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Confidence trick



 
 
A confidence trick or confidence game (also known as a bunko, con, flim flam, gaffle, grift, hustle, scam, scheme, or swindle) is an attempt to defraud a person or group by gaining their confidence.

first known usage of the term "confidence man" in English was in 1849; it was used by American press during the United States trial of William Thompson
William Thompson (confidence man)

William Thompson was an United States criminal whose deceptions caused the term "Confidence trick" to be coined.Operating in New York City in the late 1840s, a gently-dressed Thompson would approach an upper-class mark and begin a brief conversation....
.






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A confidence trick or confidence game (also known as a bunko, con, flim flam, gaffle, grift, hustle, scam, scheme, or swindle) is an attempt to defraud a person or group by gaining their confidence.

History

The first known usage of the term "confidence man" in English was in 1849; it was used by American press during the United States trial of William Thompson
William Thompson (confidence man)

William Thompson was an United States criminal whose deceptions caused the term "Confidence trick" to be coined.Operating in New York City in the late 1840s, a gently-dressed Thompson would approach an upper-class mark and begin a brief conversation....
. Thompson chatted with strangers until he asked if they had the confidence to lend him their watches, whereupon he would walk off with the watch; he was captured when a victim recognized him on the street.

The term 'scam' is often used to describe the 'confidence trick' employed by a 'confidence man'. The origin of this word is thought to come from the Irish phrase S cam ι (pron. s'cam ae) meaning 'it is a trick'

Vulnerability to confidence tricks

Persons of any level of intelligence are vulnerable to deception by experienced con artists. Confidence tricks exploit human weaknesses like greed, dishonesty
Dishonesty

Dishonesty is a word which in common usage may be defined as the act or to act without honesty; a lack of probity, to cheat, lying or being deliberately deceptive; lacking in integrity; to be knavish, perfidious, corrupt or treacherous; charlatanism or quackery....
, vanity
Vanity

In conventional parlance, vanity is the excessive belief in one's own abilities or attractiveness to others. In many religions vanity is considered a form of self-idolatry, in which one rejects God for the sake of one's own , and thereby becomes divorced from the Divine graces of God....
, but also virtues like honesty
Honesty

Honesty is the human quality of communicating and acting truthfully, in accordance with a sense of fairness and sincerity. This includes all varieties of communication, both verbal and non-verbal....
, compassion
Compassion

Compassion is commonly defined as a profound human emotion prompted by the suffering of others. More vigorous than empathy, the feeling commonly gives rise to an active desire to alleviate another's suffering....
, or a naοve
Naοve

Na?ve may refer to:* a French loanword indicating having or showing a lack of experience, understanding or sophistication* Na?ve art, art created by untrained artists, or artists aspiring to na?ve realisations...
 expectation of good faith on the part of the con artist.
Just as there is no typical profile for swindlers, neither is there one for their victims. Virtually anyone can fall prey to fraudulent crimes. … Certainly victims of high-yield investment frauds may possess a level of greed which exceeds their caution as well as a willingness to believe what they want to believe. However, not all fraud victims are greedy, risk-taking, self-deceptive individuals looking to make a quick dollar. Nor are all fraud victims naive, uneducated, or elderly.


Confidence tricksters often rely on the greed and dishonesty of the mark, who may attempt to out-cheat the con artist, only to discover that he or she has been manipulated into losing from the very beginning. This is such a general principle in confidence tricks that there is a saying among con men that "you can't cheat an honest man."

Nevertheless, some tricks depend on the honesty of the victim. In a common scam, as part of an apparently legitimate transaction, the victim is sent a worthless check, which the victim then deposits. The victim is then urged to forward the apparent value of the check to the trickster as cash, possibly keeping a small portion of the money as a commission, which they may do before discovering the check bounces. Another fashionable scenario (as of 2006) has the victim recruited as a "financial agent" to collect "business debts." Paper checks are not always involved: funds may be transferred electronically from another victim.

Sometimes con men rely on naive individuals who put their confidence into get-rich-quick scheme
Get-rich-quick scheme

A get-rich-quick scheme is a plan to acquire high rates of return for a small investment. Most such schemes promise that participants can obtain this high rate of return with little risk....
s, such as "too good to be true" investment
Investment

Investment or investing is a term with several closely-related meanings in business management, finance and economics, related to Saving or deferring Consumption ....
s. It may take years for the wider community to discover that such investment schemes are bogus
Bogus

Bogus can mean:*Not genuine; spurious*Of computer programs, "not working"*Bogus , a 1996 film starring Whoopi Goldberg*Bogus Basin mountain resort in Idaho...
. By the time they are discovered, many people may have lost their life savings to something in which they have been persuaded to invest.

