Scamfluencers - ENCORE: Brooklyn's Bling Bishop
Episode Date: August 19, 2024Now that Lamor Whitehead has been sent to prison, we return to his Biblical fall from grace. In 2006, Lamor gets arrested while wearing a mink coat, prompting the New York post to dub him a �...��high roller.” But after a stint in prison, Lamor reinvents himself as a man of God. He starts his own for-profit ministry called Leaders of Tomorrow and befriends some very influential people, including New York politician Eric Adams. But Lamor never lets go of his flashy lifestyle. After he gets robbed while wearing expensive jewelry, his community begins to wonder: How does the pastor of a tiny church afford all of this luxury? See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Sarah, do you remember Eric Adams' best friend, Brooklyn's very own bling bishop, Lamor Whitehead?
I will never forget him for as long as I live.
I'll never forget anything about him.
Good.
Well, we have an update on this crooked man of the cloth.
He was convicted of stealing a parishioner's retirement savings and attempted extortion. Lamour didn't even get to ceremoniously
turn himself in. He was already in custody after the judge revoked his bail in May. In
a live stream after his conviction, he tried to intimidate his victims and flashed confidential
court documents. He reportedly even tried selling those documents online. I didn't
know there was a market for that, but scammers got a scam.
Prosecutors called Lamour a career conman and liar before sentencing.
Shocking that they'd say that about someone obsessed with showing off their expensive
jewelry, luxury cars, and very tacky high-end suits.
And in June, he was sentenced to nine years in prison.
He got away with so much for a very long time that I'm actually quite shocked he's in prison.
Well, his lawyers have said that they'll appeal,
but there's no word on that yet.
At this point, maybe Lamour's best bet
is to pray for some divine intervention.
And while he does some soul searching from prison,
here's our encore of Brooklyn's Blank Bishop.
A heads up to our listeners.
Early in this episode, there's a graphic description
of police violence and murder.
Please listen with care.
Sarah, do you have a preferred sin?
No, that is a crazy question.
But like, would you say you're like a glutton girly or like a lustful lady?
This is the worst thing you've ever asked me when starting an episode.
I want to go on the record saying that and I'm not answering.
Well, as usual, I'm asking because today I have a story about someone who engaged in a few too many of the deadly sins,
even while he claimed to be spreading the word of God.
It's a sweltering Sunday morning in July 2022 in the East Brooklyn neighborhood of Canarsie.
In a small room above a Haitian restaurant, a man stands at a gold podium on a stage. He's dressed in a crimson suit with gold embroidery,
gold cuffs, and a long, thick gold chain.
He's holding a mic in one hand, his pinky adorned with a big ornate ring.
His name is Bishop Lamour Whitehead, and this is his church service.
There are only a few people in the crowd, but lots of congregants tuned into the
live stream. Sarah, take a look at this screenshot of his service.
He looks pretty fancy to me.
Like he looks like a, yeah, a stylish religious figure, which can only mean good things.
Only the best religious figures are this well dressed.
Well Lamor glances down at his iPad, propped up on the podium, and he reads from his sermon.
The livestream captures what happens next. But Lamor glances down at his iPad, propped up on the podium, and he reads from his sermon.
The livestream captures what happens next.
How many of you have lost your faith because you saw somebody else die, which you are about
to go through?
Yo, yo.
All right, all right, all right.
All right, all right.
All right, all right.
All right, all right.
Three men wearing ski masks and carrying guns
have entered the building.
Lamor puts his hands up and lies face down on the floor
while the assailants take his jewelry
and go through his pockets.
In total, they steal an estimated $1 million worth
of jewelry from Lamor and his wife,
who's sitting in the crowd.
Lamor's livestream catches everything
and the robbery quickly goes viral. Here's Lamor describing the event on an Instagram Live later that same day.
They took my watch, took my jewelry, took my bishop's ring, took my wedding band, and
then they took my bishop's cross.
And then I had my other chains underneath my shirt.
He ripped my collar off just to get to my jury.
Okay, I do remember this kind of going viral. I don't remember the video, but I do remember seeing
that a bishop was robbed on a live stream now that you mention it.
Yeah.
But something tells me all is not what it seems.
Well, the live video of a pastor being robbed in the middle of a church service is horrifying,
but it also raises a lot of questions.
As people start to dig into his social media, they discover that in addition to the millions
of dollars worth of jewelry, Lamorra also drives a Rolls Royce and owns several Fendi
suits. So everyone wants to know, how does
the pastor of a tiny church afford all of this stuff? And when they uncover the answer,
well, let's just say it's not prayer financing his lifestyle. I'm Raza Jaffrey and in the latest season of The Spy Who we open the file on Willie
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Matt, if we had a bingo card, what would be on there?
