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Top 14 Financial Frauds of All Time

Top 14 Financial Frauds of All Time

By Geoffrey James
Sales Machine Blogger

With the documentary  Inside Job winning an Oscar, you'd think that massive financial fraud is a modern invention.  Well, think again.

History is full of scams and frauds that removed billions of dollars from the pockets of investors and destroyed entire economies.  This post contains some of the most memorable.

There is one huge difference, though, between the Great Wall Street Ripoff and the all the rest of these history-making scams.  See if you can figure it out, before you get to the end of the gallery.

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Top 14 Financial Frauds of All Time

The Sale of the Roman Empire (193 A.D.)

The Sale of the Roman Empire (193 A.D.)

During unrest in the Roman Empire, the Praetorian Guard (a special army supposedly loyal to the emperor), killed the current emperor and offered the empire to the highest bidder.  The "winner" was Julianus, who came up with a truly astronomical price: 250 gold pieces for every member of the army, which comes out to somewhere around $1 billion in today's money.  Unfortunately, the guards had sold something that didn't belong to them, a classic, if simple, financial fraud.  The new "emperor" was never recognized as such and was quickly deposed.

Fun fact: The first offical act of the real emperor who "deposed" Julianus was executing the guards who ran the scam.

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Top 14 Financial Frauds of All Time

The Mississippi Scheme (1719)

The Mississippi Scheme (1719)

When Scottish financial genius John Law started a company to develop the then-wilderness Louisiana, he saw nothing wrong with hyping the possibilties rather than the reality.  He convinced investors (including the French government) to back his development scheme.  Shares in his company skyrocketed and French currency increased in value, since it was widely believed France would gain a mountain of gold and silver from what was then only a swampy backwater.  When investors actually received what Louisiana was like, shared plummeted.  Law narrowly avoided being lynched, escaping only by disguising himself as a beggar.  He died in poverty nine years later.

Fun fact: With the exception of New Orleans, Louisiana is still a swampy backwater.

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Top 14 Financial Frauds of All Time

The Diamond Necklace Hoax (1785)

The Diamond Necklace Hoax (1785)

It's been said that few creatures on this earth are more gullible than a horny priest.  That was certainly the case with Cardinal Prince de Rohan, who was so convinced that he was having an affair with Queen Marie Antoinette (pictured), that he arranged for her to purchase, on her line of credit, a diamond necklace worth six million livres.  Unfortunately, Rohan was, unbeknownst to him, actually having an affair with a prostitute dressed up as the Queen, a ruse conducted by his (former) mistress, courtesan/countess Jeanne de la Motte, who hoped to make away with the necklace herself.   When caught, de la Motte was sentenced to be stripped naked in public and branded with a hot iron.

Fun fact: The resulting scandal triggered the French Revolution.

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Top 14 Financial Frauds of All Time

The Wright Panic (1900)

The Wright Panic (1900)

Never underestimate the power of social pressure.  Financier Whitaker Wright put pretigious figurehead names -- lords and ladies, mostly -- on the boards of directors of his companies.  As a result, investing his firms became quite the social norm among the well-heeled.  Unfortunately, while his companies looked solvent on paper, they were really only lending money to one another in order to balance the books.  When the scheme became public, shares collapsed, leaving many of his posh pals penniless. 

Fun fact: When Whitaker heard he'd been convited of fraud, he took cyanide pills and died within minutes.

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Top 14 Financial Frauds of All Time

The Original Ponzi Scheme (1920)

The Original Ponzi Scheme (1920)

Charles Ponzi discovered that he could purchase postal coupons at a discount, ship them abroad ,and sell them for full price.  His only lie was exaggerating the financial benefits.  Rather than a modest 5% profit, he claimed the coupons would produce a 50% profit in only 45 days.  Thousands of people practically threw their money at him, as he paid early investors from the proceeds of subsequent ones.  When the epynomous scheme finally blew up, investors lost nearly $10 million.  Ponzi fled the country and eventually died in abject poverty.