The confidence trickster often works with one or more accomplices called shill
Shill

A shill is an associate of a person selling goods or services or a political group, who pretends no association to the seller/group and assumes the air of an enthusiastic customer....
s, who help manipulate the mark into accepting the con man's plan. In a traditional confidence trick, the mark is led to believe that he will be able to win money or some other prize by doing some task. The accomplices may pretend to be random strangers who have benefited from successfully performing the task.

Notable con artists


Born in the 18th century

  • Gregor MacGregor
    Gregor MacGregor

    Gregor MacGregor was a Scotland soldier, adventurer and colonizer who fought in the South American struggle for independence. Upon his return to England in 1820, he claimed to be cazique of Poyais ....
     (1786–1845) – Scottish conman who tried to attract investment and settlers for a non-existent country of Poyais


Born or active in the 19th century

  • Helga de la Brache
    Helga de la Brache

    Helga de la Brache, n?e Aurora Florentina Magnusson, , was a Swedish con artist. She attained a royal pension by convincing the authorities that she was the secret daughter of King Gustav IV of Sweden and Queen Frederica of Baden....
     (1817-1885)
  • William Thompson
    William Thompson (confidence man)

    William Thompson was an United States criminal whose deceptions caused the term "Confidence trick" to be coined.Operating in New York City in the late 1840s, a gently-dressed Thompson would approach an upper-class mark and begin a brief conversation....
     (active in 1840–1849) – US criminal whose deceptions caused the term
    confidence man to be coined
  • Lou Blonger
    Lou Blonger

    Lou "The Fixer" Blonger , born Louis Herbert Belonger, was an American Civil War veteran, saloonkeeper, mine operator and well-known gambler, but is most often noted as the organizer of an extensive ring of confidence tricksters that operated for more than 25 years in Denver, Colorado....
     (1849–1924) – organized massive ring of con men in Denver in early 1900s
  • Soapy Smith
    Soapy Smith

    Jefferson Randolph "Soapy" Smith II was an American con artist and gangster who had a major hand in the organized criminal operations of Denver, Colorado, Creede, Colorado, and Skagway, Alaska from 1879 to 1898....
     (1860–1898) — confidence gang boss, who operated in Denver
    Denver, Colorado

    Denver is the Capital and the Colorado municipalities of the state of Colorado, in the United States. Denver is a consolidated city-county located in the South Platte River on the High Plains just east of the Front Range of the Rocky Mountains....
    , Colorado
    Colorado

    The State of Colorado is a U.S. state located in the Mountain States of the United States of America. Colorado may also be considered to be a part of the Western United States and Southwestern United States regions of the United States....
    ; Creede
    Creede, Colorado

    File:Creede, 1942.jpgThe historic Town of Creede is a Colorado municipalities#Statutory_Town that is the county seat of, and the only Colorado municipalities in, Mineral County, Colorado, Colorado, United States....
    , Colorado
    Colorado

    The State of Colorado is a U.S. state located in the Mountain States of the United States of America. Colorado may also be considered to be a part of the Western United States and Southwestern United States regions of the United States....
    ; and Skagway
    Skagway, Alaska

    Skagway is a first-class borough in Alaska, on the Alaska Panhandle. It was formerly a city first incorporated in 1900 that was re-incorporated as a borough on June 25, 2007....
    , Alaska
    Alaska

    Alaska is the largest U.S. state of the United States by area; it is situated in the northwest extremity of the North American continent, with Canada to the east, the Arctic Ocean to the north, and the Pacific Ocean to the west and south, with Russia further west across the Bering Strait....
  • George C. Parker
    George C. Parker

    George Parker was one of the most audacious confidence trick in American history. He made his living selling New York's public landmarks to unwary tourists....
     (1870–1936) — US con man who sold New York monuments to tourists
  • Scotty
    Walter E. Scott

    Walter Edward Scott , also known as Death Valley Scotty, was a Prospecting, performer, and confidence trick, who was made famous by his many scams involving gold mining and the iconic mansion in Death Valley, popularly known as Scotty's Castle....
     (1872–1954) a prospector, performer, and con man, who was made famous by his many scams involving gold mining and the iconic mansion in Death Valley, popularly known as Scotty's Castle
  • Joseph Weil
    Joseph Weil