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From Wondery, I'm Saatchi Cole.
And I'm Sarah Haggye.
And this is Scamfluencers.
is scamfluencers.
We've talked about scammers who use religion to con their victims, but Lamor is our first full-fledged man of the cloth.
He's charismatic, charming, and has a taste for the finer things in life,
including head-to-toe Fendi Gucci Versace.
But he doesn't just use his powers of persuasion
to manipulate girlfriends, roommates,
and his own congregants.
He also has friends in very high places.
And I'm not talking about Jesus.
Lamour has his own personal higher power,
New York City Mayor Eric Adams.
I'm calling this Brooklyn's Ling Bishop.
I'm calling this Brooklyn's Bling Bishop. Before Lamar Whitehead ever sets foot in a pair of Gucci slides, he's a kid growing
up in Crown Heights, Brooklyn.
He's just six weeks old when his neighborhood becomes the center of unrest.
It's June 1978.
A 30-year-old Bahamian immigrant named Arthur Miller is in the street trying
to settle a dispute between the cops and his younger brother.
Arthur is married with four kids, and he's a beloved community organizer.
He's even on a first-name basis with some of the cops.
But in the midst of their confrontation, 16 police officers swarm him.
One of them sees a gun in Arthur's waistband, and Arthur explains that it's legally owned and registered,
but the cop tackles him and puts him in a chokehold.
Eyewitnesses say Arthur passes out.
He's transported to the hospital,
but he's dead by the time they arrive.
The murder sparks outrage across New York City.
His family later says that about 3,000 people
gather to protest Arthur's death.
Arthur's death.
Arthur's wife and four children publicly mourn him, but according to Lamour, Arthur had a
secret fifth child.
There's no hard proof verifying this claim, but Lamour says that his mother was Arthur's
mistress.
Lamour grows up with his mom and two siblings, bouncing around Brooklyn.
The family is poor, and later he's fond of saying
that when he wanted Nikes, he had to wear Olympians.
We don't know much about his early life,
but he makes a number of really fabulous claims
about his youth.
Like, he tells New York Magazine
that he was one of the first ever models for Fubu
when he was in high school.
Sarah, do you remember Fubu?
Sachi, Fubu stands for For Us, By Us.
Who is the us in question?
Of course I remember FUBU.
Well, Sarah, listen, nothing would make you sound cooler
in the late 90s than saying I was a FUBU model,
except maybe like I was in a Puff Daddy video, you know?
Yeah, true.
Well, around the time Lamor is in high school,
or shortly after, he reaches out to a woman
named Lelisa Miller Bradford.
Lelisa is one of Arthur's children.
She's in her twenties now, and she was just eight years old when Arthur died.
And Lamor has some bombshell news for Lelisa.
He tells her that he is her half-sibling.
She's never even heard of Lamor before, and now he's telling her they have the same dad?
It's a lot to take in.
But Lamor isn't just calling to reconnect with the person he claims is his family.
He seemingly has another motive.
Years later, Lalisa described what happened next on a Gift and a Curse podcast. — He called and he told me who he was, and he said that he was my brother.
I told him, you're not my brother.
In that same interview, Lalisa recalls that Lamour asked about money the family received
in connection with Arthur Miller's death.
It was always a rumor that we got $10 million or something.
I have no idea when that rumor started.
I wouldn't have gotten $10 million, but that never happened.
The money might have been just a rumor, but Lamour has needs.
He tells Lalisa that he needs a Toyota Camry.
Lalisa is totally thrown off guard, and she's suspicious.
So she's like, hey, brother, I've never heard of, do you want to take a DNA test?
She actually offers to fly him down to Florida, where she and her siblings live.
But Lamor hangs up on her.
If Lolisa isn't going to give him what he needs, he'll have to find someone who will,
whether she knows it or not.
It's April 2004.
A 22-year-old woman named Valerie is walking down the street in Manhattan when
a guy hollers at her.
His name is Lamor Whitehead, and he tells Valerie that he's a model, actor, and a
rapper.
Plus, he's kind of cute, so she goes out with him, and they start dating.
After about five months, Valerie gets a new job as a finance associate at a Honda dealership
on Long Island.
It sounds boring, but Lamor is really interested.
One day, when Valerie is working from home,
Lamor asks her tons of questions about her job.
Valerie tells him that she's checking on the status of loan applications from potential customers.
This involves logging into a software program and reviewing their personal information,
including their names, social security numbers,
and credit scores.
A few months later, Lamor asks her for the names of some clients with good credit scores.
He says he wants to pass them on to a friend who works in mortgages, and so she gives him
a handful of names.
Wow, sometimes it's just that easy.
