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The $300 Million Scam That Fooled Wall Street - YouTube
Channel: Pablito's Way
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Barry Minkow by the age of 15 had already
started his very own carpet-cleaning business.
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And by his early 20s, that company was worth
upwards of $300 million.
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Except it was a giant ponzi scheme.
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And after he got caught for this scam, he
ran ANOTHER giant scam posing as the pastor
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of a church!
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ZZZZ Best
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If Barry Minkow's life story sounds more like
a Hollywood movie, that's because it is!
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Minnows' very true story was dramatized in
the 2018 crime thriller "Con Man," which centered
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around Minkow's various exploits as a scheming
businessman.
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Before we dive into the juicy twists and turns,
let's take a look back at his upbringing to
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better understand how he became the infamous
con man he is today.
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Barry had always been a hustler, even as a
young boy in 1970s Los Angeles.
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The importance of a strong work ethic was
instilled in him throughout his childhood.
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His drive to work hard and make a better life
for himself and his family became a recurring
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theme that characterized his later years.
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He got his first job at the ripe old age of
9 when his mother got him a telemarketing
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gig at the carpet cleaning company she worked
for.
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It wasn't anything more than an easy summer
job, but Barry was still just 9 years old
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at the time, so the fact that he had any type
of employment at all was rather remarkable.
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While most of his classmates were playing
with their toys, Barry was out there making
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cold calls for his mother's employer.
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Barry refined his skills as a salesman in
his teenage years.
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With his growing work experience came increased
dissatisfaction with his family's low-class
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way of living.
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The Minkows were, by all accounts, quite poor.
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They often struggled to pay the bills, and
Barry's parents had to work multiple jobs
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just to make ends meet.
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Barry was embarrassed by his family's lack
of wealth, and he dreamed of making enough
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money to change their fortunes.
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That's why, as a sophomore in high school,
he took the giant leap into the world of entrepreneurship
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and started a rug cleaning business of his
own called ZZZZ Best. (pronounced Zee-Best)
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Nearly 150 competing firms populated the LA
carpet cleaning scene, none of which had gained
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a significant leg up on the rest.
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Barry had become quite familiar with the ins
and outs of the carpet-cleaning business over
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the last few years, and he was confident he
could make ZZZZ Best a household name.
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Best Start
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With the six thousand dollars he had saved
up working nights and summers for his mother's
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company, he officially launched ZZZZ Best
at 15-years-old.
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He wasn't even able to drive a car yet, but
he was now the owner of his very own company.
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The operation was modest.
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He and three other employees set up shop in
his parents' garage and used the four phones
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they had at their disposal to start calling
potential clients.
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Minkow sought to differentiate ZZZZ Best from
other carpet cleaning companies in the area,
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who would often obtain business through a
deceptive bait-and-switch that promised customers
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better rates than what were actually charged
for.
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People were wary of this common industry practice
at this point, so Minkow knew he had to be
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different to get ahead.
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Sustainability Model
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He offered his clients two-room cleanings
for just 40 bucks, a seemingly fair deal that
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resulted in very few customer complaints at
first.
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But Barry struggled to keep ZZZZ Best afloat
during these early years, and his inexperience
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as a business owner became apparent.
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His clients complained about ZZZZ Best's work
quality and accused Barry of up-charging them
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after the fact.
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His troubles didn't stop there.
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While many applauded him for starting his
own business, banks were not so impressed
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with the teen.
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Two different banks shut down Barry's business
accounts because he was still a minor, and
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the carpet suppliers he was doing business
with grew tired of the teenager's late payments.
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He was forced to rely on cash transactions
rather than using credit cards, a necessity
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during his early years that later made his
illicit dealings easier to conceal from authorities.
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His dream of starting a successful business
and lifting his family from the depths of
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poverty was beginning to fade.
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Ethical Decisions
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Desperate, Barry engaged in some ethically
questionable behavior to bring in enough cash
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to keep the lights on.
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He started kiting checks, which is a complicated
process of continuously writing checks from
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different bank accounts.
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Simply put, a check kiter will write a check
from one bank account for more money than
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is actually in that account.
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They'll then deposit that check into another
account and then withdraw the cash for instant
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money.
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The Kiter then uses that instant cash to pay
off a debt or leaves it in the account to
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fool an auditor.
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With modern banking and technology, check
Kiting is borderline impossible.
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But back in the early 80s, it could take days,
maybe weeks, before the bank noticed the massive
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account overdraft.
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If that makes your head spin, then you understand
why it can be difficult for banks back then
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to detect kiters like Minkow.