    Joseph "Yellow Kid" Weil was one of the most famous American Confidence trick of his era. Weil's biographer, W.T. Brannon, believed Weil had an "uncanny knowledge of human nature." Over the course of his career, Weil is said to have stolen over eight million dollars....
     (1875–1976) – one of the most famous American con men of his era
  • Horace de Vere Cole
    Horace de Vere Cole

    William Horace de Vere Cole was a United Kingdom eccentric practical joke. His most famous trick was the Dreadnought hoax in 1910 when he fooled the captain of the famous Royal Navy warship HMS Dreadnought into taking Cole and a group of his friends for an Ethiopia delegation....
     (1881–1936)
  • Charles Ponzi
    Charles Ponzi

    Charles Ponzi was one of the greatest swindlers in American history. His aliases include Charles Ponei, Charles P. Bianchi, Carl and Carlo....
     (1882–1949) – Italian immigrant into the US; "Ponzi scheme
    Ponzi scheme

    A Ponzi scheme is a fraudulent investment operation that pays returns to investors from their own money or money paid by subsequent investors rather than from profit....
    " is a "get rich fast" fraud named after him
  • Victor Lustig
    Victor Lustig

    Victor Lustig was a Czech con artist who undertook scams in various countries and became best known as "the man who sold the Eiffel Tower"....
     (1890–1947) – born in Bohemia
    Bohemia

    History...
     (today's Czech Republic
    Czech Republic

    The Czech Republic , is a landlocked country in Central Europe. The country borders Poland to the northeast, Germany to the west, Austria to the south and Slovakia to the east....
    ) and known as "the man who sold the Eiffel Tower
    Eiffel Tower

    The Eiffel Tower is an Puddle iron tower built on the Champ de Mars beside the Seine River in Paris. The tower has become a global Cultural icon of France and is one of the most recognizable structures in the world....
    "
  • Canada Bill Jones
    Canada Bill Jones

    Canada Bill Jones was the working nickname of William Jones, a noted con artist, riverboat gambler and card sharp. He has been described as "without doubt the greatest three-card-monte sharp ever to work the boats, perhaps the greatest of them all."...
     – riverboat gambler and card shark


Born or active in the 20th century

  • Eduardo de Valfierno
    Eduardo de Valfierno

    Eduardo de Valfierno, who referred to himself as Marqu?s , was an Argentina Confidence trick who allegedly masterminded the theft of the Mona Lisa....
     – Argentine con man who allegedly masterminded the theft of the Mona Lisa
    Mona Lisa

    Mona Lisa is a 16th century portrait painting painted in oil painting on a poplar panel painting by Leonardo da Vinci during the Italian Renaissance....
     in 1911
  • Ostap Bender
    Ostap Bender

    Ostap Bender is a Misanthropy confidence trick and antihero who first appeared in the novel The Twelve Chairs , written by Russian authors Ilya Ilf Ilf and Petrov Evgeny Petrov....
     - semi-fictional Prichernomorsk
    Odessa

    Odessa or Odesa is the Capital of the Odessa Oblast located in southern Ukraine. The city is a major port located on the shore of the Black Sea and the fourth largest city in Ukraine with a population of 1,029,000 ....
     resident who sought hidden treasures.
  • Bernie Cornfeld
    Bernard Cornfeld

    Bernard "Bernie" Cornfeld was a prominent businessman and international financier who sold investments in United States mutual funds, and was tried and acquitted for orchestrating one of the most lucrative confidence games of his era....
     (1927–1995) – ran one of the greatest scams in history which was later realized to be a Ponzi scheme
  • David Hampton
    David Hampton

    David Hampton was an American conman who gained infamy in the 1980s after milking a group of wealthy Manhattanites out of thousands of dollars by convincing them he was Sidney Poitier's son....
     (1964–2003) - Inspiration for the play and film
    Six Degrees of Separation
    Six Degrees of Separation (film)

    Six Degrees of Separation is a 1990 play written by John Guare that premiered at the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts on 16 May, 1990, directed by Jerry Zaks and starring Stockard Channing....