And to think someone who's that willing to give away that information has the information,
whoo, makes you a little bit scared.
I know.
But also, Sarah, here's where it gets even better.
She kept the username and the password for the system with everyone's sensitive information
written on a pad of paper right next to her computer. Valerie is really young, but it doesn't take her long to wise up.
She and Lamor break up just a few months later, and she probably feels like she's dodged a bullet.
Because in January 2006, Lamor is arrested while driving a Land Rover down Riverside Drive in Manhattan.
Lamor is dressed so outrageously, and his charges are so extreme that his arrest actually
makes the New York Post.
They call him a high roller and describe him as being dressed in a, quote, pimp-style red-and-white
waist-length mink jacket.
The car and the coat were paid for with about a quarter of a million dollars in loans he
took out using the information he stole from Valerie's clients.
He's charged with 10 counts of identity theft.
He's also charged with unlawful possession
of personal information and grand larceny.
But something as minor as getting caught
isn't gonna stop Lamor from defrauding people.
He has a lifestyle to maintain.
While awaiting trial,
Lamor starts a mortgage brokerage
company called Anointing Management Services,
and he claims that he's been ordained as a minister
and starts showing up to court wearing clerical collars.
Lamour is offered a plea deal with a one-year jail sentence.
He's so confident that he decides to go to trial instead.
But his plan backfires.
He's convicted on 17 counts of identity theft,
grand larceny, and other crimes.
On the day of the sentencing,
he tells the district attorney,
quote, I don't fear you, I fear God.
I mean, you should probably fear both at this point.
You can be afraid of two things at once.
Yeah, you don't have to pick one or the other, dude.
Well, even though Lamour asks for mercy,
the judge doesn't think Lamour has any remorse or shame,
just anger and resentment.
He sentences Lamour to 10 to 30 years in prison.
And then, while he's in prison,
he gets sued for swindling a mortgage client.
The court orders him to fork over more than $300,000.
Lamour's sudden transformation into a man of God
isn't enough to keep him out of jail
or out of more legal trouble,
but it does set the stage for the next phase of his life
and opens him up to a whole new lane of scamming.
Lamour is released in July 2013,
after serving just five years of his sentence.
On his website, he claims that he was released because his sentence was overturned,
but there's no evidence that this was the case.
After leaving prison, Lamour starts renting a room in his friend's apartment.
Her name is Aurora Gordon, and she's in her mid-40s with hazel eyes and a warm smile.
She lives in affordable housing in Fort Greene, Brooklyn.
Aurora is interested in helping survivors
of domestic violence, and she thinks Lamour
can help her get her organization off the ground.
In exchange, she agrees to help Lamour
found a ministry called Leaders of Tomorrow Brooklyn.
It's a for-profit youth outreach ministry,
though in public statements, Lamour tries
to make it sound like a non-profit youth outreach ministry. Though in public statements, Lamor tries to make it sound like a non-profit.
That is weird.
A for-profit youth outreach ministry?
If that was a good thing,
I don't think Lamor would try
and make it sound like it's a non-profit.
Yeah, it's very strange.
And it also claims to offer a bunch of programs and services
and, like, a ton of initiatives.
On his website, Lamor lists an NYPD initiative, a media initiative, a catering initiative,
and a record label initiative.
Just a lot of initiatives.
With Aurora's help, L'Amour scales up Leaders of Tomorrow and turns it into a church.
They host an initial meeting with about 40 people.
They read the Bible, and they talk about whatever it is you talk about when
some of you genuinely love the Lord and one of you genuinely loves fleecing people. Lamor now has a
powerful cover for his future activities, and now with the congregation following him, he has access
to a flock of possible victims. Almost immediately after his release from prison, Lamour somehow links up with a rising star in New York politics.
Eric Adams. Yeah, that Eric Adams.
No. Yeah. The bald-headed, smiley, confident man
who will eventually become New York City's mayor.
At this point, though, he's still a New York State senator.
We don't know exactly how Lamour and Eric meet,
but the two have a lot in common.
They're both Black and they both grew up in New York City.
They both put stories of police brutality
at the center of their personal narratives.
Eric says that while he was in a gang in his youth,
he and his brother were badly beaten by a group of cops,
and they both claim to have been chosen by God
as leaders in their communities.
Lamor and his new BFF Eric start appearing at all kinds of public events together.
Lamor calls Eric his mentor, and there's footage of them on YouTube at a Leaders of Tomorrow event at Boys and Girls School in Bed-Stuy.
Lamor speaks first, followed by Eric.
From a brother to a brother, you're the epitome of a black man. Brother's going to work it out.
Right.
Thank you, Eric, man.
Leads of tomorrow, man.
Be going to the top, man.
