The Dollop with Dave Anthony and Gareth Reynolds - 185 - Con Man Victor Lustig
Episode Date: June 26, 2016Comedians Dave Anthony and Gareth Reynolds examine Victor Lustig, one of the greatest conmen ever to live. SOURCESTOUR DATES REDBUBBLE MERCH...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
When you're staying at an Airbnb you might be like me wondering could my
place be an Airbnb and if it could what could it earn? You could be sitting on
an Airbnb and not even know it. That in-law sweet guest house where your
parents stay only part-time Airbnb it and make some money the rest of the year
whether you could use a little extra money to cover some bills or for
something a little more fun. Your home might be worth more than you think. Find
out how much at airbnb.ca slash host.
You're listening to the dollop. This is a bi-weekly American History podcast. Each
week I read a story to my friend. Gareth Reynolds who has no idea what the
topic is gonna be about. Let's get that energy up Anthony. Come on. Come on buddy.
Boom. Excuse me. What? I don't know how to get my energy up. What just happened?
I'm tired. Never try to get your energy up again. I'm sorry I asked. Did you hear
your boom-boom? So many boom-boom. Can we isolate that? I'd love that. It's my ring
tone. Boom-boom. Do you want to look who to do? I'll do one bump. People say this is funny.
Not Gary Gareth. Okay. Someone or something is tickling people. Is it for fun?
And this is not going to come to tickling podcasts. Okay. You are queen fakie of
made-up town. All hail Queen Shit of Liesville. A bunch of religious virgins go
to mingle. And do what? Pray. Hi, Gary. No. Is he done, my friend? No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
This podcast is brought to you by our subscribers on Patreon. I want to thank
each and every one of you. You guys are awesome. We also are on the All Things
Comedy podcasting network. Yes. So check out all the other great podcasts on
All Things Comedy. Yes. That's good stuff. January 4th. That happened because I was
nervous. 1890. The 90s. Victor Lustig was born in the Austro-Hungarian
Empire. His parents were, according to him, quote, poor peasant people who
struggled to survive in a grim house made of stone. Well, they were hungry. Also,
that's a pretty intense description. Yeah. Well, that's kind of what I would
picture Hungarians in the 1890s like. We live in Tum. Tum. Tum is home. Tum is
where the heart is. Where I lay my head is Tum. His parents separated when he was
eight. Jeez. That's a really crazy time for separation, right? I mean, like, yeah.
That is gossip column shit. It really is. When Victor was 12 years old, his
father bought him a violin and said he was going to be sent to Vienna to
take lessons from the greatest masters in all of Austria. Okay. So Victor ran
away to Paris. More of an oboe guy. Where he hid for two months for spending
time in a brothel. He was hiding in a brothel? Yeah. I know where to hide in a
brothel. Oh, God. The police eventually found him and returned him to his father
who smashed the violin over his head. Oh, oh, that is. And by the way, that's
probably not one hard smash. No, that's a. That's an eight or nine-er. Yeah. That's
an eight or nine-dinger. That is not an easy thing to break over. Yeah. Victor.
Worth it. Victor took off and began a life of traveling. According to Victor in
1903, when he was 13, he was scavenging for food outside of a Budapest hotel. So
things are good. Yeah. He's loving it. When he saw a beautiful young woman in
gold, a gold evening gown on a balcony, she was with an older man. At some point,
the man handed the woman money and they left, leaving her their plates of food.
Victor said this changed him forever. Quote, what I saw that night shattered my
faith in women forever. Whoa. Little intense. Little intense. Yeah. That's your
ease up. Yeah. They were big. I decided that anyone who could afford to leave
plates of food while others starved did not deserve to keep their fortunes. I
vowed to dedicate my life to the pursuit of cash and beautiful women. All right.
All right. Take it easy. All right, play it. All right, play it. Do you play it? Do you.
Victor followed his brother, Emil, into crime. Wait a minute. A kid from Hungary
is named Emil. Yep. That's got to get confusing. And your name? I'm Emil. I'm
from Hungary. Well, normally when someone's hungry, you do give him a meal. Hello.
Sit down, kid. He went for a pen handler to pickpocket, to burglar, and then to
street hustler. Oh, that's quite a rise. He mastered every card trick known. Uh-huh.
In 1908, Victor spent two months in a Prague prison for theft. Okay. That year
he was arrested in Switzerland for, quote, false pretenses. Okay. And the next
April in Vienna, he was arrested for attempted false pretenses. I'm going to
need to at some point get a little more specific. I don't know. I don't know. He had
a plot to imagine. This is general trickery. It's the card stuff. Sure. He
spent most of 1912 in prisons in Vienna, Prague and Zurich. Victor then began
traveling first class on ships selling back and forth to America, fleecing
businessmen. Okay. That's fun. On his fourth Atlantic crossing, Victor met
Nicky Arnstein, a swindler who advised him, quote, you always, always let the
sucker suggest the game. He must press you to get you to play. That's a good,
that's good advice. Yeah. Victor studied Arnstein and copied his dress manners
and his swagger. So it's dirty rotten scoundrels. It is dirty rotten scoundrels.