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In addition to kiting checks, Barry also sold
some of his grandmother's jewelry behind her
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back and even staged break-ins at the ZZZZ
Best office to recoup insurance funds.
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He had no problem twisting the rules to keep
his dream alive, and these youthful examples
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of delinquency and deception were only the
beginning of Minkow's descent into a life
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of crime.
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All In
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It's at this point that Barry's story gets
a little more nefarious.
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The small-time scams turned into a full-on
Ponzi scheme once he got involved with an
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insurance claims adjuster named Tom Padgett.
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When parents warn their children of potential
bad influences, they're usually talking about
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high school bullies and dropouts, not crooked
insurance claims adjusters.
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But like everything in Minkow's life up to
this point, he was operating far beyond his
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years.
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With Padgett's assistance, Barry forged several
fraudulent documents that falsely claimed
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ZZZZ Best worked alongside Padgett's firm
on various restoration projects across Southern
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California.
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The pair even created a fake company called
Interstate Appraisal Services to help legitimize
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these phony restorations.
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Interstate, which was actually just Barry
himself, would appraise the details of their
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non-existent restoration projects and give
banks the impression that everything was on
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the up and up.
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In reality, it was all a ruse.
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But thanks to Minkow and Padgett's carefully
spun web of lies and fake companies, prospective
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lenders were none the wiser.
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ZZZZ Best's new restoration division brought
in bundles of cash in the form of bank loans.
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With his newfound financial stability, Barry
was able to expand his company into multiple
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locations across the state of California.
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ZZZZ Best wasn't a complete and total sham.
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It still was a functioning carpet-cleaning
business garnering positive reviews and feedback
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from its customers.
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Unbeknownst to their clients and the banks
that continued to fund their operations, the
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vast majority of ZZZZ Best's money was coming
from their fake insurance restoration projects.
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Roughly 86% of the company's revenue came
from these non-existent restorations鈥攐r
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rather the bank loans they received for them.
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Barry would subsequently use new loans to
pay back old ones, and the Ponzi cycle continued.
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He also kept up his check-kiting scam to secure
more fraudulent funding for his growing carpet-cleaning
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business.
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He even masterminded a $70,000 credit card
fraud that wrongly charged multiple ZZZZ Best
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customers.
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He was able to wiggle his way out of that
one by blaming it on rogue employees who had
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supposedly been fired.
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He then paid back all of his angry clients鈥攁ll
except for one鈥攁 homemaker who lost a few
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hundred dollars to Barry's scam.
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It seemed like the problem had been dealt
with, though, so Barry moved on.
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Although he was still just a high school student,
he was successfully operating a high-level
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Ponzi scheme from his parent's garage, and
the scamming was only just beginning.
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Loan Sharks
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Barry graduated in 1985 and focused all of
his efforts on ZZZZ Best and the various scams
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he was involved in.
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Things got even more precarious after Barry
accepted a loan from a man named Jack Catain,
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Jr.
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Despite his rampant scams, he was still strapped
for cash and needed some help.
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Catain wasn't your average, everyday investor,
though.
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By 1985, he was infamous among LAPD circles
for his involvement in organized crime, not
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only in Los Angeles but also in Chicago and
Philadelphia.
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While Minkow later said he was unaware of
Catain's ties to the Mafia, he didn't actually
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end his association with the mobster once
his criminal background came to light.
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It's become obvious at this point that Minkow's
moral compass doesn't exactly point north.
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If someone offers him money, he's gonna take
it.
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That's exactly what he did when Catain arrived
with cash to bankroll ZZZZ Best's operation.
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The two apparently agreed on a deal that awarded
Jack Catain 50% of the company's profits in
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exchange for the loans he supplied.
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The partnership didn't last long before it
abruptly imploded.
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Catain claimed that Minkow was not giving
him his agreed-upon share of the money, while
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Minkow asserted that his mobster friend was
unreasonably increasing the interest rates
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on his loans.
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The pair brought their grievances to court,
but Catain passed away before any resolution
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was reached.
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Minkow had taken his first step into the world
of organized crime, and you know what they
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say: once you're in, you're in for life.
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Other corrupt individuals came knocking once
Minkow got in bed with the mob.
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Much to the dismay of ZZZZ Best's law-abiding
employees, convicted felons turned into trusted
[514]
advisers when Minkow solicited the help of
guys like Maurice Rind and Robert Viggiano.
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Rind was one of the company's biggest shareholders
but was also convicted of securities fraud
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a decade prior.
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Viggiano was a convicted jewel thief who served
as a close business partner to Minkow.
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Although he was swimming with the sharks,
Barry lived like a rockstar.
[535]
He splurged on over-the-top luxuries he only
ever dreamed of as a kid.
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He treated himself to a massive Mediterranean-style
mansion in a gated Woodland Hills community
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that cost him nearly $700,000.
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He was definitely the only 19-year old homeowner
in the neighborhood.
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He traded in his parents' garage for one that
fit his two new luxury cars: a white BMW and
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a red 1985 Ferrari, which sported "ZZZZ BST"
on the license plate.
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They went nicely with his girlfriend's black
Porsche, which he bought her for her 19th
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birthday.
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Barry walked around with a gold ring on his
finger and gold chains around his neck.
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He had officially escaped his previous life
and was finally leading the kind of high-flying
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existence he had been working towards since
9-years-old.
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It was ten years of hard work and endless
hustling in the making, but we're sure he'd
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tell you it was all worth it.
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IPO
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It was around this time that Minkow decided
to take ZZZZ Best public.
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In 1986, they got a spot on the NASDAQ after
the auditor that verified them neglected to
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visit the fraudulent restoration sites they
listed on their books.
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If they'd done their due diligence, they would
have realized that the majority of ZZZZ Best's
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business wasn't real, and the jig would have
been up right then and there.
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Why this auditor didn't think it was important
to visit the sites, we'll never know.
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Perhaps a few persuasive mafia members had
something to do with it?
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Luckily for Minkow and company, that never
happened, and once they went public, Minkow
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became a millionaire.
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He retained 53% of the company, keeping a
controlling stake despite his new investors.
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Not only did going public make Minkow a very,
very rich 20-year old, it also gave him a
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potential out from the criminal doings he
was caught up in.
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His plan, or so he says, was to sell his shares
after retaining them for the mandatory two
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years required by US securities law.
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At that point, he believed he would have the
requisite funds to pay off all of his loans
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and make ZZZZ Best a legitimate business.
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Before that could happen, Minkow agreed to
undergo an initial public offering, or IPO,
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of ZZZZ Best stock to officially go public.
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For an IPO to take place, a company needs
to be audited by an independent accountant.
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This presented a problem, as much of ZZZZ
Best's operations were fraudulent.
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To conceal this from the accountants tasked
with inspecting his business, Minkow went
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to tremendous lengths of theater and deception.
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He picked out a brand new office building
in Sacramento that had absolutely no affiliation
[666]
with Minkow or his company and brought the
auditors inside, claiming it had been one
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of ZZZZ Best's recent restoration jobs.
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He even paid off the building's security guard
to take part in the charade.
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They forged thousands and thousands of phony
financial documents to keep the accountants
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fooled, and for a while, it worked.
[681]
At 21 years old, Minkow became the youngest
person in American history to successfully
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lead a company through an IPO.
[687]
The future of ZZZZ Best was looking very bright
indeed, and Minkow was quickly becoming one
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of the hottest names in the business world.
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Exposed
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In 1987, at the height of ZZZZ Best's rise,
the company was worth $280 million, trading
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on the NASDAQ at $18 a share.
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Barry's personal stock was worth about $100
million on its own.
[705]
The company employed over a thousand people
who worked at offices in California, Nevada,
[710]
and Arizona.
[711]
Despite his company's outstanding growth and
success, Minkow was still struggling to pay
[714]
back some of the loans he had taken for his
fake restorations.
[717]
While he and his business were worth a lot
of money, he didn't have a lot of cash flow
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available to pay their expenses, and he couldn't
sell his shares until the mandated two-year
[725]
period was over.
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He came up with a master plan to solve this
problem.
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A massive merger with a company called KeyServ
was put into motion.
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KeyServ, which was twice the size of ZZZZ
Best, was the official carpet cleaner for
[736]
Sears.
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Minkow planned to buy the company outright
for $25 million, absorbing all of their assets
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- and all of their cash.
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He believed that KeyServ's revenue would total
more than enough to pay off the loans and
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legitimize ZZZZ Best even sooner than was
originally planned.
[750]
KeyServ wasn't the only target of Minkow's
aggressive strategy.
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He also set his sights on ServiceMaster, which
he intended to acquire through a hostile takeover
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that would cost between 700 and 800 million
dollars.
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Minkow still wasn't done.
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A deal to purchase the Seattle Mariners Major
League Baseball Team was also in the works.
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This would all be done in the hopes that Minkow
would finally have the capital necessary to
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end his Ponzi scheme before it was too late.