Thank you, Eric.
About two months later, in January 2014, Eric Adams is sworn into a new office, Brooklyn
Borough President.
It's more of a ceremonial role without much real power.
It's kind of like a glorified ribbon cutter.
But it comes with a fair amount of visibility
and Eric is very open about his ultimate goal,
to become mayor of New York City.
About six months later, Eric and Lamor
bring their shared backgrounds and interests full circle.
Eric hosts the ceremony to honor Arthur Miller,
who Lamor claims is his father.
At the event, Eric presents a proclamation
to Lamour and his mom,
only he didn't reach out to Arthur Miller's widow or children.
They weren't involved at all.
Lalisa, Arthur's daughter, later says that she found out
about the event from family members
who saw news footage of it, and she is pissed.
She reportedly calls the news station to complain,
and then she says that Lamour calls her, livid, and yells is pissed. She reportedly calls the news station to complain. And then she says that Lamour calls her,
livid, and yells at her.
Lalisa believes the news station gave Lamour her number,
so she threatens legal action.
But then, minutes later, she gets another phone call
from a man who identifies himself as Eric Adams.
Eric says Arthur Miller was a good man,
and he wants to help Lalisa in her effort
to start a foundation in her father's name.
But Lalisa and her family never hear from him again.
In the summer of 2014,
not long after the ceremony to honor Arthur Miller,
Eric is facing some backlash.
As Brooklyn Borough president,
he's proposed rezoning an area near Prospect Park so
that developers can build high-rise condos. And the neighborhood is not having it. Alicia Boyd,
a 50-something-year-old Black woman with a full-grang Afro, is leading the opposition to the
measure. She thinks that high-rise condos will jack up rents and accelerate gentrification.
So she holds a meeting at her house to discuss the issue,
and guess who shows up?
Lamour.
But he isn't there to support Alicia.
He's there to defend his buddy, Eric.
He shows up with about 10 other people,
and they disrupt the meeting by screaming
at the top of their lungs.
Lamour accuses Alicia of being anti-black
and trying to thwart the agenda
of Brooklyn's first Black borough president, even though she herself is a Black woman and she's just holding a meeting at
her house.
Over the next few months, Lamor and Eric continue to have each other's backs.
In the fall of 2014, Lamor gets the go-ahead to put on an all-star gospel concert at the
Barclay Center in Brooklyn, featuring special guest Eric Adams.
Lamour raises $150,000 for the concert,
which will benefit leaders of tomorrow Brooklyn.
But not only is he vague about where the money came from,
he has no idea how to plan such a huge event.
Things quickly fall apart, and Barclays cancels the concert.
Of course, Lamour later tells the New Yorker
that it was his idea to cancel,
and it is unclear if he gives back the $150,000.
This fiasco is a tipping point.
Some of Lamour's supporters and associates
start to lose faith in him,
but that doesn't stop him from plowing ahead at full speed.
Everything to play for has taken on its biggest challenge yet. We've had two-parters, we've even had three-parters.
This is a four-parter, and the reason why we're giving it four podcasts is it's probably
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Yes, Arsene Wenger versus Alex Ferguson.
We've bitten off more than we can chew.
And what it reminds me of, I saw a video on social media the other day of a python having swallowed a duvet.
And the vets were trying to get the duvet out of the python.
I thought that is like me and Colin having to skip over FA Cup finals because there's so much to talk about when it comes to Wenger and Ferguson.
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I feel like a legend.
A lot of people are getting fed up with Lamor, including his roommate, Aurora.
It's been about a year since she helped him found leaders of tomorrow.
In exchange for her support, she asked for his help with her organization,
Battered to Beautiful, which advocates for survivors of domestic violence.
Lamour has been telling Aurora that Eric would help her get city funding, but no money or any type of contract ever materializes.
So Aurora cuts ties with Lamour.
In a November 2014 email obtained by The New Yorker,
she tells him that his bad attitude and rush to have money
were the reasons that the gospel event
at the Barclay Center fell through.
And she kicks Lamor out of her apartment.
Lamor turns around and files a suit against her
for wrongful eviction, which alerts the housing authority
that Aurora has been illegally renting out a room
in her apartment.
And this potentially jeopardizes her housing.
She reaches out to Eric personally
to ask him why Lamour can't act right,
and Eric says that he doesn't want to get involved.
She writes the DA's office as well,
and they open an investigation into Lamour.
It's so crazy to me that every time you say Eric,
you're speaking about the current mayor of New York City
who's involved with this guy and this like weird
petty drama.