Yes. Which one? What was the Zackel Phenegas one? Was that dirty rotten
scoundrels or was that just scoundrels? That's just scoundrels. I'm going to
check out. World War One began. You may mentally check out. I just stopped my
conversation. That's not how dialogue works. I asked you a question and then I
halted the entire situation. Yeah. Then you got your answer and decided you were
out. If I got my answer, I just decided that you got your answer. World War One
began and Victor dropped off the radar for four years. So no one knows where he
was. Okay. When it ended. I hope he was taking violin lessons. I'm sure he was.
When it ended in 1918, 28-year-old Victor went to New York. He wore the finest tan
colored plaid suit, a silk shirt, camel hair topcoat, and carried a yellow cane
and called himself Count Victor Lustig. I mean, that's how we do makeovers. That
is exactly how we do makeovers. Also, I'm a count. Back then, you could just show up
anywhere and say you were a count. I'm a count. Who's going to check? Yeah. I
would estimate 40% of people were lying. Oh, yeah. Yeah, count. Yeah. I'm a duke.
I'm a count. I'm a king. I'm Jerry. Are you serious? Yeah, I guess. I don't
know. He said he was a political exile from the Balkans who had been
tossed out of his castles in a revolution. You've heard it a million times.
Lost all my castles. I'm a Balkan prince and I got thrown out of my castle.
Hello. Here I am wearing camel. Victor was first arrested in Kansas City for
running a found wallet scam. It's where you find a wall with another guy and then
you go, hey, they'll give us money if we blobby. Blah. I'm sorry. I'm not
familiar with this wallet scam. Jump bail. Wait, what is the wallet scam? Am I
going to give away all the fucking secrets? Wait, what do you do? You're just
like, I found a wallet. Give me your wallet. You drop a wallet on the ground
and then there's another guy there and you go, hey, man, there's a wallet here and
then you pick it up and you go, we should return it to the owner. And then you
do some sort of scam when you go to the owner. The owner is also in on it and
you do some sort of, hey, you know what, fellas, let's play the ponies with this
money. Oh, okay. Or the owner is like, $60 is missing. You each owe me $30. That's my
wallet scam. It's a side scam. It's a terrible one. When mine, nobody's in on it.
I'm losing a lot of money buying all these wallet decoys. At a party in Kansas City, Victor
met Roberta Nort. She had come to the party with a date but ended up leaving
with Victor. That's a love it game. Love it. I did that once. That's some game.
That's game. There you go. Roberta was a small town girl from a poor Kansas family.
Victor took her to Paris immediately, bought her a ivory chiffon dress with
gold lame and told her she was a vision of an angel. They were married in New York
on November 3rd, 1919. Okay. She felt insecure in a new role as Count Vister
Lustig's wife and wanted to impress. Oh, don't worry. I'm full of shit. Oh, no. You
don't have to feel anything because I'm just fucking. I'm gonna call you Queen
Victoria. You know, they should call me Count talking out of my asshole. Count
talk you up. She brought, she bought books on conversations, meals on ships,
fashions, anything that would help her live this new life. Book on conversation.
Could you imagine? If you're reading this, you're a social butterfly. I mean, just a
book on conversation. Ask him how he's doing. Have you read any good books
lately? What do you think of the sky? Huh? I'm not good at conversation. Jesus,
this was terrible. I have a robe. What? I have to go read my book. Oh, god. You know what?
I'm only a freshman at the conversation. I'm only on chapter four, which is when
you learn how to talk about the sky. Nice sky, huh? Chapter four, the sky. Nice
sky, huh? You could never go wrong by pointing out that there is a sky. You
noticed there was a sky today? Hi. Yeah, I did. Yeah, it's, it's up in the sky.
I'm peeing. I'm peeing all down my legs. Gotta go. I did too. Victor told his wife,
quote, I want you to know that my work is different from any you have known. So on
our next trip to Paris, I'll have to be away from you quite a bit because of my
work. She never asked where he was going or what he was doing. After the trip,
Victor explained what the deal was, quote, my work is not illegal. I simply find
people who are doing illegal things already and I merely assist them to
further their illegal acts. Yeah, okay. I'm an illegal helper. Yeah, I help
illegals. Is that not illegal? What? No, it's not illegal to help people doing
illegal stuff. It's not illegal if they were already planning on doing it and it
was illegal. Thank you. Then it's illegal. By the way, what's law? I do not know.
Hey, how about that sky? No, honey, honey. Did you um... Fairy blue. Did you look at
the sky when you were out today, honey? Honey, stop reading that book. Don't be
worried about me. I noticed that, oh boy, I'm going down my legs again. Roberta just
told him that if he was going to do something illegal, just tell her and
she would protect him. On another trip to Europe, they traveled as Mr. and Mrs.
Eric von Kessler. Victor also kept money in lock boxes in every major city in
the U.S. and Roberta kept the keys, like it. In 1919, Victor used his European
connections to import high-end booze to the U.S. during prohibition. He teamed up
with Jack Legs Diamond, a famous Irish-American gangster. Legs? Legs. Who had a
great set of games. Well, he had giant legs and then his torso was
about a foot high. Get on my back, we can run there. I like how I got
ostrich. They used to call me Jack ostrich diamonds. But then I told them to stop.