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Unfortunately for Minkow, it was too late
before it even began.
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The event that ultimately toppled his house
of cards had occurred years prior before Barry
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even considered taking ZZZZ Best public.
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Remember that homemaker that Minkow scammed
a couple hundred dollars from?
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Well, believe it or not, that disgruntled
individual was the key in exposing all of
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Barry's criminal schemes.
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Days before the merger with KeyServ was finalized,
the LA Times published a story detailing the
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homemaker's experiences with ZZZZ Best's credit
card scam.
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She spoke with many other people who'd been
defrauded by Minkow, documenting her findings
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in a journal sent to the newspaper.
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Barry had assumed the homemaker wouldn't cry
over spilled milk and just opted to ignore
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her.
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Nonetheless, those few hundred dollars were
enough for her to spring into action, and
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her initiative proved to be Minkow's undoing.
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From Under the Rug
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As a result of the shocking LA Times expos茅,
everything Minkow had achieved came crashing
[820]
down in one fell swoop.
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ZZZZ Best's stock price plummeted 28 percent
overnight.
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Duped lenders lined up to demand their money
back.
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Investigations were launched into the company's
various operations.
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In June of 1987, an independent law firm was
brought in to closely inspect ZZZZ Best's
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supposed restoration projects.
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Not even a week later, Minkow resigned from
his post as president and chairman of the
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company, citing unknown health problems as
the reason behind his departure.
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Nobody was fooled.
[846]
He left because he knew his schemes were about
to be found out, and he didn't want to be
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anywhere near ZZZZ Best when that happened.
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Once Barry resigned, a new board was formed
to conduct a thorough internal investigation.
[856]
This investigation quickly uncovered the rampant
fraud that Barry had taken part in for years
[860]
as the head man at ZZZZ Best.
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Just days after his resignation, the company
sued Barry, claiming he had fled with $23
[867]
million of the company's money, which forced
them to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.
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The LAPD raided the ZZZZ Best office and Minkow's
house as well.
[874]
In addition to the elaborate Ponzi scheme,
authorities also found evidence that the mob
[878]
had utilized ZZZZ Best as a money-laundering
front.
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This came as an ironic shock to many, as Barry
Minkow had long been quite vocal in his opposition
[886]
to the widespread drug use of the '80s.
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He had always forbidden the use of drugs by
ZZZZ Best employees, even going so far as
[892]
to put up anti-drug posters around the company's
offices.
[894]
Perhaps he was just trying to throw people
off the scent of his ties to organized crime?
[898]
Maybe he felt guilty about his secret association
with drug money?
[900]
Whatever the reason for his particular aversion
to drug use, it was all a lie, like everything
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else in his life.
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Charged
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As you probably guessed, Minkow was hit with
heavy charges after his schemes were found
[910]
out.
[911]
He was indicted on 54 counts of racketeering,
securities fraud, bank fraud, mail fraud,
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tax evasion, money laundering, and embezzlement.
[918]
That pretty much covers it all, right?
[920]
Minkow tried to portray himself as the victim
during the court proceedings, claiming that
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he was pressured into turning ZZZZ Best into
a Ponzi scheme by mobsters who were secretly
[927]
pulling the strings.
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Years later, even Minkow himself admitted
this was actually false and that he was the
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true mastermind behind the fraud.
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The jury saw through his lies, and in March
of 1989, Barry Minkow was found guilty on
[939]
all charges.
[940]
He was sentenced to 25 years in federal prison.
[943]
In addition to the hefty jail time, Minkow
was placed on five years probation and ordered
[947]
to pay $26 million in restitution for the
victims of his financial crimes.
[952]
He pleaded for a lighter sentence, which the
judge simply laughed at.
[955]
The SEC banned him from serving as the director
of a public company ever again.
[959]
A teenager had turned his modest carpet-cleaning
business into a publicly traded, multi-million
[963]
dollar company in a matter of years.
[965]
In a matter of days, it was all taken away.
[967]
New Beginnings?
[968]
While serving his sentence, Minkow turned
over a new leaf.
[970]
He became a devout Christian, taking part
in the prison ministry and seemingly repenting
[974]
of his past sins.
[975]
His new lease on life got him an early release
just seven and a half years into his prison
[979]
stay.
[980]
He was committed to finally doing something
positive with his life.
[983]
But unfortunately, you can't teach an old
dog new tricks.
[986]
As we'll explore in the next video, that dog
got back to his old tricks in a hurry.
[990]
Barry Minkow's schemes had only just begun.
[994]
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