I know, I know. It's pitiful. At the beginning of the month, Lamor and Eric appear at a ribbon
cutting for a new restaurant in Brooklyn. And the restaurant is owned by twin brothers
who pled guilty to insurance fraud just a few months earlier. Lamor even writes a letter
in defense of one of the brothers, claiming that the twins were instrumental to leaders of tomorrow's nutrition and cooking initiative, which is
titled Cooking Initiative. They love their initiatives.
But there are like some consequences, because later that month, the Brooklyn DA sends Lamour
a cease and desist letter. Lamour's organization, Leaders of Tomorrow, has been posting about its civic programs with the NYPD,
Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce,
and the Brooklyn District Attorney's Office itself.
But these programs that he's been bragging about
are completely bogus,
and the DA is calling out Lamour's lies.
But they're doing it privately.
The broader public has no idea
that he's been making this stuff up,
which gives Lamor even more room to do what he does.
Get famous and get rich.
Lamor starts to focus on raising his profile
in New York City and gaining a following on social media.
He appears at events with a who's who
of local celebrities like Al Sharpton,
former Knicks forward, Charles Oakley, Biz
Markey, and Jerry Seinfeld.
50 Cent even speaks at his church service one day.
Lamour preaches the prosperity gospel, which means he believes that wealth is a sign of
God's favor.
And Lamour has a lot of signs of God's favor.
There are designer clothes and Rolex watches and fancy cars.
He buys a Royal Blue Bentley and posts a video of him trying to hit 130 miles per hour in a Maserati on the freeway.
And by the way, remember the mortgage client Lamor swindled who sued him back when he was in prison?
The one who's owed $300,000?
Lamor still has not paid him.
Sarah, you might be wondering, where did he get this money from?
Well, Lamour is teaching real estate classes at church
and asking for what he calls love offerings,
also known as donations.
And when they sign up for the class,
he collects people's names, email addresses,
and their social security numbers.
He's also put his own spin on the offering portion of church.
So typically a collection plate is passed around
and churchgoers give what they can.
But not the bishop.
He runs it like a reverse auction,
starting at ridiculous amounts like a thousand dollars
or $500 and working his way down.
He calls it sowing, as in if they give now, they will reap.
It's like a spiritual Ponzi scheme, basically.
Yes, that is right. You have cracked it, Sarah.
Well, despite Lamour's flashy lifestyle, leaders of Tomorrow still hold services in a single room
above a Haitian restaurant deep in Canarsie. But Lamour and leaders of Tomorrow have Eric
Adams' support. And sometimes, this shows up in surprising ways.
In July 2016, Eric Adams declares a leaders of tomorrow day in Brooklyn.
It's July 31st, by the way, in case you want to celebrate.
But with more visibility comes more scrutiny.
And in October, the New York Post breaks the story about the fake leaders of tomorrow programs.
They also note that Lamour relied on his connection with Eric to raise money
and that he continues driving luxury cars even while he still owes hundreds of thousands of
dollars to the mortgage client he swindled. When Eric is asked about the news a month later,
he makes his support for Lamour clear. I was arrested at 15 years old and because
people embraced me when I was arrested,
I embraced Lamor Whitehead. Lamor wants to return that embrace and he wants to have his own source
of political power and soon enough he'll be ready to follow in his mentor's footsteps and run for
office. But that means he'll need something Eric can't give him. A lot of money.
It's November 2020. For the past year and a half,
Lamour has been running to replace Eric as Brooklyn Borough president.
Eric is getting ready to finally make a run at the mayor's office.
And there's also a pandemic raging, so Lamour takes church online
and hosts prayer meetings over the phone.
That's how Pauline Anderson meets Lamor.
She's in her mid-50s and has recently joined
Leaders of Tomorrow, where her son is also a member.
Lamor helped her son find a place to live,
and now Pauline's hoping that he can do the same for her.
She's recently had major surgery
and needs a place to rest and recover.
She wants to buy a house, but she later alleges
that Lamour tells her
that her credit score isn't high enough. But she says that he offers to help her out.
All she has to do is make an investment in his company, and he'll use the money to help
her buy a house. So Pauline sends Lamour a check for 90 grand, her life savings. She's
hesitant at first, but he tells her that he'll send her $100 a month to
make sure she has some money coming in. Well, for one whole month, Lamour does keep good on
his promise, and he sends Pauline $100. But after that, she stops receiving payments.
She reaches out to ask him where her stipend is and about the status of buying her a house.
But according to text messages later presented in court, Lamour tells her that he can't access
the money.
And he says he can't deal with this right now.
You know, he's in the middle of an election season.
I truly hate this man.
This is so evil.
I feel so bad for her.
Well, Pauline demands her money back.
But Lamour tells her it's being invested
and can't be touched for a year.
He even goes so far as to say that he interpreted her check
for 90 grand as a campaign contribution.