Living people

  • Bernard Lawrence Madoff (1938) - American businessman and former chairman of the NASDAQ stock market who is accused of running a $50 billion Ponzi scheme. He started the Wall Street firm Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC in 1960 and was its chairman until December 11, 2008, when he was arrested and charged with securities fraud.
  • Bon Levi
    Bon Levi

    Bon Levi is a famous Australian confidence trickster. Before he changed his name, he was Ronald Frederick. He is also known as Ron the Con, Roddy Farrow, Ron Heelan, Brett Wyatt, Ronald White and John McCorry....
     (1943) - Aka Ron the Con and Ronald Frederick. Arguably Australia's most notorious conman who has tricked Australian and US citizens out of millions of dollars by enticing them to invest in scam franchise businesses. He has been jailed both in Australia and the United States.
  • Casey Serin
    Casey Serin

    Casey Konstantin Serin is a former real estate speculator and blogger. In a newspaper article, USA Today called him the "poster child for everything that went wrong in the real estate boom"....
     (1982) - self-confessed mortgage fraudster who became the "poster child" of the housing bubble.
  • Clifford Irving
    Clifford Irving

    Clifford Michael Irving is an United States writer, best known for using forged letters to trick a publisher into accepting a fake "autobiography" of reclusive billionaire Howard Hughes in the early 1970s....
     (1930) – US writer, best known for an "authorized autobiography" of Howard Hughes
    Howard Hughes

    Howard Robard Hughes, Jr. was an American aviator, industrialist, film producer and director, philanthropist, and one of the wealthiest people in the world....
     that turned out to be a hoax
  • Kevin Trudeau
    Kevin Trudeau

    Kevin Mark Trudeau is an American author, pocket billiards promoter , salesman, and self-proclaimed alternative medicine advocate. He is known for a number of television infomercials promoting his products, and for several books, including Natural Cures "They" Don't Want You to Know About....
     (1963) – US writer and billiards promoter, convicted of fraud and larceny in 1991, known for a series of late-night infomercials and his series of books about "Secrets 'they' don't want you to know about."
  • Frank Abagnale
    Frank Abagnale

    Frank William Abagnale, Jr. is an American security consultant and former check confidence trickster, forgery and impostor. He became infamous in the 1960s for passing bad checks worth about $2.5 million in 26 countries over the course of five years....
     (1948) – former US con artist, check forger and impostor; his autobiography,
    Catch Me If You Can
    Catch Me If You Can

    Catch Me If You Can is a 2002 comedy-drama crime film loosely based on the life of Frank Abagnale, who, before his 19th birthday, successfully confidence trick millions of United States dollar by posing as a Pan American World Airways pilot, a Georgia doctor and Louisiana prosecutor....
    , was made into a movie
  • Gert Postel
    Gert Postel

    Gert Postel is a German impostor, best known for successfully applying as a medical doctor several times without ever having received medical education....
     (1958) – German medical con, a simple postman who for decades pretended to be a medical doctor, worked from 1995 for almost 2 years as a psychiatrist in a small province hospital in Saxony
    Saxony

    The Free State of Saxony is a States of Germany of Germany. Located in the southeastern part of present-day Germany. It is the tenth-largest German state in area and the sixth largest in population , of Germany's sixteen states....
  • James Arthur Hogue (1959) – US impostor who most famously entered Princeton University
    Princeton University

    Princeton University is a private university university located in Princeton, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States. The school is one of the eight universities of the Ivy League and has the largest per-student Financial endowment in the world....
     by posing as a self-taught orphan
  • Robert Hendy-Freegard
    Robert Hendy-Freegard

    Robert Hendy-Freegard is a United Kingdom barman, car salesman, confidence trick and impostor who masqueraded as an MI5 agent and fooled several people to go underground for fear of Provisional Irish Republican Army assassination....
     (1971) — British con artist who kidnapped people by impersonating an MI5
    MI5

    The Security Service, commonly known as MI5 , is the United Kingdom counter-intelligence and security agency and is part of the intelligence machinery alongside the Secret Intelligence Service , Government Communications Headquarters and the Defence Intelligence Staff ....
     agent and conned them out of money; he was convicted in 2005
  • Matt the Knife
    Matt the Knife

    Matthew Cassiere, also known by his stage name Matt the Knife, is an United States Magic , Escapologist and sideshow performer who holds 12 Guinness World Records....
     (1979) — American born con artist, card cheat and pickpocket who, from the ages of approximately 14 through 21, bilked dozens of casinos, corporations and at least one Mafia family out of untold sums
  • Lou Pearlman
    Lou Pearlman

    Louis Jay Pearlman , was known in the 1990s entertainment business for being the Talent manager of famous American boy bands the Backstreet Boys and 'N Sync and later for being the owner of controversial talent scouting companies Wilhelmina Scouting Network aka Trans Continental Talent and Fashion Rock/Talent Rock ....
     (1958) — US businessman and entertainment mogul, currently serving time for operating a Ponzi
    Ponzi scheme

    A Ponzi scheme is a fraudulent investment operation that pays returns to investors from their own money or money paid by subsequent investors rather than from profit....
     investment scheme


Psychopathology

  • Psychopathy
    Psychopathy

    Psychopathy is a psychology construct that describes chronic immoral and antisocial behavior.The term is often used interchangeably with sociopathy....
  • Malignant narcissism
    Malignant Narcissism

    Otto Kernberg described malignant narcissism as a syndrome characterized by a narcissistic personality disorder , antisocial features, Paranoia traits, and ego-syntonic aggression....


See also

  • The Sting
    The Sting

    The Sting is a 1973 caper film set in September 1936 and revolving around a complicated plot by two professional Confidence trick to confidence trick a mob boss ....
  • Confidence trick (tv and movies)
    Confidence trick (tv and movies)

    Fictional portrayals...
  • Confidence trick (books and literature)
    Confidence trick (books and literature)

    Notable confidence tricks in literature...
  • List of confidence tricks
    List of confidence tricks

    Confidence tricks are difficult to classify, because they keep changing and often contain elements of more than one type. This list should not be considered complete, but covers the most well-known confidence tricks....
  • Quackery
    Quackery

    Quackery is a derogatory term used to describe unproven or fraudulent medicine. Random House Dictionary describes a "quack" as a "fraudulent or ignorant pretender to medical skill" or "a person who pretends, professionally or publicly, to have skill, knowledge, or Professional certification he or she does not possess; a charlatan."...
     - questionable medical practices
  • Romance scam
    Romance scam

    A romance scam occurs when strangers pretend romantic intentions, gain the affection of victims, and then use that goodwill to gain access to their victims' money, bank accounts, credit cards, passports, e-mail accounts, and/or national identification numbers or by getting the victims to commit financial fraud on their behalf....
  • Scam baiting
    Scam baiting

    Scam baiting is the practice of pretending interest in a fraudulent scheme in order to manipulate a scammer. The purpose of scam baiting might be to waste the scammers' time, embarrass him or her, cause him or her to reveal information which can be passed on to legal authorities, get him or her to waste money, or, in the great majority of cas...
     - deliberately seeking out scammers to expose them or waste their time
  • Scams in intellectual property
    Scams in intellectual property

    Intellectual property is a very complex area and covers a vast range of diverse subjects. As a result, there are opportunities for unscrupulous individuals and organisations to take advantage of those wishing to secure protection for their IP....
  • Social engineering
    Social engineering (security)

    Social engineering is the act of manipulating people into performing actions or divulging confidential information. While similar to a confidence trick or simple fraud, the term typically applies to trickery or deception for the purpose of information gathering, fraud or computer system access; in most cases the attacker never comes face-to-f...
     - Techniques used to manipulate people into performing actions or divulging confidential information.
  • Sting operation
    Sting operation

    In law enforcement, a sting operation is a deceptive operation designed to catch a person committing a crime. A typical sting will have a law-enforcement officer or cooperative member of the public play a role as criminal partner or potential victim and go along with a suspect's actions to gather evidence of the suspect's wrongdoing....
     - confidence tricks used for the purpose of law enforcement
  • White-collar crime
    White-collar crime

    Within the field of criminology, white-collar crime has been defined by Edwin Sutherland as "a crime committed by a person of respectability and high social status in the course of his occupation" ....
     - crime committed by a person of respectability and high social status in the course of his occupation
  • White van speakers
    White van speakers

    White van speakers is a Confidence trick sales technique in which a salesman makes a buyer believe he is getting a good price on audio merchandise....
     - scam sales technique in which a salesman makes a buyer believe he is getting a good price on audio merchandise


Further reading



  • Marek M. Kaminski (2004) Games Prisoners Play. Princeton: Princeton University Press
    Princeton University Press

    The Princeton University Press is an independent Academic publishing with close connections to Princeton University. Its mission is to disseminate scholarship within academia and society at large....
    . ISBN 0-691-11721-7



External links

  • New York Herald
    New York Herald

    The New York Herald was a large distribution newspaper based in New York City that existed between May 6, 1835 and 1924....
    , 1849
  • bibliography and art gallery of confidence crime
  • 'To Catch a Con Man'
  • An encyclopaedia of confidence tricks
  • Con Artists Profiles