Here, quick, put your head in the sand. They won't know where we are. Victor
realized it was easier to sell bathtub gym with counterfeit labels. Bath tub what?
Bath, you know, just gin you make. Oh, bathtub gym. Okay, right. He faked whiskey
stickers and government stamps with a face value of three million and sold them.
But he was shut down by the Secret Service. Two gangsters were pulling
stickups on Wall Street, taking liberty bonds at gunpoint, so Victor then became
the middleman for the sale of the bonds. Nothing illegal there. Nope, just helping
out illegals. Just helping a guy doing something illegal with another guy wants
to do something illegal. What am I doing? I'm just helping a couple. I'm introducing a
couple of illegal guys. What I'm doing is post-illegal. All right. On February 13,
1922, Victor and Roberta had a baby girl, Betty Jean. But Victor called her
a skeezix. What? That was his nickname for her. Skeezix? S-K-E-E-Z-I-X. How's my
little skeezix? Did she make dubstep? That's the worst nickname ever. What is he doing?
She was scarred for life. Yeah. This is my little shit fuck. This is skeezits. Did she say
skeezits? No. That would be crazy. This is my daughter's skeezits. Oh god, okay.
Keep her away from me. He looked at the sky today? No. Victor traveled under many
aliases. Von Kessler was his favorite. He was often Count Von Kessler. He was also
C.H. Baxter, a Rudolph Habagar, Victor Gross, Frank Gardner, Herman Keller,
Helmut Strode, Monsignor Andre Dupree, and Pierre Duvall. I gotta say, I think
every time I've heard aliases in the dollop, they've always been dynamite.
They're always great. There's always one or two that are just amazing. Peter
Fire hydrant. His count status helped him to get in places. He rubbed elbows with
celebrities, movie stars, Rudolph Valentino, Marion Davies, and Sophia Tucker,
Sophie Tucker were all his friends. Once Victor and Roberta were attending a
John Barrymore play and Victor went backstage afterwards to talk to him.
Barrymore was removing his makeup and Victor picked up a beard that Barrymore
had worn and he put it on. Barrymore then made Victor up giving him bushy eyebrows
and sideburns. Victor wore the disguise to a party. Oh boy. No one recognized him.
Oh boy. He walked past Roberta twice before she said, Vic, is that you?
Yeah. And a light bulb that hadn't been invented yet went off. That's not happening, baby.
From that day forward, he often used disguises to elude the law. He dresses a
Jewish rabbi, a priest, a clown, a bell-ha, a clown. A clown. Just a guy
walking around as a clown. Hurry. That's not suspicious. No. Want to buy drugs?
Whatever disguised to the occasion, he would use. He had 12 trunks, many filled
with makeup and disguises. The trunks went wherever he went. Victor then came
up with one of his most successful scams. It was a device called the Romanian
Money Box. No, it's not Romanian. It's Romanian. Romanian? R-U-M-A-N-I-N. Okay.
So it's not. Is it just the place that has rum? I don't know. Okay. He had a
craftsman. That's where Captain Morgan's from. I don't want to talk anymore. He had a
craftsman make a few wooden boxes, two feet in length, nine inches wide, and a
foot deep with a few dials on the front. Victor, he had a couple boxes. He had some
boxes made. With dials on them. Yep. He got 50,000 and freshly minted a hundred
dollar bills with serial numbers in sequential order. Boy, this is exciting.
Then he scraped off the last four digits of each serial number and he put the
same last number on each bill. So he had a bunch of identical serial numbers on
bills. The hell was happening? He told Marx the story of a man who was supposed
to have been in on the plot assassination of Archduke Francis. He was then
captured, taken to Berlin, and put in a lab and told to make a foolproof method
of duplicating foreign currency. And this man came up with the box. Okay. So the
bullshit is the story. Yep. Really? He just had boxes. He just had boxes with dials.
Yep. And okay. And these are now counterfeiting machines. He would fiddle
with the knobs while he told the people the story of the inventor and come up
with a, he told them that the inventor had come up with a chemical method of
duplication. After the war, the inventor had escaped and sought asylum with
Victor's father. And then after he died, Victor found the box and the chemical
formula. So Victor would put... That is some heavy bullshit. Just so fucking stupid. That is
grade A tasty bullshit. It's just like nine pounds of fucking garbage. That is
great. So Victor would put a real bill into the top of the box and then he would
put a blank piece of currency paper. Oh my god. And he would turn the crank. Here
we go. Stand back now. It can be pretty powerful. And then a bill would come out.
Uh-huh. And if he did again, the same bill would come out. Uh-huh. There is a catch.
Wasn't that they were just boxes? No, it was very time-sensitive. Oh, that's right.
That is true. After you created a bill, you had to leave it alone for 18 hours
before turning the crank again to get another bill. When he performed the
demonstration, Victor used the identical clone notes that he doctored at home.
Right? So the idea there being that you can't really, like you're not going to
find out how shit it is for a couple, like for a little bit of time. Okay, right.
Mark's always saw a bill being duplicated and then they would go to a bank
together with him and cash it in. And of course it would be taken because it really
was a bill. Right. And the 18 hour window gave Victor time to skip town after the
mark bought the box. Sometimes he would even load the machine with a few bills
so that give him more time. Oh my god. But one time Mark saw Victor in
Chicago and ran up to him. I've done something terrible, something terrible.
What did you do as Victor? I didn't wait the 18 hours you told me. I waited to, I
waited the 16 and then I cranked it. Why you fool, you've destroyed the machine,
Victor said. You'll have to pay me $25,000 for another. No, no. And he did.
Oh, no. Oh man, I waited 18 hours this time. Boy, I'm hoping he's not full of it.
I bought two of these counterfeiting machines. Why did I just wait two more
hours? Can you, when he sees him, that confrontation? Victor, sir, sir, sir, I
have something very important to talk to you about. What, what, what, what? I think I
broke my counterfeiting machine. Oh, I used it too early. I can't, they're very
expensive. I agree. I messed up royally. Boy, am I glad to run into you. I'm sorry
I'm laughing. Oh, please, believe me. I've been through all the emotions. I know. I feel
good. Here I was sitting there for weeks, months, pining for a new one. Thinking to
myself I'd spoiled my only opportunity. Here I am. I mean, I don't have the money
for this. But here I am now. I have another one. Oh, boy. You're great. You're great.
You're great. I mean, I'm sorry you did that, but you're a great guy. Thank you. Yeah,
no, I just. We'll get you to the one. I'm sorry. Boy, I tell you. I'll tell you one
thing. I am lucky. Yes, you are. Yeah. Holy shit. Well, unfortunately, I have to
start working because Frank put a lot of money into fake boxes that he thought
were counterfeiting machines. Why did he buy two? I didn't wait the 18 hours the
con man told me to. Jesus Christ. Another took the box apart to see how to fix it
and couldn't figure out how to put it back together again. I'm just thinking it's
an empty box. He told Victor said it couldn't be repaired and sold him a new
one. Wow, I can't believe the amount of people that buy it so much they think
they're broken. No, two owners of a pool hall in Montana paid him $43,000 for a
money box. He sold one to two merchants in Chicago for $10,000. Another to a
Kansas businessman for $25,000. A gambling syndicate in New York for $46,000.
A banker in California paid $100,000. I mean, he's better not hear about these
people who paid $10,000. Oh my God. God, he's good. Most of these people would not
go to police because they would have to admit their involvement in counterfeiting.
Especially the guy who bought two. No, I take this to the grave. Take the
wood from them and put me in it, build a coffin out of it. I'm not telling anyone
about these things. Victor was only arrested once for the box scam when he
was using the alias Charles Gruber in San Francisco. He wasn't convicted and
probably bribed his way out because Victor always wore a suit with $15,000
sewn into it. Or he was just like, boy, officers, I understand. You know, it'd be
nice if you guys had a counterfeiting machine for the station, don't you
think? Yeah, just over there on the quarter. Well, wait a minute. Isn't that
what you got the other guys for? Yeah, you want one? Oh, it's real. Let me show
you. Okay. Put up your hands. We did it. We used it at 17 hours. We were too
anxious. Please put up your hands. We used it in 17 hours. Yeah, that's them going
back and getting him. When he was arrested in Indiana in 1925 for finnally
for swindling a real estate man for $10,000, he escaped most likely a bribe.
His daughter, Betty, grew up used to this life as a child. It was a life of packing,
running, hiding, using numerous names. Could you imagine his kid having to
remember what name your name is? Yeah, especially when your nickname is
Skeezix. Skeezix. She went to 37 different schools. Oh my god. Military
brat. No, my dad's a psycho. Yeah. She'd be dressed. You could call me the Duchess
of Cheese. She'd be dressed in the middle of night to made to be run, to run.
She just got used to it. Betty was taught from an early age never to talk
about her father. If someone asked where he was, she was always to say, I don't
know. He taught her Morse code. They would tap messages to each other on the
palms of their hands. He would tap do not talk or go to your room of people
around. And he was worried. One night, she was dressed in packed in the middle
of the night. And when she woke up in the morning, she was on a train. When she
looked at the window, she saw the families made in a nurses outfit, pushing
Victor in a wheelchair. His leg was in a cast. His arm in a sling. His head was
down his chest with a felt hat pulled down his ears. He was then lifted on the
train. At which point, he took off his disguise. Then he grabbed Betty and said,
how's my little skeezing? I'm crazy, dad. I'm out of my fucking mind. Oh my god.
Oh, I didn't realize we'd moved to the train and dad was pretending his leg was
broken. Sorry. In one year, in one year, they were in New York, Chicago, Detroit,
Kansas City, Montreal, Boston, Paris, Cherbourg, Berlin, Munich, Naples, Spain,
and Italy as Victor ran from the law. For some strange reason, Roberta couldn't
hang with his life plus with his constant womanizing and she divorced him at
the end of 1925. Well, to be fair, I mean, he wasn't
cheating on her. His aliases were. Thank you. Yeah. It wasn't me. It was Count von
Klesser. And by the way, he's got a really, he's got a wandering eye. That one.
Shit. Can he fuck? Yeah. Oh, shit. Can that man fuck? Don't be mad at me. Be mad at
King Chuck. You know what? Y'all have the passport over there. Come on. Your beef
is not with me. It's with the rabbi. No, you cannot. You cannot talk to Van
Kessler. He's not here right now. Oh, I'm sorry that
wrinkles. The clown is upset you, but he's not here.
I'm not him. So she actually quickly remarried and Betty ended up being
putting in a put in a boarding school near Pittsburgh.
One day, Victor, now that she was in Kansas City, one day, Victor went to
Kansas City to claim his visiting rights and see his
daughter. But then instead of taking Betty out for ice cream and the
merry-go-round, as he said, he took her to Europe, hired her, made it, put them
in a Paris hotel. Wow. Upgrade. Upgrade. In Paris, Victor met
with a Chicago criminal named Dapper Dan Collins.
Perfect. As they sat at a sidewalk cafe, Victor noticed a front page editorial
about the increasing costs to repair the Eiffel Tower.
The Parisian design community filed a petition against it,
quote, passionate devotees of the untouched beauty of Paris protest
with all our strength in the name of the threatened art
and history of France against the erection right in the heart of our
capital of the useless and monstrous Eiffel Tower.
So they actually didn't like it. Interesting. Yeah.
Victor had an idea, though. He commissioned stationery with the
official letterhead of the Ministry of Post and Telegraph.
Oh boy. And then he invited six major scrap metal
dealers to discuss a potential matter in his hotel room.
This matter. No. This matter, he wrote, was too hush-hush to be discussed within
the official office. When they gathered, Victor began his pitch in
perfect French. He told them the government was going to
scrap the Eiffel Tower, but they couldn't do it immediately
and the government was waiting on bids for the more than 700,
more 7,000 tons of quality scrap iron of the Eiffel Tower.
After Vic chose one of the men to be his mark, he met with him alone.
Victor explained he wasn't paid enough by the government
and the guy got the gist and a bribe was agreed upon.
And then that guy bought the Eiffel Tower with a bribe tossed into
Buddha. Oh my god. I love that it wasn't enough
just to sell the Eiffel Tower. He had to get the guy to give him a bribe
to sell the Eiffel Tower.
That is some real good scam. I mean that makes your counter-fitting box look
like nothing. That's child's play. He just sold the dude the Eiffel Tower
and made him feel like he was privileged. I'm lucky I got that thing. That was
close. Shut up the next day. Okay.
All right guys. Excuse me. Can we all get off of their place? This is mine now.
Take this down.
I'm uh I've fallen into a little bit of uh a good situation one could say.
Yeah. Uh yes you may see my receipt. Yes right here you'll see at the top.
What do you mean he doesn't exist? Pardon? Boy the only way that I'm going to
be able to get out of it is by one of those counter-fitting machines.
This is awkward.
Sir sir are you telling me I don't own the Eiffel Tower?
You have any idea how crazy you sound? When I was done he and uh Victor and
Dapper Dan Collins got the hell out of town and went to Austria.
They checked into a fancy hotel and waited for the story to hit the news.
But two weeks later he did not hit the news. Victor realized that he had pulled
off the perfect con. The mark was so ashamed that he remained
silent. Wow. So he turned to Collins and said
we're going to sell the Eiffel Tower again. No!
And he sold it one more time. What the f- are you serious?
How do you not root for this guy? If you can't it's fucking amazing.
He sold it again. Why would you not root? He's the best.
I mean I've just got that letterhead burning a hole in my briefcase.
One more run. And he came back to America by ship.
He sent uh oh wait I think I jumped oh right.
Victor returned to the states where he and Roberta were remarried and moved to
Detroit so he got back together with Roberta. Okay.
She could not she loved the action too. Yeah no I mean you like this guy that
clue has a lot of charm. And exciting too. Yeah and sometimes I
fuck you like the count. Yeah and then you settle down with Dale the
accountant and you're like you know I didn't mind being married to a
priest rabbi clown combo. Right. On December 11, 1928 Victor
lured a mark named Thomas Kearns into a scam
requiring sixteen thousand dollars. But when they were at
Kearns home Victor distracted him and just stole the money.
Kearns immediately went to the cops and Victor fled to Europe.
I don't like that one. I don't know why he did that. Sloppy.
Yeah maybe he needed the money fast but he. Sell him the son. Maybe he's getting
worried it wasn't going to happen but he stole it. I don't like it. Sell him the son.
Sell him the son. Thank you. Yeah. Have someone finally said it.
Yeah at least his wife then would have something to talk about. Right. Do you
like this guy? I own the son. Really? Oh that's not in the book.
Hold on. So he was there in Europe for a bit when he
came back by ship he sent a wire to the Secret Service and two agents came to
his first class cabin. He explained to them the
misunderstanding he had had with Kearns and
then he said he had information about counterfeiting.
When they left the ship a police detective tried to arrest Victor but the
Secret Service told them that he was now theirs.
Victor then gave the Secret Service tons of information about people
counterfeiting in Paris. Names, addresses, what they were up to, the
whole thing. Victor was then released as a free man
and went right back to his old ways. Wow. Just Kearns everybody. Yeah.
In July of 1929 he was in Paris when two French detectives
quote seized a large number of forged documents
including passports and a counterfeiting machine.
You can tell it is a counterfeiting machine because it has all the dials.
It makes a money. And like he says you can use it unless you have
18 hours in between. Uh yes. Uh wee wee.
Excuse me? Yeah, wee wee. Okay. So we're talking English but
Zava? Yeah, wee wee.
How don't? Victor told them he was a member of Al Capone's gang
and this was all the loot he was going to dispose of in other countries not in
France and they jailed him. That was he didn't
work. That one didn't work out. Yeah. It was a bad scam. Right.
I don't know what he was thinking. He probably wasn't thinking to me. He
probably thought he was gonna be okay. I mean at that point you're trying to
talk your way out of it. You just come up with some bullshit. Yeah and you're
like no that didn't come out right. I'm having an off night.
So he was held in jail. Want to buy a submarine? Huh? Yeah. Wee wee.
Hey. Uh Victor uh so he's put in jail and then
returned to America to face charges of robbing Kearns and somehow
he evaded prosecution again. In 1929 Victor met uh with
he's just bribing people. It's mainly bribing? Yeah. Okay.
With the with the law stuff? Yeah. In 1929 Victor met with William Watts a drug
store clerk from Nebraska who was interested in making
plates to counterfeit bills. They worked uh for a long time in an
apartment Victor rented on the Hudson River and ended up
succeeding. They made two types of bills. Sloppy and rushed notes and very
good notes. The worst ones were sold to low-end criminals
and the others were for higher ups. Okay. They were
considered to be the super notes of the era. A judge would later say Victor
became quote like some other government issuing money in
rivalry with the United States Treasury.
It's hard to not like this guy. Dapper Dan Collins was the chief
distributor. He sold a hundred dollar bills for thirty dollars each.
It is believed to up to fifty. That's a net loss though.
Okay. Yeah. You don't do the math. I do the math. You do the selling. You know
what I mean? But. Yep. Zip. Hold on. Hold on. Hold on.
Fuck me. Nobody pulls one over on Dapper Dan.
Okay. I think they do. Now. Yep. Hear me out. Hearing. We have hundred
dollar bills. Right. If we need to make profit we
got to sell them for one ten each. Okay. So how about I just shoot myself in the
face. No dude. No. You're not listening. I am
listening and I would like to kill myself. We sell them for one hundred and
thirty dollars. Then we're making profit. You see why
they call me Dapper. I do. Yeah. Yeah. Because I'm thinking.
Yes. You are not supposed to think. What does Dapper mean.
Okay. I got to go. Okay. Here we look at the sky.
Oh. Whoa. Really opens up on you. Done. It is believed
that up to fifty percent of all fake currency at the time in America
was from Victor. Quite a percentage. And Victor continued
with his scams across the U.S. traveling back and forth to Europe fighting
extradition and sometimes deportation juggling a wife a child a high
profile mistress hiding from a dozen detectives in
multiple states and gambling. So he sounds a little stressful. He's busy.
Sounds a little stressful. Sounds a little stressful. He likes to have
everything in the air. He likes spinning plates. High profile
mistress. Yep. H. P. M. He went to Latin America
to try to run some scams. And when he came back on February
27th 1931 he was arrested by Sheriff Q. R. Miller at the
border. A local businessman had bought fifty thousand
dollars worth of stocks from Victor that turned out to be toilet paper.
Oh. Oh man. I mean. I can't believe they're selling rolls of stocks.
They're good news. It's a new thing where there's stocks
coming rolls. I'm telling you it's the whole it's what's happening now.
Is that two ply stocks. Yes. Two ply stocks. Wow.
Yeah. You should get in on this one roll fifty K.
Look at all these stocks. Yeah. No. I know. I feel like I'm kind of ripping you
off. Okay. Yeah. Let's do it. Yeah. Yeah.
Don't forget you can wipe your ass with those two.
I'll catch you around buddy. Huh. Where'd he go. What a good guy.
Jesus Christ. Victor ended up. I'm not an idiot. I figured out it was toilet paper.
Victor ended up talking to the sheriff. It turned out the sheriff was thirty
thousand dollars in debt. And he had taken money from the county.
Uh oh. So Victor sold him a money box. Oh Jesus Christ. For twenty five thousand
dollars. Don't use it within eighteen hours though.
And he walked free. Oh God. Geez. Terrible. When the sheriff realized he'd been duped
he went to Chicago to find Victor and ended up holding him at gunpoint.
Wow. Victor apologized. Victor sold him the
Statue of Liberty. And he offered the sheriff fifty thousand
dollars in cash. Okay. He gave the sheriff the money
and crisp one hundred dollar bills. Uh oh. The sheriff was then arrested for
passing counterfeit bills. Oh Jesus. This guy's like boy I wish I never
met Victor. Life was pretty good when I was just a cop.
His income tax fraud was also exposed and then
the sheriff was locked up in prison. Geez. The chief of the U.S. Treasury flew
to interview the sheriff in jail. Victor jumped bail in so many countries that he
couldn't go to large areas of the U.S. anymore.
And is womanizing Cos Roberta to Roberta to leave again in 1931.
She immediately married a man named Doug Conner.
In New York City agents from the Secret Service, the Treasury Department,
officers from the New York Bomb Squad, I don't know why the New York Bomb Squad,
hiring lawyers. He doesn't throw anything at them.
And state troopers had a meeting to discuss Victor's counterfeiting. They
had never seen bills this good. They were now
after Victor as a special squad. The Secret Service had a tip that he was
using a brothel as his headquarters. An agent hid in the building and typed
up transcripts from the wiretaps. He sent copies to the
special squad and the squad in the Secret Service.
One chief responded, quote, I'm not interested in the details of the
prostitution business. In future reports, eliminate all material
not having to do with the counterfeiting. Oh, there's got this one and she is
busting out. Busting chief. I'm telling you,
vah, vah, vah, boom. She's got legs that won't quit.
I went up to her one day to talk and she smells like fresh raspberries.
Okay, what about the bills? Uh, no bills there. Just Dames.
I met this other girl named Lucy. She's real sweet.
You know, kind of one of those people that like is an injured dove.
She's beautiful but she's got a broken wing and you want to fix it. You want to
help her. I took her down to the field one day and
she let me play with her hair. I forgot about everything.
What about the bills? The place? Uh, yeah, yeah.
I'm not gonna lie. I've been swamped with the whores.
So, I forgot. That's fair. That's totally fair.
But I think if you go to page 98 of the report,
you'll find some interesting stuff there. Okay. All right, thanks. So we're gonna
take off this one. Good. I miss her. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. You're fine.
Okay. Published my report. Yep. It's going out. It's being published by the
Penguin Books. Thank you. On May 10th, 1935, Victor was arrested.
It was when I got pulled over one time and I thought it was because I was on my
phone but it was because I ran a stop sign.
Yeah. And then like when he pulled me over, I was so glad I didn't ask why.
Yeah. Or I was so glad that I wasn't like, you saw me on the phone, huh? Because
he'd been like, what? But when he gets arrested, he must always
just be like, why don't you tell me the crime?
Uh, they let Victor know they wanted the plates to end the counterfeiting.
It was implied that if Victor helped them, they would not be ungrateful.
They were given a key to a locker at Times Square subway station.
Inside the locker, agents found $50,000 in fake bills and 20 steel plates.
But it was obvious these were not the plates cranking out the awesome bills.
So Victor offered to give those up if they let him go
and they refused and suddenly Victor found himself in federal prison.
Now he was there for three months and 22 days.
And during that time, he tore bedsheets into strips, dipped them in water, and
wove them together, making a rope. He then cut the mesh on his window and
out he went. Wow. When people saw him climbing down,
he pretended to be a window washer. Oh, wow.
He then fell and dashed off, quote, like a deer. Wow.
To pretend you're washing windows. Oh, wait, no, it's not a convict.
He's just washing the windows. In a convict outfit.
That's fine. And rope. And he doesn't have the supplies to wash.
He's washing with his hand. He's running. He's running.
That was September 2, 1935. Victor moved regularly to evade detection,
only going outside in disguise. The secret service was on his trail,
once bursting into a seedy bedroom where they found his socks, bloody bandages,
and a copy of American detective. Wow.
Victor had become a celebrity in true crime press where he was called the
miracle man of crime. Wow. He had at least 32 arrests with no
convictions over the years. That is crazy. The entire secret service
looked for his counterfeiting house. During one interview, Victor said that
William Watts, the plate engraver, needed morning sunlight to work. An agent
Johnson remembered the exact words. He could look out the window at the Hudson
River and watch the big ship dock. So they searched for that spot, ringing
doorbells and talking to landlords. Other agents talked to chemical suppliers
and ink houses. Eventually, a lead pointed the agents to Watts'
rooming house. After 26 days on the run, on September 28, 1935, Victor was
spotted in Pittsburgh and chased in his car by the secret service.
Agents rammed their car into his and locked their wheels together.
The cars crash. Victor got out and said, quote, well, boys, here I am.
Okay. The big reveal. Yeah. Back in New York, Victor
wanted to know who had snitched on him. Turned out to be his mistress who was
upset that he was cheating on her. The, I mean, amazing. I can't believe he's
seeing other women. The nerve. I thought he was a good
fella besides me and his wife. Oh, and Victor had sold her $100,000 of fake stock.
Wow. She was a well-known brothel owner and it
cost her her business and her freedom. She was charged with tax fraud and got
four years. Boy, he didn't give a fuck.
Nope. At Victor's trial, it was revealed the two
counterfeiters had put $2,340,000 of counterfeit money into
circulation. Wow. Williams testified against Victor
and after listening to him for 15,
Williams testified and after listening to him for 15 minutes, Victor said to his
attorney, let's get it over with. All I wanted to see was whether the rat would
really squeal on the stand. Victor then stood up and yelled, guilty.
And he was of counterfeiting and a law created
because of him. The Federal Escaped Act was written after Victor's escape.
He was sentenced to 20 years in jail for counterfeiting and escaping and was
sent to Alcatraz. I bet he was 13 years old.
Victor's fingerprints were sent to police departments all over the U.S.
New victims came forward when his mug shot was on the front page of the New
York America. Oh yeah, he sold me a time mission.
He sold me all the houses? Yeah.
Okay, if we're all being honest, I was convinced I was the president of the
United States for a fortnight. Yeah.
He told me that if I paid enough, I would run the country.
Yeah. And you know, go ahead, we're all friends here.
Okay, he also sold me an iceberg. Yeah.
Go ahead, that's fine. I mean, Johnny got sold.
This is the Victor Lustig group session. I should point out my name's Tim.
Okay. Hi, Tim. I've been two and a half months
since I was last swindled by Victor. Yeah. So it's getting easier.
Well, it is now, but he might come back around. I'm willing to buy whatever he
has. That guy's a lock. No, no, Tim, no. Tim, no.
I gotta tell you guys, I just bought a money box last night. Oh yeah, I bought
money boxes last night. Yeah, me too. I was lying
about the two and a half months. My 17th one.
We've all been there. Anybody who hasn't bought 17, put your hand up. You can see
there's just two or three of us. Yeah, so anyways. Hey guys, I own the
White House. We're not in it. No, I'm pretty sure I
own it. All right, I'll make you an offer for it.
I'd like to buy your White House and I'll sell you two of my time machines at a
kind of fitting machine for it. Okay. Ah, suckers.
Talk about a meeting where everyone's like, suckers.
Stupid. The amount of times people must have left
Victor's presence being like, what an idiot. I know.
All the fucking time. What a fucking moron. I really took that day.
Jesus. New complaints flooding in from all over. He was now wanted in
Bocain as C. Baxter in Detroit as Chas Gromar in Nebraska as Robert Lamar and
in New York as Robert Duvall. Oh, whoa. I know.
After seven years in jail, a guard found several pieces of torn blanket in
Victor's cell. Of course. I'm going again. Of course.
Roberta tried to bribe the director of prisons with $70,000.
Well, she's back. But was told it wasn't enough.
Wait, is that the wife or the daughter? That's the wife. Okay, that's what I
thought. She can't stay away. She can't.
She fucking loves it too much. She loves the action. Yeah. They hate.
All right. You're definitely getting a little too turned on for me.
Excuse me. On the morning of number 29th, 1946, Victor woke with a massive
swelling on the left side of his forehead. He was transferred to the
Medical Center for Federal Prisoners at Springfield, Missouri.
On in March of 1947, Betty visited and tapped I Love You Daddy in Morse code
in Victor's hand before he died on March 11th, after 11 years in prison.
The family kept Victor's death a secret for over two years.
His brother finally revealed it in court, thinking it would help him get a
release. Clearly, his brother was not the smart.
Yeah. Not the smart one of the, my brother's dead. So, you know, isn't it
like a rule that only one guy can die in prison? The only one brother, you know,
like in World War II, when they wouldn't send all guys from the
same town. So, what I'm thinking is, since my brother died
in a jail that I, then I go. Guilty. For sure.
Okay. Then, but then I get to leave. Yeah. Because my brother died in prison, right?
No. No. Okay. So, I go? No. To jail. Yeah.
No. I, my brother died, right? That's good to know.
Where'd I go home? Okay. Uh, that's going to adjourn the court.
Hey, Emil. Are you hungry? Yeah.
Hey, serve it back to me. I'm loving every bite, baby.
Uh, of course it didn't. What did happen was money started coming to Roberta
and Betty unsigned or from someone, quote, whom your husband helped.
It would come from many cities and areas. One letter had a type message
fastened to the top of a $500 bill. It read, my father would
want me to send you this. Vic helped him out and never would accept repayment.
Another letter unsigned contained $10,000. So, he had it set up that when he
died, people would send him money. He would just send him money.
And so, they just started getting fucking cash from everywhere. Wow. As soon as
the announcement was made that he was dead. What did he die from?
Uh, some sort of. Just like a brain, like. I bet it was a tumor or. Yeah.
Okay. A massive swelling on the left side of that
forehead. I don't know. That's fucking weird. Yeah.
Because it doesn't usually happen overnight. Well, it's probably had too many
ideas. His head was about to pop. Oh, right. They won it out. Yeah.
One day while sick, Roberta called Betty to make her promise to bury her
besides Victor when she died. The next morning, Roberta took an overdose of
barbiturates and died. Happy ending. Oh, geez.
Everybody's dead. Yeah. That's how I want to go though. They're all dead except for
the barbiturates. You want to go on? It's terrible. You can really,
that doesn't usually work out, by the way. It's very painful.
You swayed me. You wake up and you're like, oh, my kidneys and liver don't work
anymore. That's cool. Okay. Heroin? You tell me. Heroin's great. You tell me.
Heroin's something you should do for a while before you die from it.
Okay. I'm glad we did this. Have you ever thought about a hammer?
You selling hammers? Yeah. You're selling me the first hammer.
By a counterfeiting machine, obviously. That dude's awesome. Yep. That's Victor.
I mean, I know he probably heard a lot of lives negatively, but this podcast
doesn't really deal with the consequence. That's not our job. We just live in the now.
We're just time travelers.
Crazy. Crazy little fox. Crazy. I love that. The disguise. The second he puts a
beard on, he's like, Eureka. I'm a clown now. I'm a clown. What was his clown,
what did his clown outfit do for him? The clown one. I cannot understand it all.
Yeah. Badass. Oh, yeah. Badass. All right. Okay. What do we do? We say goodbye,
but before we say goodbye, we tell people that we sign cars. That's the worst.
What is your deal lately?