Pauline sues Lamour for fraud and for breach of contract.
But Pauline isn't the only one Lamour is stiffing.
He's also been bouncing checks to people working
on his $1.5 million house in Paramus, New Jersey.
And he stopped making payments on at least two of his cars,
a Mercedes-Benz and a Range Rover.
His financial woes are multiplying.
He's about to need his New York political connections
more than ever, because Lamour is about to get
into the kind of trouble that not even God's chosen mayor
can bail him out of.
On December 31st, 2021, Eric Adams's dreams come true
when he's inaugurated as mayor of New York City,
and he immediately goes clubbing.
This is the beginning of his tenure
as New York's swaggiest mayor,
at least according to Eric Adams.
Listen to this NBC New York clip from a press conference he held in January 2022.
And the leadership should have that swagger. That's what has been missing in this city.
You know, having lived here, I've always said what's missing in New York is the swag.
Oh yeah, no, I think he's onto something. You know, swag can heal nations.
Swag is everything.
So, gotta hand it to him there, right?
Swag is life.
And according to Eric Adams,
he's also New York's sexiest mayor.
Sarah, please read this quote out loud.
He says,
I wanna keep my body tight.
I have great abs. I have a nice firm behind.
Pfft.
And sometimes, he gets distracted during press conferences
reminiscing about women he dated.
So I know Park Hill very well, you know.
I would tell you I met a shorty there,
but I can't say that on TV.
You know?
Okay, you know, living in Toronto,
we've had our mayor that was highly quotable.
Yeah.
And, you know, you kind of think like, oh, this could happen in Toronto because, you
know, it's like a big city, but kind of small town.
Yeah.
But you're just like, how did this guy do it?
I don't know.
I don't know, Sarah.
Everything is coming up Eric Adams.
But things are not going nearly as well for his mentee.
Lamour lost his bid for Brooklyn Borough president
with a pitiful 1.4% of the vote in the Democratic primary.
But with Eric in the top job,
Lamour still feels like he can do anything,
including blatantly trying to extort a Bronx businessman
by promising him
lucrative city contracts, boasting about his connection to the new mayor.
And then, a few months later, he becomes famous as a meme slash subject of gossip after the
live-streamed robbery goes viral.
Remember that, Sarah?
Yes, I remember it from this episode and from life.
Well, as the robbery video spreads,
people start to accuse Lamor of staging the crime
to collect insurance money.
But Lamor maintains his innocence.
And on his Instagram Live,
later on the same day of the robbery,
he defends his lavish lifestyle.
You know, it's my prerogative
to purchase what I want to purchase.
If I worked hard for it,
I can purchase what I want to purchase. If I worked hard for it, I can purchase what I want to purchase.
What does this guy even on about?
Like it's so hard to grasp how his mind can work.
He's got a beautiful mind.
But Eric comes to Lamour's defense saying, quote,
no one in this city should be the victim of armed robbery,
let alone our faith leaders
and congregants worshiping in a house of God.
But that doesn't stop the speculation. It maybe even makes it worse. robbery, let alone our faith leaders and congregants worshiping in a house of God.
But that doesn't stop the speculation.
It maybe even makes it worse.
Even the rapper Fat Joe, who interviews Lamor on Instagram Live, has his doubts.
I asked a couple of cops, they were like, yo, that shit was a setup.
I asked some gang dudes on the street, they was like, nobody violates the church.
Do you know how far we have fallen from the grace of God when Fat Joe is like the voice of reason here?
Yeah, I mean, obviously, the fact that it was live streamed, you know, to me, it's clear
Lamor thought that would have made it foolproof.
Like, you guys saw it happen with your own eyes.
I was robbed.
Well, a few days after the robbery, Lamor calls into an Instagram Live hosted by Christian
media personality Larry Reed.
Larry and his co-host, another pastor named Genesis Warren, have been making jokes about
the robbery and even talking about Lamor's wife.
And they criticize the shabby decor in the church.
Here's Larry on the Instagram Live. If you rich, you can take $100,000 and buy you a whole new backdrop for the church.
I said this don't make no sense to me.
Well apparently ripping on his interior design is a bridge too far because Lamorra calls
in to share his side of the story. And less than two minutes in, Lamorra goes on a tirade,
repeatedly calling Genesis fat
and using a homophobic slur to refer to Larry after claiming that homosexuality is an abomination.
The interview is a complete disaster.
In the aftermath, even Eric has to distance himself, stating that L'Amour used, quote,
inappropriate language.
And if this bad press isn't enough, local media gets wind of Pauline Anderson's lawsuit
over Lamour allegedly stealing her 90 grand.
Lamour addresses the fraud allegations from the pulpit,
saying, quote,
that's what the enemy wants you to believe.
