The McDonald's Monopoly Scam: Operation Final Answer - YouTube

Channel: Today I Found Out

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McDonald’s first started
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the
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Monopoly promotion in 1987, and its premise was simple: attach Monopoly pieces to food
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cartons and cups, with each piece signifying a Monopoly property or a small prize.
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One out of every four pieces would be a small prize, such as a medium fry or soda, and a
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very few of the prizes would be significantly more valuable, such as a car or, with the
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proper pieces, cash – up to $1 million.
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The key to any promotion is to keep the cost of the prizes below the increase in sales
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it produces, and so for the Monopoly game, there were very few expensive prize pieces.
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In addition, as a full-set of properties was needed to win the nice prizes, for each set,
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at least one property only had a few pieces printed (e.g., there would be many Park Places
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but precious few Boardwalks).
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Nonetheless, as long as everyone played fair, and diligently collected the attached pieces,
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eventually someone could win each of the prizes (although some years no one won the $1 million
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grand prize).
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But that’s the key – playing fair.
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It turns out, as with the real game of Monopoly, its not so hard to cheat if you’re the banker.
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Enter Jerome Jacobson of Simon Marketing Inc., the latter being one-time managers of the
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Monopoly promotion for McDonald’s.
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Most important to the story at hand is that it was the aforementioned employee of Simon
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Marketing Inc, security officer Jerome Jacobson, who was put in charge of the distribution
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of certain key game pieces.
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As a part of that job, he would travel with said pieces to the factories making McDonald’s
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cups and cartons, where the pieces would then be attached to said items.
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Not exactly an Ocean’s 11 style caper, en route with the sealed envelope containing
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the pieces, Jacobson would simply go into a private place (like an airport bathroom),
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carefully open the envelope, steal the best pieces, and then reseal and deliver the rest.
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Smart enough not to try to redeem the pieces himself, with his first theft in 1989, Jacobson
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gave the piece ($25,000) to his stepbrother who shared the proceeds with him.
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Over the years, apparently Jacobson became more emboldened, and by 1995, he was stealing
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most of the pieces of greatest value.
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To further distance himself from the theft, Jacobson and his cohorts began recruiting
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random people, who would simply purchase the pieces from them for a percentage of their
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overall ultimate worth once cashed in.
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(Ironically, and one of the ways in which the FBI tracked who was all involved, was
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that in order to buy the pieces with large prizes, many of the biggest prize winners
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mortgaged their homes before collecting their McDonald’s Monopoly prizes.)
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Jacobson also in at least one instance completely gave the biggest $1 million prize away in
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1995 when he anonymously sent the needed pieces for the prize to St. Jude’s Children’s
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Hospital.
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While technically under the rules of the promotion, the prizes were supposed to be non-transferable,
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McDonald’s chose to make an exception in this case and awarded the prize to St. Jude’s.
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Of course, all good things must come to an end, and if the banker in a Monopoly game
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cheats too much, eventually the other players will catch on.
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And so it was that the scam was first revealed to law enforcement by an informant who had
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been recruited by the Jacobson group to “win” a 1996 Dodge Viper.
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As the fraud happened across the country and the U.S. mail was involved, the FBI had jurisdiction,
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and they named their investigation “Operation Final Answer,” in reference to another McDonald’s
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promotion Jacobson was rigging connected to Who Wants to Be a Millionaire.
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Fully cooperating with the Bureau, McDonald’s agreed to continue the contest to enable agents
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to figure out which prize winners were involved and which weren’t, gathering evidence via
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methods such as wire taps, phone records, and the aforementioned pattern of winners
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who mortgaged their houses shortly before collecting a big prize.
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In another rather humorous turn, during one stake out, FBI agents reported watching one
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of Jacobson’s associates meet with a recruit in a parking lot in Fair Play, South Carolina.
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It all came crashing down in 2001 when Jacobson and seven others were charged with conspiracy
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to commit mail fraud (a federal felony) in Jacksonville, Florida.
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Jacobson pled guilty to the charge in 2002 and was sentenced to three years and one month
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in federal prison.
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He also had to give back the near $1 million he had collected over the lifespan of the
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scam as his cut.
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Altogether, 51 otherwise law abiding citizens were convicted, with 47 pleading guilty and
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four others ultimately being found guilty (although four of these 51 later had their
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convictions overturned due to technicalities).
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It isn’t clear exactly if every prize winner involved was actually aware the whole thing
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was a scam, however, with many claiming they didn’t know the prize pieces were obtained
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illegally.
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Whatever the case, the fallout was much bigger than just a few dozen people serving jail
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time while a few dozen others who would have won a big prize did not.
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After the scandal was revealed, McDonald’s promptly terminated their approximately half
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a billion dollar contract with Simon Marketing Inc, causing a couple hundred of Jerome’s
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former co-workers to lose their jobs.
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To make amends to the general public, McDonald’s promptly launched a flash-Monopoly run, with
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cash prizes awarded totaling about $10 million.
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It should also be noted that despite St. Jude’s Children’s Hospital’s winning prize pieces
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being acquired fraudulently, McDonald’s still continued paying the installments on
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the million dollar prize
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to them.