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Short filmTranscript
00:00most criminals are not very good at planning crimes the stupidity of the
00:08people who committed the crime and the absurdity of the ways that they've tried
00:12to get away with it can be eye-poppingly bad the Anthony
00:17Curcio story was unusual his planning was thoughtful and meticulous he was
00:28regarded as a little bit of a folk hero for a minute the high school hunk pulling
00:37off one of the most outrageous bank heists in years the whole crime the
00:44whole heist is really over the top it's like something out of a movie it's the
00:49work of a mastermind he pulled off the perfect crime they say Curcio was a
00:53mastermind he was not but everybody was surprised the Anthony would go to these
01:03extremes
01:07there's too much going for the guy I think this is almost the classic Icarus
01:12story of too clever kid who was too smart for his own good and got himself in a
01:19world of trouble
01:22I'm
01:29I'm
01:33I'm
01:35Thank you for having me here.
02:05I never thought I would actually be speaking at a venue like this.
02:09Why am I here?
02:11I'm going to explain basically just the chain of events that happened to me.
02:27I was a good kid growing up.
02:30Athletically, I was gifted.
02:33My dad played football at the University of Idaho, and that was my dream, to be just like my dad.
02:43In Monroe, football was a big thing, and we got away with anything we wanted.
02:48We would mess around in class, mess with teachers, we would cheat.
02:54Even with police, we'd get pulled over, and they'd be like, just let him go.
03:03And Anthony, he was the guy.
03:10Everybody just kind of looked up to him and loved the guy.
03:13Even older girls, they liked him, and that never happens in high school, right?
03:18He was the best-looking guy in his class.
03:21He was prom king.
03:22He had the good-looking cheerleader girlfriend, all of that.
03:26I loved this girl like crazy, and she did not like me, okay?
03:33She did not like me.
03:34She liked the bad boys.
03:35I was not that.
03:37Emily was the girl for that class.
03:41Naturally, they're gonna come together.
03:44Let's go!
03:46And now, I was going on to play wide receiver at the University of Idaho.
03:51Everything was just falling into place.
04:01There's too much going for the guy that you would think he would do something like this.
04:05I don't think anybody's gonna rob a bank.
04:07Who thinks of that?
04:12When it was a small town, to the people, are normal working families.
04:18It's a good spot.
04:19There's a lot of typical crimes that happen in Monroe.
04:24Shoplifting, vandalism.
04:27This crime was not typical.
04:30I worked here for 26 years.
04:33I started out as a patrol, and then I became a detective.
04:38As a detective, my favorite part is that I'm able to really dive into the investigation,
04:44be able to really track things down.
04:46When this crime happened, I didn't have my radio with me.
04:54And I started hearing sirens.
04:55One, and two, and three, and I'm like, okay, something's going on.
05:04I went back to my car, got on the radio, and I heard the call.
05:08Requesting units for robbery at Bank of America.
05:10Suspect fleeing on foot.
05:12We do have robberies at banks.
05:15I mean, it's uncommon, but it does happen.
05:17But when we have one where he's running on foot, that's pretty rare.
05:22So right away, we knew we had to find him.
05:30I am a bank robber.
05:32I was a bank robber.
05:34Yes!
05:39Anthony definitely wasn't an average criminal.
05:42He's not hindered by the rules of society.
05:49Society idealizes good heist movies like Ocean's Eleven or Thomas Crown.
05:54Those are great movies.
05:55Did you think you would get caught?
05:57No.
05:58Why would I do it if I did?
06:01After he got out of college, he immediately went into real estate,
06:04and he became very successful.
06:06He's got money.
06:08He had married his high school sweetheart.
06:11They had two beautiful daughters.
06:13He's got the perfect family.
06:15You could tell that Emily was in love with Anthony.
06:20And he was creating the lifestyle that they were expected to have,
06:24coming from wealthy families.
06:26His family's known in Monroe because of their construction company.
06:31People knew who he was, for sure.
06:33He's good-looking.