Two months after the robbery,
two men are charged for it.
A third assailant remains at large.
Lamour appears to be vindicated.
And like a true man of the cloth,
he graciously forgives everyone who doubted him.
Ha ha, no he doesn't.
In the following months,
Lamour actually files defamation suits
against some of his biggest detractors.
There's one for $20 million against Larry
for saying that he, quote,
scammed people out of money.
Another for 50 million against radio host DJ Miss Jones,
who called Lamour a drug dealer.
And one for $200 million against the Bronx businessman Lamour
allegedly threatened to beat up.
Lamour actually seems to be enjoying the media circus around his robbery.
He even describes himself to one outlet as godly and glamorous.
But the fun and games are about to take a major turn,
and no amount of bling can help him.
Ruby Franke was known by millions as a very tough mom.
That's exactly the way she wanted it.
The social media star amassed a huge following
of supporters and detractors alike,
preaching the values of strict discipline.
But you'll learn in a new podcast available exclusively on Wondery Plus, how the small
empire built by this momfluencer crumbled the moment her 12-year-old son escaped their home
and called 911.
Wondery and Law & Crime bring you the new podcast, The Rise and Fall of Ruby Franke,
which explores the allegations of starvation,
torture, and emotional abuse leveled against Franke and her business partner, Jodie Hildebrand.
Learn about the family's path to stardom, the depravity investigators uncovered inside
the home, and hear in-depth analysis of the ongoing criminal trial.
Follow The Rise and Fall of Ruby Franke on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. You can binge all episodes of the rise and fall
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by joining Wondery+.
-♪ And I feel like I like to...
-♪
In December 2022, the FBI arrests Lamour
on charges of extortion, making false statements,
and wire fraud.
Remember that auto shop guy he extorted, claiming he had the mayor in his pocket?
Well, the businessman went straight to the FBI, reportedly telling them that he suspected
the mayor is in on the tape.
They had him wear a wire the next time he saw Lamour, and caught Lamour's attempted
bribes, extortions, and threats on tape.
And then, a few months later, Lamour is charged with falsifying bank records in an attempt
to acquire a fraudulent loan.
Eric Adams has to comment on the charges.
But he seems to go out of his way to avoid condemning his friend.
Sarah, will you read the statement he gives to the Daily Beast?
Yeah, he says,
I've spent decades enforcing the law and I expect everyone to follow it.
I have also dedicated my life to assisting individuals with troubled pasts.
While these allegations are troubling, I will withhold further comment until the process
reaches its final conclusion.
Wow, that is one way to wash your hands.
So mealy-mouthed, isn't it?
It's just like, hey, I was just helping a troubled guy,
and if he ended up doing something bad,
that's not really my problem, you know?
People are gonna do bad shit.
Whoops.
Yep, exactly.
Well, after his arrest,
Lamor has released on a $500,000 bond.
And because it's Lamor, he continues live streaming,
nearly every day, sometimes for an hour at a time,
with his Bible in front of him, reading scriptures, addressing haters, clapping for emphasis,
all in some truly glorious and ridiculous outfits.
Sarah, can you describe this look for me?
Okay, first of all, he's in a Rolls Royce with an orange leather interior, like bright
orange, not like that burnt red you kind of see in expensive cars. It's loud orange. And he's kind of dressed like the Riddler, like
he's wearing a bright green Gucci monogrammed suit with like purple
accents and he has these like peach glasses. Honestly it's a good color story,
I will not lie. However, he should not be dressed like this, nor should he be in this Rolls Royce.
It's such a bad look.
Well, Lamour has had to stop bragging about his relationship with Eric.
The mayor's office tells the New Yorker in January 2023 that Eric and Lamour
actually haven't spoken since Eric's inauguration.
But don't worry, Eric isn't lonely.
Several of his other associates have also recently been accused of fraud.
Lamour's trial date was recently set for February 2024.
He's facing up to 20 years in prison on the wire fraud charge and many more years on other
charges.
His attorney told reporters,
"...our client is looking forward to the trial so he can clear his name."
Probably the person with the saddest end to their story is Aurora, L'amore's former roommate.
In November 2020, she died from complications of COVID-19.
According to her mother and sister, she believed L'amore's demise was imminent.
In addition to the Brooklyn DA, she talked to the FBI about him.
And shortly before she fell ill, she told a friend,
You're gonna see.
They're gonna get him.
Sarah, how do you feel about the prosperity gospel now?
To be honest, I didn't even know it was called that.
I mean, I know there's a lot of like religious scams and faith-based Ponzi schemes, but this
one really takes a cake because they weren't really getting anything in return.