Fun fact: After fleeing the U.S., Ponzi became financial advisor to Benito Mussiolini, where his bungling hastened Il Duce's decline.

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Top 14 Financial Frauds of All Time

The Eiffel Tower Sale (1925)

The Eiffel Tower Sale (1925)

Why buy the Brooklyn Bridge, when there's something even cooler on the market? When "Count" Victor Lustig discovered that the famous Eiffel Tower was in need of repairs, he faked some government papers showing that he was authorized to sell the tower for scrap metal.  He managed to get not one, but two scrap metal dealers to come up with a total of over $200,000 in bribes to throw the multi-million dollar contract their way.  Then, he skipped town and returned to the United States, where he continued a lustrous career as America's most successful swindler.

Fun fact: VIctor Lustig is the also author of "The 10 Commandments of Con Men."

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Top 14 Financial Frauds of All Time

The Match King Hoax (1929)

The Match King Hoax (1929)

Few moguls of the roaring twenties roared louder than Ivar Krueger, who owned banks, film companies, newspapers, mines, telephone companies and railways.  When he tried to form a monopoly to control manufacturing and distribution of all the world's safety matches, few questioned he'd succeed.  International banks begged him to let them invest, not knowing that his many companies existed only on paper, profitable only because they were invested in each other.  The scam began to fall apart in the great crash of 1929 when investors wanted to cash out, but he managed to hold on until 1932.  At that point, he saw it was pointless to continue and shot himself in the chest. The financial world mourned, until it became publicly known that Kreuger spent all his investor's money -- half a billion dollars -- on his luxurious lifestyle.

Fun fact: Krueger was reputed to have faked his death and lived the high life for years in the distant island of Sumatra.

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Top 14 Financial Frauds of All Time

The Baker Estate Swindle (1936)

The Baker Estate Swindle (1936)

In 1839, one Colonel Jacob Baker died, leaving an estate that comprised most of the land where the city of Philadelpia is located, a tract worth up to $3 billion.  Under the leadership of William Cameron Morrow Smith (pictured?), Baker's heirs formed a legal association, open for a small fee to anybody with the last name "Baker", to pool their resources for the legal battle to recover their share of their rightful inheritance.  There was only one problem; Colonel Baker was a fictional creation and there was no inheritance.  Smith and his cronies collected nearly $25 million before the swindle was shut down in 1936. 

Fun fact: A similar scam is pulled on folk with the last name Drake, inheritors of the Elizabethan explorer who discovered San Fransiciso bay.

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Top 14 Financial Frauds of All Time

ZZZZ Best Cleaners (1986)

ZZZZ Best Cleaners (1986)

Barry Minkow was the wunderkind of Wall Street when he brought his company public.  Shares in ZZZZ Best, an industrial rug cleaning firm, exploded in value, creating a company with a stock valuation of $200 million.   Unfortunately, ZZZZ Best didn't really exist, didn't have any contracts, and had originally been funded through a series of credit-card thefts. Finally exposed in 1987, the stock dropped to zero, and Minkow landed 25 years in prison.  The actual assets of the erstwhile $200 million firm -- a few trucks and some cleaning equipment -- were sold for $64,000.

Fun fact: In his heyday, Barry Minkow was a featured guest on Oprah Winfrey's TV show!

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Top 14 Financial Frauds of All Time

The Great Insider Trading Scam (1986)

The Great Insider Trading Scam (1986)

Ivan Boesky amassed a fortune of more than $200 million by betting on corporate takeovers, many of which occurred only a few days before the announcement of the acquisition. When charged with insider trading, Boesky cooperated with the SEC, and recieved a negotiated sentence of only 3.5 years (and only 2 of which were served.)  He was also  fined $100 million, a fraction of his ill-gotten gains and was permanently barred from working in the securities industry.  Ironically, fellow-fraudster Michael Milken, who was also convicted, managed to retrieve his reputation after a sort, and is now a philanthropist, respected by those who have short memories.

Fun fact: Boesky is the prototype of Gordon Gecko from the movie Wall Street.

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Top 14 Financial Frauds of All Time

The Savings & Loan Scandal (1989)

The Savings & Loan Scandal (1989)

Few fraudsters have been as brazen as Charles Keating, the most visible of a cadre of corporate officers running a number of huge Savings and Loan institutions. These companies operated like banks, but without the regulations, and therefore made a series of bad investments, the main purpose of which was to enrich the corporate officers. Keating and crew never told their investors that they were investing in worthless junk, and Keating was eventually arrested and convicted of securities fraud.  As a result, government regulation was promptly tightened, and then promptly untightened, since the financial industry essentially owns the U.S. government.

Fun fact: Five senators were implicated for providing political cover to Keating and his cronies. One of them was John McCain.

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Top 14 Financial Frauds of All Time

The Enron Bankruptcy (2001)

The Enron Bankruptcy (2001)

Ken Lay was the hapless CEO of Enron, a company that employed approximately 22,000 people and claimed revenues of nearly $101 billion in the year 2000. In 2001, however, it came out that Enron's finances were a cooked up fiction, involving all sorts of "creative" accounting.  The scandal brought down Enron and it's laughably incompetent "auditors" the Arthur Andersen accounting firm, and resulted in the Sarbanes-Oxley act, whose main purpose is to make it financially difficult for small companies to issue stock. (Score one for big business!)

Fun fact: Fortune magazine named Enron "America's Most Innovative Company" for six consecutive years, thereby proving that Fortune magazine is written by idiots.

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Top 14 Financial Frauds of All Time

The Madoff Pyramid (2008)

The Madoff Pyramid (2008)

The only advantage of financial meltdowns is that they smoke out fraud. Compared to the havoc wreaked by Greenspan's course of deregulation, Madoff's ponzi scheme was chickenfeed, involving a measly $18 billion.  However, the fact that Madoff was able to keep the scheme going for so long is ample testament to the fact that the U.S. government -- despite repeated scandals, frauds, ripoff, hoaxes, and general fancy mischief -- isn't really serious about regulating the financial sector.  The SEC even investigated his operations and failed to find anything wrong, even though the impossibility of his business model was staring them in the face.

Fun fact: Madoff claims that most of the bankers through which he worked knew that he was pulling a scam, but said nothing.

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Top 14 Financial Frauds of All Time

The Great Wall Street Rip-Off (Ongoing)

The Great Wall Street Rip-Off (Ongoing)

By far the biggest fraud of all time, the great Wall Street ripoff involved more far money (in real dollars) than all the financial frauds of the past put together. The fraud, perpetrated by several large financial firms, consisted of selling fraudulent mortgage-backed securities, thereby creating a financial bubble. When the bubble burst, the resulting crash destroyed trillions of dollars of real investment, threw most of the world into a crippling recession, and created massive unemployment. The fraud -- and all the disasters that followed -- stemmed from the almost complete deregulation of the financial industry, spearheaded by Alan Greenspan (pictured), and abetted by both political parties.

Fun fact: Unlike ALL the other previous frauds in this post, The Great Wall Street Ripoff is going entirely unpunished. Despite the fact that the CEOs of the financial institutions repeatedly lied to investors and profitted mightily from the fraud, it appears as if nobody will serve a single day in jail. This is apparently because the ill-gotten gain is so spectacularly enormous that it has not only allowed the perpetrators to buy control of the government, but also to run a well-orchestrated and highly effective campaign to direct the anger of the public upon other victims of the fraud, rather than upon the perpetrators themselves. As such, the Great Wall Street Ripoff represents the final and complete victory of the fraudsters over attempts to restrain them by law. What's fun about that fact? Nothing, unless you're one of the criminals who pulled it off. In which case, it's freakin' hil-ar-i-ous!!!

READERS: Do you think at least somebody from Wall Street ought to be in prison? If so, click the LIKE button on the top of this post. Maybe if enough people read this post, they'll get angry enough to demand action.

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