy" Smith''' got his nickname from his infamous soap swindle, where he would sell bars of soap from a suitcase on the sidewalk. He would make a show of wrapping an occasional bar of soap with a bill, ranging in size from $1 to $100. He would then mix the wrapped bars together, and sell them for between $1 and $5. Naturally, the "winners" of the currency-wrapped soap were always associates of Soapy. From 1887 to 1895, Soapy was king of Denver's underworld, making money through a variety scams, and becoming more of a gangster than a confidence man. Despite his reputation as a bad man, Soapy was also generous to charitable causes, and was often sought out by men like Parson Uzzell of the People's church for assistance. Smith was killed in 1898, during a gunfight.<ref>Friends of Badman Soapy Smith, [http://www.soapysmith.net/page2.html History Part 1.] Retrieved May 29, 2017.</ref>
  
*'''Lottery Fraud by Proxy''' In this particularly vicious scam, the scammer buys a lotto ticket with old winning numbers. He or she then alters the date on the ticket so that it appears to be from the day before, and therefore a winning ticket. He or she then sells the ticket to the mark, claiming it is a winning ticket, but for some reason, he or she is unable to collect the prize (not eligible, etc.). The particular cruelty in this scam is that if the mark attempts to collect the prize, the fraudulently altered ticket will be discovered and the mark held criminally liable.
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==Confidence tricks in the movies==
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The public has long had a fascination with confidence men, evident in the number of movies about con artists. Author Robert Nash summed up this feeling, saying, "we have a secret admiration for con artists. We get a vicarious thrill."<ref> Chris Wright, [http://www.bostonphoenix.com/boston/news_features/other_stories/multipage/documents/00634143.htm Love of the Game.] ''Boston Phoenix''. Retrieved May 29, 2017</ref>
  
*'''[[Pig-in-a-poke]]''' originated in the late [[Middle Ages]], when meat was scarce, but apparently rats and cats were not. The con entails a sale of a "suckling [[pig]]", in a "poke" (bag). The bag ostensibly contains a live healthy little pig, but actually contains a [[cat]] (not particularly prized as a source of meat, and at any rate, quite unlikely to grow to be a large hog). If one "buys a pig in a poke" without looking in the bag (a common colloquial expression in the English language, meaning "to be a sucker"), the person has bought something of lesser value than was assumed, and has learned firsthand the lesson [[caveat emptor]]. It is also said to be where the phrase, 'the cat's out of the bag', comes from, although there may be other [[Cat_o%27_nine_tails#Expressions|explanations]]  
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In the movies, con artists often prey upon the corrupt and greedy, meting out justice through their deceptive schemes. Instead of [[conscience]]-less criminals, they are portrayed as [[hero]]es. In ''The Sting,'' Robert Redford and Paul Newman use an elaborate set up to fleece a corrupt crime boss. In ''Matchstick Men,'' Nicolas Cage portrays a quirky, likable guy who meets his 14 year old daughter for the first time. He teaches her how to con a woman using a fake "found" lottery ticket, but when the con is over, he insists that she return the woman's money. In ''Paper Moon,'' a good looking and likable [[Great Depression|depression]]-era con man and his young daughter travel across the country, conning everyone from little old ladies to [[bootlegging|bootleggers]]. Despite the fact that such a young girl is being introduced into a dangerous life of crime, the audience is still left rooting for the two to stay together at the end of the film.
  
*The '''[[Pigeon drop]]''', also featured early in the film ''[[The Sting]]'', involves the mark or pigeon assisting an elderly, weak or infirm stranger to keep their money safe for them. In the process, the stranger (actually a confidence trickster) puts his money with the mark's money (in an envelope, briefcase, or sack) which the pigeon is then entrusted with. The money is actually not put into the sack or envelope, but is switched for a bag full of newspaper, etc. The pigeon is enticed to make off with the con man's money through the greed element and various theatrics, but in actuality, the pigeon is fleeing from his own money, which the con man still has (or has handed off to an accomplice).
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Confidence games are often portrayed in the movies as impressive schemes thought up by basically good, likable men and women. Rarely do innocent people suffer, and rarely does one see any noteworthy impact on the lives of ordinary, hardworking people. Instead, it is the crime bosses, the corrupt businessmen, the greedy and dishonest who suffer. Hollywood perpetrates the concept of con men who love the challenge of cheating the wealthy, greedy and arrogant. However, this is a sentimental way of looking at confidence men. There is not, nor has there ever been any "code of honor" among con artists.
  
*'''The Protection Scheme''' takes advantage of the fact that there are con artists out there. The con man tells the mark that there is a web site you can register your credit card number on to keep it safe from stolen identity. The mark then willingly gives the con man their credit card number. The con man is then never seen again.
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==Notes==
 
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<references/>
*'''[[Pseudoscience]]''' and '''[[snake oil]]'''. Some [[popular psychology]] confidence tricksters make money by falsely claiming to improve reading speed and comprehension using [[speed reading]] courses by fooling the consumer with inappropriate [[skimming (reading)|skimming]] and general knowledge tests. These popular psychology tricksters often employ popular assumptions about the [[brain]] and the [[cerebral hemispheres]] that are scientifically wrong, but attractive and easy to believe. Similar scams involve the use of brain machines to alter [[brain waves]], and intelligence amplification through balancing the mind and body. See [[neurofeedback]].
 
 
 
*'''[[Psychic surgery]]''' is a con game in which the trickster uses [[sleight of hand]] to pretend to remove bits of malignant growths from the mark's body. A common form of medical fraud in underdeveloped countries, it imperils the victims, who may fail to seek competent medical attention. (The movie ''[[Man on the Moon]]'' depicts comedian [[Andy Kaufman]] undergoing psychic surgery.)
 
 
 
*The '''[[pyramid scheme]]'''. See also [[Ponzi scheme]], [[Matrix sale]].
 
 
 
*'''Salting''' is the term for a scam in which gems or gold ore are planted in a mine or on the landscape, duping the greedy mark into purchasing shares in a worthless or non-existent mining company. For an 18th century example, see the [[Diamond hoax of 1872]], for a modern example, involving imaginary gold deposits in [[Borneo]], see [[Bre-X]].
 
 
 
*The '''[[Spanish Prisoner]]''' scam, and its modern variant, the [[Advance fee fraud|Nigerian money transfer fraud]], take advantage of the victim's greed. The basic premise involves enlisting the mark to aid in retrieving some stolen money from its hiding place. The victim sometimes goes in figuring he can cheat the con artists out of their money, but anyone trying this has already fallen for the essential con by believing that the money is there to steal. See also [[Black money scam]].
 
 
 
*The '''[[Thai Gem Scam]]''' involves layers of conmen and helpers who tell a tourist in [[Bangkok]] of an opportunity to earn money by buying duty-free jewelry and having it shipped back to the tourist's home country. The mark is driven around the city in a [[tuk-tuk]] operated by one of the con men, who ensures that the mark meets one helper after another, until the mark is convinced to buy the jewelry from a store also operated by the scammers. This scam has been operating for 20 years in Bangkok and is alleged to be protected by Thai police and politicians.[http://www.2bangkok.com/2bangkok/Scams/Sapphire.shtml] A similar scam usually runs in parallel for custom-made suits. Many tourists are hit by scammers touting both goods.
 
 
 
*'''[[Three-card Monte]]''', the "Three-card Trick", or "Follow The Lady", is (except for the [[Theatrical property|prop]]s) essentially the same as the probably centuries-older '''[[shell game]]''' or ''thimblerig''. The trickster shows three playing cards to the audience, one of which is a queen (the "lady"), then places the cards face-down, shuffles them around and invites the audience to bet on which one is the queen. At first the audience is skeptical, so the [[shill]] places a bet and the scammer allows him to win. This is sometimes enough to entice the audience to place bets, but the trickster uses [[sleight of hand]] to ensure that they always lose, unless the con man decides to let them win to lure them into betting even more. The mark loses whenever the dealer chooses to make him lose.
 
 
 
*In the '''trust scheme''', a con artist teams with another con artist or shill to lead the mark to trusting them. The con artist will convince the mark to scam people with him, but after the crime spree is over, the con artist takes the mark's share of the money and disappears.
 
 
 
==Extra finesse==
 
Many con men employ extra tricks to keep the victim from going to the police:
 
* Illegal money. A common ploy of investment scammers is to encourage the victim to use money that has been concealed from the tax authorities. The victim cannot go to the authorities without revealing that they have committed tax fraud.
 
* Illegal enterprise. Many swindles involve a minor element of crime or some other misdeed. The victim is made to think that they will gain money by helping fraudsters get huge sums out of a country (the classic [[advance fee fraud|Nigerian scam]]). The victim cannot go to the police without revealing that they planned to commit a crime themselves. Similar tricks can be played on people shopping for pirated software, illegal pornographic images, bootleg music, drugs, firearms or other forbidden or controlled goods. Another example is the "big screen TV in back of the truck"; the TV is touted as "hot" (stolen), so it will be sold for a ridiculously low price, such as US$1200 "when it's worth US$4000!".  The TV is in fact defective/broken, and has bricks inside its otherwise gutted case to give it heft.  When it is plugged in, of course, it doesn't work - and, again, the buyer has no legal recourse without admitting to attempted purchase of stolen goods.
 
*Pitiful fraud. The con artist may tell their mark pitiful lies about their family, children, etc therefore the mark feels sorry for them and does not alert the police.
 
* Family member. Many con artists con on family members because the family would not want to hurt the con man by alerting the police.
 
* Embarrassing enterprise. If the victim loses a small sum only, they may be unwilling to contact the authorities if the circumstances are embarrassing, e.g. if they would look like an idiot or if their spouse would find out that they paid lots of money to access a website of (worthless or nonexisting) pornographic material.
 
* Stolen Cheques. A recent twist on the Nigerian fraud scheme, the mark is told he is helping someone overseas collect "debts" from corporate clients. Large cheques stolen from businesses are mailed to the victim. These cheques are altered to reflect the victim's name, and the mark is then asked to cash them and transfer all but a percentage of the funds (his [[commission]]) to the fraudster. The cheques are often completely genuine, except that the "pay to" information has been expertly changed. This exposes the victim not only to enormous debt when the bank reclaims the money from their account, but also to criminal charges for transacting the forged cheques.
 
 
 
It is to be noted also that the above list is only a sampling. Confidence games are continually evolving and subject to many variations and refinements, as in the following:
 
 
 
:Con games never remain stationary. The principle may be old, but the external forms are always changing, for con men know they must adapt their schemes to the times. This is especially true of the [[Big Con]]. A good [[grifter]] is never satisfied with the form his swindle takes; he studies it constantly to improve it; as he learns more about people, he finds a way to use what he has learned.
 
:— From ''The Big Con'', by David Maurer (Chapter 3)
 
 
 
==Famous convicted and alleged con artists==
 
''Note: Some inclusions in this list may be disputed.''
 
*[[Frank Abagnale]], masqueraded as a pilot, doctor and professor
 
*[[Tino De Angelis]], who sold rights to $175 million in [[soybean]] oil stored in tanks, which was actually a thin layer of oil floating on water.
 
*[[Arnold and Slack]], Phillip Arnold and John Slack, perpetrators of the 1871 "Great Diamond Hoax" in San Francisco. William Ralston paid Slack and Arnold three hundred thousand dollars for worthless land but eventually repaid investors in his North American Diamond Mines.
 
*Howard Berg, with the same con as Kevin Trudeau (see below)
 
*[[Lou Blonger]], organized massive ring of con men in [[Denver]] in early [[1900s|1900]]'s
 
*[[Tony & Sharon Bonicci]], also known as [[Christie & McLean]], Australian confidence artists, who rip off innocent elderly people for all their savings and possessions
 
*[[Gregory Caplinger]], impersonated a doctor and scammed his patients into using his "miracle drug" ImmuStim which he claimed was a cure for [[cancer]], [[AIDS]], [[allergies]], [[multiple sclerosis]], [[chronic fatigue syndrome]], and several other conditions.
 
*[[Bernard Cornfeld|Bernie Cornfeld]] ran what is to date the greatest scam in history, taking in just under $2.5 billion in what was later realized to be a [[Ponzi scheme]].
 
*[[Louis Enricht]], U.S. chemist who claimed to have made a substitute for gasoline
 
*[[Billie Sol Estes]], who was paid to produce millions in quotas of [[cotton]], which never existed. [[LBJ]] was implicated by Estes in taking payoffs to ignore the scam, which took place in [[Texas]].
 
*[[Arthur Ferguson]] Scottish con artist
 
*[[Robert Hendy-Freegard]], British confidence artist who kidnapped people by telling them he was an [[MI5]] agent and they were being hunted by terrorists, then took them on the run, conned them out of money and emotionally manipulated them; convicted in [[2005]][http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/nottinghamshire/4114640.stm]
 
*[[Nate Heller]] American con artist
 
*[[Susanna Mildred Hill]], U.S. woman who fooled potential suitors
 
*[[L.Ron Hubbard]], science fiction author and founder of the [[Church of Scientology]],claiming that "the fastest way to make a million dollars is to start a religion"
 
*[[Kaz DeMille Jacobsen]], Kiwi fraudulent 9/11 "[[motivational speaker]]"
 
*[[Mikailo Jefferson]], Singaporean con artist
 
*[[Henri Lemoine]], French diamond faker
 
* [[Peter Rodney Llewellyn|Peter Llewellyn]] who almost tricked the [[Russian Space Agency|Russians]] to get a lift on the space station [[Mir]]
 
*[[Victor Lustig]], sold the [[Eiffel Tower]]
 
*[[Gregor MacGregor]], Scottish conman who tried to attract investment and settlers for a non-existent country of [[Poyais]]
 
*[[George Parker]], who sold New York monuments
 
*[[Charles Ponzi]], who ran a [[pyramid scheme]] (though he did not invent them) and became so closely identified with them that they are also known as Ponzi schemes.
 
*[[Raymond Price (character)|Raymond Price]], British confidence artist who cons people out of money by telling them his car has broken down and he needs a train fare home; mentioned in the book ''[[Join Me]]''-[http://www.join-me.co.uk/raymondprice.html the book]
 
*[[Lobsang Rampa]], who claimed to be occupied by the [[spirit]] of a [[lama]].
 
*[[Christopher Rocancourt |Christophe Rocancourt]]
 
*[[Christopher Skase]]
 
* [[Soapy Smith]], infamous 19th century confidence gang boss. [[Denver, Colorado]], [[Skagway, Alaska]]
 
*[[Lolit Solis]], who was responsible for the [[1994 Manila Filmfest scam]]. Later confessed and apologized.
 
*[[William Thompson (confidence man)|William Thompson]], American criminal whose deceptions caused the term "confidence man" to be coined.
 
*[[Kevin Trudeau]], who claimed to be able to cure brain damage, increase reading speed in customers up to and beyond the rate of 10000 [[words per minute]], and develop photographic memory.
 
*[[Joseph Weil]], also known as [[The Yellow Kid#Related Topics|The Yellow Kid]], one of the inspirations for the Academy-award winning film ''The Sting''.
 
*[[Stephen L. Smith]], who defrauded 170 investors out of $130 million in the small town of [[Winter Haven, Florida]] through his bogus SH Oil and Gas Exploration company in the 1980s.[http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/1990/07/16/73784/index.htm]
 
*[[Manny "Whistling" Jesus]], know for using the "[[French Drop]]" during the testing of pills in the turn of the 21st century [[harm reduction]] movement, whereby real pharmaceuticals were switched out for [[placebo|placbos]]
 
==Confidence tricks in the movies and television==
 
* ''[[The Rainmaker (N. Richard Nash)|The Rainmaker]]''. 1956. Produced by Paul Nathan. Paramount.
 
* ''[[Elmer Gantry]]''. 1960. Directed by [[Richard Brooks]]. Distributed by [[United Artists]]. Starring [[Burt Lancaster]], [[Jean Simmons]].
 
* ''[[The Hustler]]''. 1962. Directed by [[Robert Rossen]].
 
* ''[[The Music Man]]''. 1962. Produced and Directed by Morton da Costa. Warner.
 
* ''[[The Fortune Cookie]]''. 1966. Directed by [[Billy Wilder]]. [[Walter Matthau]] and [[Jack Lemon]] star.
 
* ''[[The Flim-Flam Man]]''. 1967. Produced by Lawrence Turman; Directed by [[Irvin Kershner]] and Yakima Canutt. Twentieth Century Fox.
 
* ''[[The Producers (1968 film)|The Producers]]''. 1968. Written and directed by [[Mel Brooks]].
 
* ''[[The Italian Job]]''. 1969. Directed by Peter Collinson. A [[The Italian Job (2003 film)|remake]] was released in 2003
 
* ''[[Skin Game]]''. 1971. [[James Garner]] and [[Louis Gossett]]. Directed by Paul Bogart.
 
* ''[[Paper Moon (film)|Paper Moon]]''. 1973. Directed and produced by [[Peter Bogdanovich]]. Paramount.
 
* ''[[The Sting]]''. 1973. Directed by George Roy Hill. Universal.
 
* ''[[The Ribos Operation]]''. 1978. Episode of ''[[Doctor Who]]'', produced by [[Graham Williams]], written by [[Robert Holmes (scriptwriter)|Robert Holmes]] and starring [[Tom Baker]].
 
* ''[[Vabank]]''. 1981. Directed by Juliusz Machulski.
 
* ''[[Cheers]]''. 1982-1993. NBC. Featured a recurring "Flimflam man" character, Harry 'The Hat' Gittes (played by [[Harry Anderson]])
 
* ''[[The Sting II]]''. 1983. Sequel to ''The Sting'' (1973)
 
* ''[[Vabank II]]''. 1985. Sequel to ''Vabank'' (1981)
 
* ''[[House of Games]]''. 1987. Produced by Michael Hausman, directed by [[David Mamet]]. Orion.
 
*''[[The Vanishing (1988 film)|The Vanishing]]''. 1988. Directed by George Sluizer. A [[The Vanishing (1993 film)|remake]] by Sluizer was released in 1993.
 
* ''[[Dirty Rotten Scoundrels (film)|Dirty Rotten Scoundrels]]''. 1988. Directed by [[Frank Oz]].
 
* ''[[Grifters (film)|The Grifters]]''. 1990. Produced by [[Martin Scorsese]]; Directed by [[Stephen Frears]]. Miramax Films.
 
* ''[[Leap of Faith (film)|Leap of Faith]]''. 1992.
 
* ''[[Scam (film)|Scam]]'', 1993. Directed by [[John Flynn]]
 
* ''[[The Usual Suspects]]''. 1995. Directed by [[Bryan Singer]]
 
* ''[[Primal Fear (film)|Primal Fear]]'', 1996.
 
* ''[[The Pest]]''. 1997. Directed by Paul Miller.
 
* ''[[The Spanish Prisoner]]''. 1997. Directed by David Mamet.
 
* ''[[Traveller (film)|Traveller]]'', 1997, [[Bill Paxton]] plays an Irish gypsy confidence man.
 
* ''[[Blue Streak (film)|Blue Streak]]''. 1999. Directed by Les Mayfield.
 
* ''[[Man on the Moon]]''. 1999. Produced by [[Danny DeVito]], directed by [[Miloš Forman]].
 
* ''[[Nueve Reinas]]'' (Nine Queens). 2000. Directed by Fabián Bielinsky.
 
* ''[[Boiler Room (film)|Boiler Room]]''. 2000. Directed by [[Ben Younger]].
 
* ''[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0223954 The Prime Gig]''. 2000. Directed by Gregory Mosher.
 
* ''[[Bandits (film)|Bandits]]''. 2001. Directed by [[Barry Levinson]].
 
* ''[[Heist (film)|Heist]]''. 2001. Directed by David Mamet.
 
* ''[[Heartbreakers]]''. 2001. Directed by [[David Mirkin]].
 
* ''[[Hustle (TV series)|Hustle]]''. 2004. A BBC series about a team of grifters.
 
* ''[[Ocean's Eleven (2001 film)|Ocean's Eleven]]''. 2001. Directed by [[Steven Soderbergh]] as a remake of the [[Ocean's Eleven (2001 film)|1960 film]].
 
* ''[[The Score (film)|The Score]]''. 2001. Directed by [[Frank Oz]]
 
* "[[The Great Money Caper]]," 2002, a ''[[Simpsons]]'' episode based around grifting.
 
* ''[[Catch Me If You Can]]''. 2002. Directed by [[Steven Spielberg]].
 
* ''[[Confidence (film)|Confidence]]''. 2003. Directed by James Foley.
 
* ''[[Matchstick Men (film)|Matchstick Men]]''. 2003. Directed by Ridley Scott.
 
* ''[[Shade (film)|Shade]]''. 2003. Directed by Damian Nieman.
 
* ''[[Out of Time (film)|Out of Time]]''. 2003. Produced by Neal H. Moritz, directed by Carl Franklin.
 
* ''[[Criminal (film)|Criminal]]''. 2004. Directed by Gregory Jacobs as a remake of ''Nueva Reinas'' (2000).
 
* ''[[Ocean's Twelve]]''. 2004. Directed by Steven Soderbergh.
 
* ''[[Stories of Lost Souls]]''. 2005. A presentation of six short stories. "Euston Road" stars Paul Bettany as a swindler. Directed by Toa Stappar.
 
* ''[[Derailed]]''. 2005. Directed by [[Mikael Håfström]].
 
* ''[[Con (TV series)|A Con]]'', 2005, created by [http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1043126 Skyler Stone].
 
* ''[[Lost (TV series)|Lost]]'', 2005, [[James "Sawyer" Ford|Sawyer]] was formerly a con artist.
 
* ''[[Kurosagi (Japanese Drama)|Kurosagi]]'', 2006, [[Kurosaki (Kurosagi)|Kurosaki]], the protagonist of Kurosagi, is a swindler who preys on other con artists.
 
* ''[[The O.C.]]'', [[Jeri Ryan]] played a character during the third season who was a con artist.
 
* ''[[North Shore (TV Show)|North Shore]]'', Amanda Rhigetti played a character who was a con artist.
 
* ''[[Firefly (TV series)|Firefly]]'', Saffron
 
 
 
==Confidence tricks in literature==
 
:''This section is incomplete. Please expand it if you can.''
 
* [[Herman Melville]]'s ''[[The Confidence-Man]]''.
 
* [[The Red-Headed League]], a [[Sherlock Holmes]] story by [[Sir Arthur Conan Doyle]], involves a sort of confidence trick used to enable a bank robbery.
 
* [[Thomas Mann]]'s Confessions of Felix Krull Confidence Man, The Early Years, an unfinished novel about a German con man.
 
* Many of the crime novels of [[Jim Thompson (writer)|Jim Thompson]] involve confidence artists.
 
* [[Joyce Carol Oates]]'s ''My Heart Laid Bare'' features a family of confidence artists.
 
* Eric Garcia's ''Matchstick Men''.
 
* [[Neil Gaiman]]'s ''American Gods'' uses a [[two-man con]] as a major plot element.
 
* [[O. Henry]]'s collection ''The Gentle Grafter'' describes a variety of confidence tricks.
 
* [[James Bolivar DiGriz|Slippery Jim]] - the protagonist of [[Harry Harrison]]'s ''[[The Stainless Steel Rat|Stainless Steel Rat]]'' trilogy - uses abundant schemes and frauds.
 
* ''[[The Big Con]]''
 
* Judith Ivory's ''Untie My Heart''
 
* Jenny Crusie's ''Faking It'' — Features a family of confidence artists
 
*[[Children of Lieutenant Schmidt Society]], a society of pretenders to be sons of [[Pyotr Schmidt]]
 
*[[Ostap Bender]], the central character of [[Ilf and Petrov]]'s ''[[The Twelve Chairs]]'' and ''[[The Little Golden Calf]]''
 
* The Professor in [[Spider Robinson]]'s [[Callahan Series]]
 
* [[John Constantine]] of [[DC Comics]]/[[Vertigo (comics)|Vertigo]] ongoing series, ''[[Hellblazer]]'', created by [[Alan Moore]] uses confidence scams, trickery, and [[magick]] to outwit his opponents.
 
* Stephen J. Cannell's ''King Con'' features a confidence man who successfully performs many of the known tricks, as well as some very creative and impressive ones.
 
* [[Tim Krabbé]]'s ''[[The Golden Egg]]'' (1984) features a chemistry teacher who employs confidence tricks for the purpose of kidnapping.
 
* [[Travis McGee]] in [[John D. MacDonald]]'s series of novels frequently uses con games or has them tried against him.
 
* [[Delos D. Harriman]] of [[Robert H. Heinlein]]'s novel ''[[The Man Who Sold the Moon]]'' could possibly be considered a con artist.
 
* The novella ''[[The Space Merchants]]'' by [[Frederic Pohl]] and [[Cyril Kornbluth]] is replete with con games practiced by corporations.
 
* The novel ''[[The Brethren]]'' by [[John Grisham]] features a con run within a federal prison in which closeted gay men are targeted for extortion by three incarcerated judges.
 
* [[Terry Pratchett]]'s ''[[Going Postal]]'' features a convicted and condemned swindler spared execution in exchange for taking on a hazardous government job, to which he applies the principles of the con.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
==Quotations==
 
* In response to the question "Who's going to believe a con artist?" Ben Matlock of ''[[Matlock (television series)|Matlock]]'' responded, "Everyone, if she's good." <!--"The Con Man" episode—>
 
 
 
==References==
 
* {{cite book
 
| last = Blundell
 
| first = Nigel
 
| origyear = 1982
 
| title = The World's Greatest Crooks and Conmen and other mischievous malefactors
 
| publisher = Octopus Books
 
| location = London
 
| year = 1984
 
| id = ISBN 0-7064-2144-2
 
}}
 
* {{cite book
 
| last = Maurer
 
| first = David W.
 
| year = 1940
 
| title = The Big Con: The Story of the Confidence Man and the Confidence Game
 
| location = New York
 
| publisher = The Bobbs Merrill company
 
| id = ISBN 0-3854-9538-2
 
}}
 
* {{cite book
 
| last = Maurer
 
| first = David W.
 
| year = 1974
 
| title = The American Confidence Man
 
| location = Springfield
 
| publisher = Charles C. Thomas, Publisher
 
| id = ISBN 0-3980-2974-1
 
}}
 
 
 
* Marek M. Kaminski (2004) ''Games Prisoners Play''.  Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691117217 http://webfiles.uci.edu/mkaminsk/www/book.html
 
 
 
* {{cite book
 
| last = Ball
 
| first = J. Bowyer
 
| coauthors = Whaley, Barton
 
| year = 1982
 
| title = Cheating and Deception
 
| publisher = Transaction Publishers
 
| location = New Brunswick (USA), London (UK)
 
| id = ISBN 0-88738-868-X
 
}}
 
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
* [http://www.fraudaid.com/ FraudAid] Site giving anti-scam information.
+
All links retrieved May 29, 2017.
* [http://chnm.gmu.edu/lostmuseum/lm/328/ "Arrest of the Confidence Man," New York Herald, 1849]
 
* [http://www.courier-journal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=%2F20051009%2FNEWS01%2F510090392%2F1008 "A hoax most cruel," Louisville, The Courier Journal, October 9, 2005]
 
* [http://www.soapysmith.net/ "Friends of Con man Soapy Smith"]
 
* [http://www.blongerbros.com/gang/ "The Blonger Gang" details the exploits and arrest of Denver's "Million Dollar Bunko Ring"]
 
* [http://webfiles.uci.edu/mkaminsk/www/book.html Games, tests, word-games, and scams that prisoners play]
 
* [http://www.findextrawork.co.uk/internetscams.php Advice about Internet Scams and Fraud and how to identify and avoid them.]
 
* [http://www.alsforums.com/scamwatch Common frauds revealed when searching for information about terminal illness online.]
 
* [http://www.totallyproperty.com/scams/ Property Forum] where the latest property / real estate scams are highlighted
 
 
 
 
 
  
 +
* [http://www.fraudaid.com FraudAid: site giving anti-scam information.]
 +
* [http://www.fastcompany.com/magazine/66/realitycheck.html Interview with author and policeman Dennis Marlock]
 +
* [http://www.quackwatch.org/index.html Quackwatch: scams in the health industry.]
 +
* [http://www.blongerbros.com/gang "The Blonger Gang" details the exploits and arrest of Denver's "Million Dollar Bunko Ring."]
  
 
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Latest revision as of 21:30, 29 May 2017


A confidence game, also known as a con, scam, grift, or flim flam, is an attempt to win the trust and confidence of a victim, known as the "mark," in order to defraud them. Although general expectation is that con artists are untrustworthy, their particular ability is actually to be able to gain the trust of their victims. They play on people's selfish desires, greed and the desire to obtain much with minimal effort. Victims often do not report con men due to their own complicity in an activity of dubious, if not criminal, nature, and their embarrassment at having been tricked.

The cleverness of con men often makes them appear sympathetic even after their deceit has been revealed, leading to their popularity as fictional heroes. Ultimately, though, the confidence game is a deception that leads to criminal results, and its perpetrators deserve no acclaim as they do not embody any characteristics of true human nature.

Origin of the term

Did you know?
The term "confidence man" was first used in 1849 about a thief who asked strangers if they had confidence to trust him with their watch

The term "confidence man" (usually shortened to "con"), first came into use in 1849, when the New York Herald published a story about the arrest of William Thompson, entitled, "Arrest of the Confidence Man." Thompson would approach strangers on the street, talk a while with them, and then ask if they had "confidence in [him] to trust [him] with [their] watch until to-morrow.” The victims would then give Thompson their expensive watches, believing him to be an acquaintance they didn't remember.[1]

How confidence games work

The con man

The term "con man" may bring to mind images of shady, underworld characters, but reality is quite different. A good con artist needs to appear trustworthy and likable in order to win the trust of his victim. Con artists are charismatic, intelligent, have good memories, and know how to manipulate people's hopes and fears. They attempt to blend in, to look and sound familiar, and often work diligently at appearing to be smooth, professional, and successful. A con man may wear an expensive suit and appear to work in a high class office.[2] Or, conversely, a con artist may put him or herself in a weaker position to play on a victim's sympathies: They may take on the role of illegal immigrant, a likable man down on his luck, or a woman with a small child who needs to use the bathroom. From city official to roofer, the con artist can appear to be just about anyone.

The mark

The "mark," or victim, may also be just about anyone who wants something. Con artists prey on human desires for money, health, happiness, and even the desire to help others. Some may argue that con artists are a sort of Robin Hood, nobly cheating the greedy and dishonest out of their money; hence the old adage, "you can't cheat an honest man." In many cases, this holds true, as many cons exploit the greed and willingness to go "around the law" in their victims. Many cons dangle the prospect of "something for nothing (or very little)" in front of their marks.

However, there are just as many cons that don't depend on greedy or dishonest marks; many scams involving the elderly and "charity" scams often exploit the fear or good intentions of their marks. Some believe that an intelligent, educated person is much more difficult to con, as he or she would more easily recognize an offer that sounded "too good to be true." In actuality, this belief of invulnerability makes one a good target. Good con artists have a great deal of charm and intelligence, and a good con man can make just about anything sound reasonable.

The game

Types of confidence tricks are limited only by the imagination of the con artists, who are constantly inventing new ways of tricking people out of their money. However, there are two main categories of confidence games: The "short con" and the "long con." Sometimes called a "street con," the "short con" takes little set up and little time to execute. The "long con," on the other hand, involves much more time to set up, more planning, more money, and often more accomplices. Unlike the short con, though, the long con usually scams the victim out of a sizable amount of cash. The long con is sometimes referred to as a "big store scam," where the "big store" is an elaborately set up fake bank, lawyer's office, betting parlor, and so forth.

Many confidence games are simply variations on "classic" cons. The following are some of the more well known classic short cons:

  • The Pigeon drop

In this con, the con artist and the mark, or "pigeon," find a wad of cash in the street that appears to be from an illegal activity, such as gambling or drug money. Since there is no way to return the money directly to its rightful owner, the con artist determines, after speaking with a "lawyer (or banker) friend," that if no one claims it within thirty days, the money is theirs. The "lawyer" says that it is best if each of them put up some extra money, as "good faith money," "proof of individual financial responsibility," or "to show that the people involved are above board" to be held by the lawyer until they can split the found cash.[3] Naturally, the mark never sees either their money or the "found" money again.

  • The Spanish Prisoner

This con first appeared in 1588, where a man with an attractive young girl approached British nobility, claiming that the girl's father, a British nobleman, was imprisoned in Spain. The nobleman's identity had to be kept a secret, lest the Spanish discover who their prisoner was. If the mark helped pay the ransom, the freed nobleman would surely reward him, and perhaps even give him the hand of the lovely daughter in marriage. Over the years, this scam has evolved into the popular "Nigerian Email Scam," where marks are asked to help "liberate" funds of wealthy Nigerians.

  • The Glasses Drop and the Flop

In the "glasses drop," the con man drops a pair of broken glasses where the mark will step on them. The con man then demands that the mark pay for the glasses he "broke." "The flop" is a similar type of scam where con artists use a preexisting injury in the same fashion. An accident is staged, the injury is claimed to be new, and insurance companies are scammed out of their money.

  • Pig in a Poke

One of the oldest cons, this scam dates from the late Middle Ages. The con man would sell a suckling pig in a bag (or "poke") to an unsuspecting customer. When the victim reached home, he would open the bag only to find that his "pig" had mysteriously become a cat. This confidence game may have given rise to the phrases "let the cat out of the bag," "you got left holding the bag," as well as the adage "never buy a pig in a poke."

  • The Fiddle Game

In this con, a shabbily dressed "musician" leaves his fiddle as collateral in a restaurant, claiming to have left his money at home. While he is getting his money, another accomplice comes by and offers to purchase such a "rare" instrument for a large amount of money. When the musician returns, the restaurant owner offers to buy the fiddle for a lesser amount of money, thinking that he will be able to sell it to the accomplice and make a tidy profit. In need of money, the musician reluctantly sells his "beloved instrument." Naturally, the accomplice never returns, and the restaurant owner is left having paid a tidy sum for a nearly worthless fiddle.

  • Three-card Monte

"Three-card monte," or "Follow The Lady," is essentially the same as the probably centuries-older "shell game" or "thimblerig." The trickster shows three playing cards to the audience, one of which is a queen (the "lady"), then places the cards face-down, shuffles them around and invites the audience to bet on which one is the queen. At first the audience may be skeptical, so the "shill," or accomplice, places a bet and the con artist allows him to win. This is sometimes enough to entice the audience to place bets, but the trickster uses sleight of hand to ensure that they always lose, unless the con man decides to let them win to lure them into betting even more. The mark loses whenever the dealer chooses to make him lose.

  • Change Raising

"Change raising" is a short con generally performed at the cash register of a store. The con artist performs several money exchanges involving finding the correct change to pay for a purchase ("Wait, I do have a ten; could you give me two fives instead?"), with the end result that he walks out of the store with more money than he had coming in, leaving a vaguely confused clerk wondering if everything made as much sense as it seemed to.

The above list is only a sampling. Confidence games are continually evolving and subject to many variations and refinements, and con artists are continually seeking to improve their swindles. Some con artists prey upon the lonely, seeking out marks through internet dating sites, convincing men and women to "loan" them money so they can come visit. Ironically enough, some con artists find people who have already been conned, telling them that, for a fee, they can recover most of the money that the victim lost. The internet, partly because of its accessibility and anonymity, is a popular place for scam artists.

How con artists avoid the police

Many victims of confidence games are embarrassed to admit they fell victim to a scam, feeling foolish and stupid for being taken in by the con artist's game. Sometimes, the con artist is so convincing with the pitiful tales he tells the mark about his family, children, and so forth, that, even though the mark knows he has been swindled, he still feels bad for the con man and fails to report him. Other times, the con artist will manipulate the situation so that the mark cannot go to the police without admitting that he has committed a crime. Because of this surefire way to escape punishment, many confidence games include a minor element of crime. For example, the victim may be encouraged to use money concealed from the tax authorities to invest in the con artist's scheme; if they go to the authorities, they must reveal that they have committed tax fraud. Similarly, the mark who buys a stolen television off the back of a truck, only to find he has bought an empty case filled with bricks, cannot report the seller without admitted to attempted purchase of stolen goods. Illegal pornographic images, pirated software, and bootleg music, drugs, and firearms are all good candidates for fraud.

Famous con artists

  • Frank Abagnale was one of the world's most famous con men, as well as one of the youngest. Between the ages of 16 and 21, he cashed $2.5 million in forged checks, scammed free flights by posing as an airline pilot, and successfully passed himself off as an attorney, a college professor, and a pediatrician. At 21, he was apprehended by the French police, and served a total of five years in the French, Swedish, and U.S. prison systems. He was released on the condition that he use his skills to assist the federal government with fraud prevention, and currently lectures extensively at the FBI Academy. His best selling book, Catch Me if You Can, was later made into a film starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Tom Hanks. He has received accolades for his contributions to fraud prevention, and was made national spokesperson for the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) in 2004.[4] On his website, Abagnale says, "I consider my past immoral, unethical, and illegal. It is something I am not proud of. I am proud that I have been able to turn my life around and in the past 25 years, helped my government, my clients, thousands of corporations and consumers deal with the problems of white collar crime and fraud."[4]
  • Joseph Weil, also known as "The Yellow Kid," was born in 1877, to a German grocer, lived for 101 years, and theoretically made millions of dollars by cheating his fellow man. His exploits partially inspired the film The Sting, starring Robert Redford and Paul Newman.
  • Victor Lustig was born in Czechoslovakia in 1890. Lustig had 45 known aliases, nearly fifty arrests in the United States alone, and was fluent in five languages. In 1922, he posed as "Count" Lustig from Austria, and conned a bank out of $32,000 by switching envelopes. Upon capture, he used the long train ride to convince his captors that, not only should they let him go, but that they should also give him $1,000 for the inconvenience of being arrested. Lustig's most famous con, however, was the sale of the Eiffel Tower. In 1925, Lustig invited five scrap iron dealers to meet with him in a hotel, and auctioned off the famous landmark to Andre Poisson, who used a bribe to seal the deal. Lustig traveled to Austria and kept a close eye on the Parisian newspapers. When no mention was made of the scam, Lustig determined that Poisson had been too ashamed to admit he fell for such a scheme and had never reported it. Lustig promptly headed back to Paris and sold the Eiffel Tower a second time, after which the victims did go to the police, forcing Lustig to leave Europe and head to the United States. In 1934, Lustig was arrested for counterfeiting, and served time in Alcatraz prison. He died of pneumonia in 1947, at the age of 57.[5]
  • Gregor MacGregor was a Scottish conman who, in 1822, tried to attract investors and settlers for a non-existent country of "Poyais." Poyais, he claimed, was a fertile "Garden of Eden" on the Caribbean coast of Central America, with an efficient, European-style government. Successfully duping not only land investors and adventurers, but also bankers and aristocrats, MacGregor's scam ended with 250 settlers left stranded on the "beautiful" islands of Poyais. Instead of cotton growing wild and European-style cities, they found forest, swampland, malaria, and yellow fever. Before they managed to find passage back to England, approximately 180 were dead from tropical diseases.
  • Phillip Arnold and John Slack, were perpetrators of the 1872 "Great Diamond Hoax" in San Francisco. Through a series of deceptions, the pair sold over a half-million dollars in Colorado land and stock shares to wealthy businessmen. In addition to the use of bags of "found" diamonds, they also "salted" the potential "diamond mine," scattering diamonds, rubies, sapphires, and emeralds where they would be likely to be discovered by potential investors. The hoax was discovered by Clarence King, a geologist leading a government survey team. When he heard about the diamonds found in Colorado, he feared that missing such a large diamond deposit would result in the loss of his funding, and immediately took a team to Colorado to investigate. When King found that the only gems that turned up were only several inches below the surface, and only underneath previously disturbed ground, he promptly notified the investors. The investors pleaded with him to stay silent long enough for them to sell their stock to others, but King refused and the hoax was exposed.[6]
  • Jefferson "Soapy" Smith got his nickname from his infamous soap swindle, where he would sell bars of soap from a suitcase on the sidewalk. He would make a show of wrapping an occasional bar of soap with a bill, ranging in size from $1 to $100. He would then mix the wrapped bars together, and sell them for between $1 and $5. Naturally, the "winners" of the currency-wrapped soap were always associates of Soapy. From 1887 to 1895, Soapy was king of Denver's underworld, making money through a variety scams, and becoming more of a gangster than a confidence man. Despite his reputation as a bad man, Soapy was also generous to charitable causes, and was often sought out by men like Parson Uzzell of the People's church for assistance. Smith was killed in 1898, during a gunfight.[7]

Confidence tricks in the movies

The public has long had a fascination with confidence men, evident in the number of movies about con artists. Author Robert Nash summed up this feeling, saying, "we have a secret admiration for con artists. We get a vicarious thrill."[8]

In the movies, con artists often prey upon the corrupt and greedy, meting out justice through their deceptive schemes. Instead of conscience-less criminals, they are portrayed as heroes. In The Sting, Robert Redford and Paul Newman use an elaborate set up to fleece a corrupt crime boss. In Matchstick Men, Nicolas Cage portrays a quirky, likable guy who meets his 14 year old daughter for the first time. He teaches her how to con a woman using a fake "found" lottery ticket, but when the con is over, he insists that she return the woman's money. In Paper Moon, a good looking and likable depression-era con man and his young daughter travel across the country, conning everyone from little old ladies to bootleggers. Despite the fact that such a young girl is being introduced into a dangerous life of crime, the audience is still left rooting for the two to stay together at the end of the film.

Confidence games are often portrayed in the movies as impressive schemes thought up by basically good, likable men and women. Rarely do innocent people suffer, and rarely does one see any noteworthy impact on the lives of ordinary, hardworking people. Instead, it is the crime bosses, the corrupt businessmen, the greedy and dishonest who suffer. Hollywood perpetrates the concept of con men who love the challenge of cheating the wealthy, greedy and arrogant. However, this is a sentimental way of looking at confidence men. There is not, nor has there ever been any "code of honor" among con artists.

Notes

  1. New York Herald, Arrest of the Confidence Man. Retrieved May 29, 2017.
  2. North American Securities Administrators Association, How to Spot a Con Artist. Retrieved May 29, 2017.
  3. Crimes of Persuasion, Pigeon Drop Theft. Retrieved May 29, 2017.
  4. 4.0 4.1 www.abagnale.com, About Frank Abagnale. Retrieved May 29, 2017.
  5. Jeff Maysh, The Man Who Sold the Eiffel Tower…Twice. Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved May 29, 2017.
  6. Robert Wilson, The Great Diamond Hoax of 1872. Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved May 29, 2017.
  7. Friends of Badman Soapy Smith, History Part 1. Retrieved May 29, 2017.
  8. Chris Wright, Love of the Game. Boston Phoenix. Retrieved May 29, 2017

External links

All links retrieved May 29, 2017.

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