Like I cannot stress how janky his church was and how janky it remained the whole time.
So to me, it was it was baffling.
It was baffling that this guy was able to get money from people.
But again, I guess that's not where the biggest part of his scam was.
I feel like he maybe would have gotten away with more if he had just put a little
money in the church.
People wouldn't have noticed the disparity so strongly if he had just like bought some new chairs and redid the carpet.
If he would have operated the way a mega church does, I think he probably would
have gotten away with a lot more. The thing is he didn't put in the investment
to like make it a scam with longevity.
Yeah, he just wasn't good enough at it. I mean usually when we talk about scam
artists they do have some kind of motivation for scamming.
You know, like they can't do it legitimately
and they fall into these patterns.
It seems like L'amore was like ready to scam from the get.
Yeah, there wasn't really like a huge scammer origin story here.
Like, I didn't really understand his motivations too much,
other than the fact that he just like really, really
wanted to be rich by any means necessary
and was able to kind of grift in a way that preyed upon
like the black community and spirituality
and the trust people have within those communities.
And again, he didn't even really do it in a believable way,
which is why the whole scam itself is quite shocking.
And also that his act of desperation
was perhaps faking a robbery.
Do you think he faked it?
Oh, 1,000%.
No one who would rob him,
and I'm sure plenty of people would have wanted to rob him,
and perhaps maybe had plans to at some point,
no one would do it that way.
Do it on camera when you know when his livestream is in,
or you do it after.
Yeah.
Or before.
Yeah. It's like robbery 101.
Don't make sure that even more people see you do it
and that it's recorded for posterity forever.
That's probably, I'd say, the biggest rule
when committing a crime.
Isn't it a guess that this story is connected
to the current mayor of New York City?
Not just connected, but he's like the second lead
of the story.
It's not just like, oh yeah, and he kind of knew Eric Adams.
It's like, no, they were bros.
These guys were thick as thieves,
and now one of them is mayor
and the other one is awaiting trial.
Would you say that the real scam artists are politicians?
Yeah, I'm gonna quote a man we know as Pitbull
and say, I like to call it politics, not politics.
Well, I am upset that you found a way to bring Pitbull
into it, but it feels right that you did.
Did you learn anything today?
Yeah, it's that truly anyone can be mayor.
Ha ha ha ha ha ha.
I mean, I could do it. You know what?
Here's what I'm gonna do, Sarah.
I'm gonna become mayor.
I'm gonna take you with me,
and then you can do whatever you want.
Okay. Wait, no. Wait a second.
I saw what happened. No, no, no, no, no.
I'm not gonna be the Lamour to your Eric.
You said yes, now you have to do it.
This is a legally binding podcast contract.
Damn it.
If you like scam flincers,
you can listen to every episode early and ad free right now
by joining Wondry Plus in the Wondry app
or on Apple podcasts.
Prime members can listen ad free on Amazon Music.
Before you go, tell us about yourself by filling out a short survey at Wondry.com slash survey.
This is Brooklyn's Bling Bishop. I'm Saatchi Cole.
And I'm Sarah Haggye. If you have a tip for us on a story that you think we should cover,
please email us at scamfluencersatwondery.com.
We use many sources in our research.
A few that were particularly helpful
were The Mayor and the Con Man
by Eric Latch in The New Yorker,
and The Story of the Bishop Robb
during his church service
by Simon Van Zylenwood in New York Magazine.
Kyla Marchal wrote this episode.
Additional writing by us, Si Cole and Sarah Hagge.
Our senior producer is Jen Swan.
Our producer is John Reed.
Our associate producers are Charlotte Miller
and Lexi Peary.
Our story editor and producer is Sarah Enni.
Eric Thurm is our story editor.
Sound design is by James Morgan.
Back checking by Will Tavelin.
Additional audio assistance provided by Adrian Tapia.
Our music supervisor is Scaf Al, is for Freeze On Sync.
Our managing producer is Matt Gant and our senior managing producer is Ryan Lohr.
Our coordinating producer is Desi Blaylock.
Kate Young and Olivia Richard are our series producers.
Our senior story editor is Rachel B. Doyle.
Our senior producer is Jenny Bloom.
Our executive producers are Janine Cornelow, Stephanie Jens, Jenny Lauer-Beckman, and Marshall
Lui for Wondry.
Was there a crime committed?
As far as I'm concerned, there wasn't.
Guilty by Design dives into the wild story of Alexander and Frank, interior designers
who in the 80s landed the jackpot of all clients.
We went to bed one night and the next morning we woke up as one of the most wanted people
in the United States.
What are they guilty of?
You can listen to Guilty By Design exclusively and ad-free on Wondry+.
Join Wondry Plus in the Wondry app, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify.