When Scamming People, Best Not To Admit It In Your Autobiography
from the just-saying... dept
Just as a story comes out about how many scams these days are pulled off by men who try to charm women into giving them money or (even better) data that’s useful for identity theft, comes the story of one such scammer who was convicted. That, by itself, isn’t that interesting. What happened following the trial was a bit more unexpected. In the trial, part of the evidence, was the scammer’s own autobiography where he admits to pulling exactly the type of scams he was on trial for committing. However, the scammer is now trying to claim that the autobiography is actually fiction — sort of a “James-Frey-in-reverse” situation, as Kevin Poulsen at Wired News suggests. Seems like a long shot — but for those of you out there working on autobiographies, it may pay to leave out the parts that involve criminal activity, especially if you’re still involved in those types of activities.
Comments on “When Scamming People, Best Not To Admit It In Your Autobiography”
My Autobiography
And here I was going to go ahead and write about my life as a contract killer… maybe we can play it on a lighter note as a contract “messenger” boy- delivering unwanted news to everybody.
Wow
I remember making retarded mistakes like that when I was four. What was he thinking?
What he must be saying now
“uh… yeah, that… that’s not true… I was just putting that down to impress women… you know… how lots of women are.. attracted to scam artists…”
Stupid is as stupid does
Can they change this guys sentence from fraud to being stupid?
If you think the jails are crowded now …