06:34He's charismatic.
06:35He's the star of the show.
06:38I had a big house, a fancy car, Range Rover, whatever it was.
06:43Everything's going great.
06:44His parents are proud of him.
06:45Her parents are proud of him.
06:47He's amazing.
06:48And everybody loved him, right?
06:53And then suddenly, things start going bad,
06:56and he doesn't really know what to do.
07:02He was sitting at his computer one night,
07:04and he just typed in armored truck robbery.
07:08And that's really how it all started.
07:14Bank robbers rob banks because that's where the money is.
07:21Anthony needed money, so he Googled how to rob a bank.
07:27And articles started coming up.
07:30There was one about a guy who robbed an armored truck
07:33and got like $1.8 million.
07:35And then another guy who simply put on security guard's outfit
07:38and walked in the bank, and they handed him the bags full of cash,
07:42and he walked right out.
07:44So it just made it sound pretty easy.
07:48Because it had a whole bunch go wrong in his life.
07:50So he could do this too.
07:53He thought if he meticulously planned it out
07:56and thought out every single possible scenario,
08:01then he wouldn't get caught.
08:03And that's what he started to do.
08:05So I started planning an armored car robbery.
08:15I'm scouting this thing out, figure out how I'm going to do it.
08:22He planned this for 10 weeks.
08:23So he had to learn what the schedule was for the Brinks truck.
08:28Several times a week, he's going there.
08:31Sometimes it show up at 10.15, sometimes 11.30.
08:36Or is it pretty much every time showing up at 11.05?
08:42He had to learn the one guard would exit out of the back.
08:45He would go in the bank.
08:47The main guy, the driver, never exited the vehicle.
08:53Most crimes occur at night.
08:56He was going to do it in the middle of the day.
09:02I wanted the armored car driver to get comfortable with me every Tuesday on his delivery.
09:07I was wearing this disguise, trying to act like a landscaper to pull this thing off.
09:12Anthony already knew that these guys weren't going to put up a fight.
09:24He told me that he knew someone that worked at Brinks.
09:29That guy had given him the inside scoop.
09:32You know, these guys, they're supposed to give up the money immediately, which he thought was going to be $100,000 to $200,000.
09:45He had a can of bear mace, which he actually tried out on himself.
09:49Which I thought was interesting.
09:55I'm not spraying myself with bear mace.
09:58But he wanted to make sure the bear mace would take out the guard, right?
10:04How painful is this?
10:06Like, is this something he's going to be able to fight me?
10:09Is he going to be able to chase me?
10:10Or is this going to drop him?
10:19He didn't want to make a rash decision.
10:21So he had a trial run.
10:36It was planned right down to the second.
10:38The amount of effort and planning that he put into this, it was really, it's really over the top.
10:51My name is Paulie Straub Cook, and I used to be the editor of the Monroe Monitor,
10:57which was the paper of record for Monroe all the way to Skye Komish.
11:01If I had to think back of my favorite stories that I ever did on the monitor, I have to say, Anthony Curcio's story would be in the top five, certainly.
11:12Because it was such a colorful crime, there was a great deal of speculation and interest and intrigue.
11:21So my job was to kind of find the most cohesive account that I could piece together out of what witnesses saw and what police were saying.
11:31It was immediately apparent to everyone that the heist had been very carefully planned out.
11:40And the more details came in, the more startling the story became.
11:45Most people try to rob the actual bank, not usually the Brinks truck because of their routes.
11:57They would have to plan it.
11:58They have to know where the truck's going to be at.
12:00And it's armored.
12:02You'd have to wait for somebody to open the doors to try to get to the money.
12:07The dispatch said we were looking for a landscaper with a yellow safety vest, a particle mask, a sprayer, and jeans.
12:15People do not usually wear outfits like that to rob a bank, no.
12:19So we thought that was weird.
12:21And then it gets more strange.
12:23My name's Chris Johnson, and I was part of a bank robbery.
12:31I've not been involved in any other bank robberies, at least not known of.
12:39I was recruited for the job on Craigslist.
12:42This is the exact wording and spelling of the ad.
12:44Seattle Tacoma Craigslist labor gigs, general cleanup landscaping for city cleanup project.
12:50$28.50 per hour must provide two personal and two work references if asked.
12:56We will provide the tools.
12:57However, all laborers must purchase safety glasses or equivalent eye protection,
13:01ventilator mask, yellow safety vest, along with proper foot protection.
13:09It seemed really well put together.
13:11You know, there was, you know, having the work references and having, you know, all the equipment.
13:16At the time, I was hungry for money and $28.50 an hour.
13:21You know, that was good money.
13:22So I kind of jumped on it.
13:27So he had these three different locations.
13:29He had different groups of people showing up at each location.
13:32There was a group that was at the bank.
13:34But even on his escape route, he had people that were a decoy.
13:37So that when he got down there, nobody really knew who it was.
13:41Pretty, pretty well thought out.
13:46It was beginning to look like a movie plot.
13:53Because it appeared to have been based on the Thomas Crown Affair.
13:57He came up with a brilliant plan.
14:03And it was time to put his plan into action.
14:06Day of the crime.
14:22Everything works the way it's supposed to work.
14:25Yeah, I've been waiting.
14:27Now it's time that you're here.
14:32Yeah, I've been holding.
14:37Now I'm doing it.
14:42Oh, yeah, I'm coming for you.
14:44Oh yeah, I'm coming for ya
14:49And I don't quit
14:53Yeah, yeah, grab the cash and go
15:04Yeah, yeah, don't look back out the door
15:09Oh, oh, yeah, yeah
15:14Yeah, yeah, take the wind, lay low
15:18Yeah, yeah, don't look back, just go
15:22Yeah, yeah, take the wind, lay low
15:27Yeah, yeah, don't look back, just go, go, go, yeah, yeah
15:34We're driving along US2, which is the main arterial of Monroe
15:51And the Bank of America is right on the corner here
15:56This is the bank that Anthony studied
16:06If I was going to rob a bank, I wouldn't rob this one
16:09But he wasn't after the bank, he was after the truck
16:12And that's different
16:12My understanding is that the Brinks truck was right about here
16:19Because this is the main entrance to the building
16:21So this is kind of the scene where it occurred
16:24This is the alley that Anthony ran through as he escaped with his money
16:34He's somebody that really, really thinks about pretty much everything that he's going to do
16:41He knew that the Bank of America had a stream by it
16:47In the Monroe area, there's a lot of little rivers and little streams
16:53And things that separate different areas of the city
16:57And he thought, if I jumped in the stream, I could get away, right?
17:01There's no car to follow
17:02Even if the police are there, they can't follow the stream
17:05You know, it was the first time I've actually walked this route
17:09I didn't realize what a straight shot to the creek he had
17:12If it was running like this when he jumped in
17:17I could see how it would be an easy getaway
17:19He tried to dig a channel in this creek for 10 weeks
17:23So he could use a jet ski to get away
17:25A jet ski would be a pretty gaudy way to get out of here
17:29The jet ski's sexy
17:35A jet ski is very impractical
17:40Woods Creek is not wide
17:44During a dry run, he took the jet ski
17:51And he was racing down the stream
17:53And he hit a rock
17:55And so the jet ski idea was out
18:00The jet ski I'm sure was the first option because of speed
18:11He's that type of guy for flair and style
18:14But he's more about what's going to get the job done
18:16So he had to use an inner tube to do it
18:21Wouldn't it be cooler to say
18:29I floated down on an inner tube
18:31Let's go
18:33Let's go
18:33Let's go
18:38The first thing is setting up a perimeter.
19:05We're trying to keep him within the location so we can't get away.
19:13We had a canine come out, and we had a helicopter come up to look for him from above.
19:20Patrol is doing what they can do, out looking for him on foot.
19:24We couldn't find him.
19:27Brinks contacted us, and we found out that he had stolen $400,000.
19:33He was gone.
19:40It's hard to believe it would actually work.
19:47Kind of sounds like the script for a Hollywood movie.
19:49The man was seen near the Lewis Street Bridge getting in an inner tube.
19:54This story caught fire immediately.
19:57Monroe police are looking for a bank robber who pulled off a really bizarre getaway.
20:01The thief enlisted unknowing strangers to help him get away.
20:05There are police boats in the water and a helicopter.
20:08It got almost humorous treatment from a lot of news outlets.
20:13Now imagine me times 15.
20:15What's up, dude?
20:17People have described him as a mastermind.
20:20There was a great deal of almost respect.
20:24He was regarded as a little bit of kind of a folk hero.
20:29We didn't know who had done it yet, but there was a fair amount of rumor.
20:32The suspect was a white man in his 20s, 5'7 to 5'10, wearing a dark blue shirt, jean shorts,
20:39and some sort of ventilation mask.
20:41Now that is a bizarre one, huh?
20:42It is.
20:43Inner tube getaway.
20:44Yeah.
20:45I haven't heard that one before.
20:46I think Anthony wanted to be respected as an excellent bank robber.
21:03As the most dashing of them all.
21:08Woo!
21:11But he wasn't the best post-crime mastermind.
21:34People think it's crazy or whatever.
21:36Yeah, it is crazy and stupid, but I got away.
21:39Anthony asked me to come to Vegas.
21:45So we just went bar to bar, club to club.
21:49He's throwing money around like it's nothing.
21:52He'd see a tray of jello shots.
21:57He'd buy the whole tray, and he'd run around table to table,
22:01Brent and everybody, take a shot, here, here, here.
22:03Everybody just wanted to party with him.
22:05And we all just kind of watched.
22:08And laughed and he danced around and had fun.
22:12By the end of the night, we'd be taking limos, getting bottles of Dom.
22:17It gets more extravagant.
22:19And I go, how much do you want me to throw down?
22:22And he's like, don't worry about it.
22:25Go throw it on red or black.
22:26We don't need it.
22:27People ask me, do you know?
22:28And I'd be like, no, I didn't know.
22:29How much did you guys spend?
22:30I don't even know.
22:31It was a lot.
22:32Frustrated he got away.
22:33I mean, we want to catch him as soon as we can.
22:35And the sooner the better.
22:36It makes it much easier.
22:37After the fact, it gets harder.
22:39Now we have to look at the evidence to try to track him down.
22:42First, we have video that we knew that is above the ATMs at the bank.
22:47And then we saw that there was a Brinks bag that was dropped.
22:55Farther down, there was the dark sunglasses, the wig, and the particle mask.
23:03We interviewed the Brinks employees and the lanterns.
23:07And say, yes, everybody has all the colors.
23:12Theyominates.
23:14We interviewed the Brinks employees and the landscapers who weren't really distracted
23:20by them.
23:21It actually helped because we had an eyewitness saying he ran down this way to the creek.
23:33The SWAT team were able to follow down the river and find some items of evidence.
23:40They found a radio and then they found the inner tube that he had gone down the river
23:46in.
23:51We're getting all different types of information from the public.
24:04It's helpful but it takes a lot of time because we have to determine if it's good information
24:09or not.
24:11So the media has tried to portray this as a very well thought out plan, smooth operation
24:16but throwing off the items, that's not very smart.
24:20With a particle mask, you're going to have DNA on a particle mask.
24:24If he is a convicted felon, we've got him, he's going to be in the system.
24:30He's not in the database, which was interesting, but we knew this is awfully structured.
24:41This is a lot of planning for somebody who did their first crime.
24:45You don't suddenly start robbing banks.
24:51Typically, people have for a long time, they've been committing smaller crimes, they get bigger.
24:56It creeps up on you and usually there's drugs involved.
25:00Anthony living a double life.
25:03I don't have that look of a criminal, of a drug addict, of basically a piece of garbage
25:15that was capable of everything that I did.
25:19Ah, he'd been a bit of a rascal before.
25:22Yeah, that wasn't his first rodeo.
25:25While I was in college, I got into that whole scene, the party scene.
25:31During a punt return in practice, I got hit, tore out my ACL.
25:36I'm prescribed Vicodin and I start taking it just exactly how it's prescribed.
25:41And then obviously that changes.
25:44As time went on, I'm taking more and more of these things.
25:48You know, it got to be like 15 a day.
25:49It got to be where I started doctor shopping.
25:51I started, you know, forging prescriptions, going around, buying them off the streets,
25:56started selling drugs.
25:58As time went on, that progressed.
26:00It got a little bigger, a little more money, little bolder type crimes.
26:04All of this type of stuff became completely normal to me.
26:08My goal and my dream wasn't to be some football player like my dad.
26:13No.
26:14It was to be a criminal.
26:19Anthony started looking for the quick dollar.
26:22You fall in love with making the easy money and you just kind of go that route.
26:28He had the veneer of being legitimate.
26:31Like many criminals at the time, I got involved with real estate.
26:36And, man, that was the easiest thing ever.
26:41And I don't even know if half of it they didn't even consider illegal.
26:48From early 2000 to 2007, if you were into real estate, it was pretty easy to make money.
26:54I rode that wave and that just fed in to my ego even more.
27:01I had been buying and flipping properties.
27:03It didn't matter what I buy by the time that, like, the whole deal closed.
27:07Maybe I'd made $50,000 just because the equity was rising that fast.
27:12It was like you couldn't lose.
27:15You know, you start to become emboldened, right?
27:17You buy a house.
27:18You fix it up.
27:19You sell it.
27:20You make $50,000.
27:21You buy a house.
27:22You fix it up.
27:23You make $150,000.
27:25You start thinking that every deal is going to close and the money is never going to stop.
27:30You start buying vehicles you shouldn't be buying.
27:33And you start to think you can do no wrong.
27:35Oh!
27:38Tafal plunged to a record low yesterday, reaching 777 points and closing the day at 10,365.
27:47And that is the largest single-day point loss ever.
27:51Anthony was really affected by the 2008 financial crisis.
27:55his identity was connected to being this successful real estate agent and he'd lost
28:05everything it's you know psychologically devastating especially somebody like anthony
28:10who's loves to be the big shot you know he needed a way out
28:17i think that under the right circumstances anyone will commit a crime
28:24you know some people's threshold is just lower
28:28i took a risk i did it you know for my family
28:40i believe the crime took place about 10 days after emily gave birth
28:50if anthony said that he wanted to steal that money for emily and his girls it's interesting to note
28:59that emily wasn't with him when he flew to las vegas and someone else was
29:04in vegas we did have groups of girls coming back to the house and partying with us and one of the
29:14girls that came on the trip him and her got very close i never saw anything with my own eyes but
29:20you kind of assume
29:24i think that people who have received a lot of approval in their lives like sports heroes do
29:32develop the expectation that they can get away with things and that they have kind of a pass
29:38in society that even if they do get caught they'll get off easy
29:42but he seems to like attention too much to actually get away with anything
29:4799 of criminals suffer from some type of psychopathy feelings of i don't know if it's
29:56inadequacy but it's also entitlement i think anthony has all of them and of course these guys they
30:04always get caught by doing something stupid and he just didn't think he was going to do anything
30:07stupid but there was something they couldn't account for
30:119-1-1 what's emergency the following day after the robbery a sergeant said hey i think i have
30:27might have some information he goes about a month ago we got a call yeah i found a bunch of
30:33burglary tools he found a burglary tools yeah a gap a wig i can't imagine all right can i get your last
30:42name please your first name
30:44alan what's your phone number
30:47there was a homeless man who lived in monroe and his name was alan dean and i knew him well
30:57that's the corner that alan always panhandled on right there so this is where alan was standing as
31:06he kind of observed all of anthony's machinations preparations he had noticed a vehicle pull up to a
31:16local dumpster and put something in it and he found the wig and a change of clothes
31:27it was a stash that certainly wasn't garbage
31:33and alan wrote down the license plate of that vehicle
31:51so we ran the plate and we found out that this vehicle that was
31:56possibly involved came back to emily cursio
32:00she has no criminal history okay well who is she associated with and well her husband is anthony
32:08cursio so looking at his past he had some cases he may not have been charged with but was a suspect in
32:17he had gone into a college dorm and tried to take furniture another one where he was selling gaming
32:27tables in idaho without a gaming license it's just weird stuff that's not normal
32:33we contact the fbi and set up surveillance
32:44by the time anthony gets back from vegas local monroe detectives are all over him
32:51they've interviewed the thomas crown decoys they've tracked down the homeless guy
33:00the heist is starting to unravel
33:05based on what we have we didn't want to tip him off we didn't want to do a whole search warrant
33:09because then the money's going to be gone as soon as he knows he's a suspect
33:16and so we start talking to people that know him but he had a lot of influence with his friends
33:24our very first contacts with most of the people their first thing they said was
33:29i'm gonna get a lawyer or i have a lawyer and i don't want to talk
33:35i've never had that ever in my career where i went to talk to someone who was not a suspect
33:41and then to tell me i'm not going to talk to you at this point we need his dna so we can match it up
33:51we need what's called throwaway dna if you drink a glass of water and you leave it here today
33:57at a restaurant i can come up pick it up and take it with me and that's considered throwaway dna i
34:03don't need a search warrant to take that cup if we get throwaway dna find out it really is him
34:11we can write the search warrants for his house for his vehicles everything and then go and do it all at
34:16once the fbi followed him
34:22and they saw him get out of his vehicle and throw away a bottle
34:33the bottle was a spit bottle and it gives anthony choose tobacco
34:40it was the only piece of trash in the trash can which is amazing so we knew it was his and it wasn't
34:48contaminated in any way from any other trash and then it's a waiting game is waiting to hear back
34:53from the crime lab
35:03and then finally i got the call
35:06and the crime lab goes it's him we got him
35:11finally we can go arrest this guy
35:18the fbi is trailing him
35:25and that's when our swat team comes in and arrests him
35:31i come up i introduce myself and i go you know anthony i know you know we got you
35:37and he's like do you know who my parents are a lot of people knew who they were in town
35:47didn't matter to me i have a crime to solve
35:52once we arrested him we booked him in jail he has money he gets bailed out
35:58anthony bonds out and then he realizes that they're putting a case together on him obviously and he
36:06starts contacting witnesses
36:10anthony ends up threatening our main witness
36:15he actually gave him a note and he gave him a lighter
36:18and he said read this and then destroy it with a lighter
36:24i think anthony thinks he's still somehow gonna try to get get through this and get away with it
36:30he gathers up all the money and takes it to a lawyer and goes i'm in trouble how can you help me
36:42he thought he'd stay kind of anonymous by using a lawyer of course it didn't work
36:48that lawyer ended up giving us the money
36:53it was in the garbage bags and we just dump it all out and start counting
37:00it was for hours
37:03it's a lot of money and some of it was wet and some of it was moldy
37:08it was around 240 000 that we counted
37:11i did not take one thing oh no not worth my job
37:25this time he doesn't get out he got six years in federal prison
37:32what's so funny is that inmates in prison would come up to me and be like anthony how'd you get
37:37away with it like dude i'm in here with you
37:43i was incarcerated with anthony curcio after spending as much time as i spent with him in prison
37:50the crime fits perfectly with him the anthony that i know he always wanted to be meticulous
37:59and have everything down and he wanted to be the best at anything that he did
38:04there must have been some satisfaction in getting caught because at least he got the credit for his
38:08mastermind plot
38:12he was indulged because of the cleverness of his crime because he was entertaining
38:18but real people did suffer real harm most of all his family
38:24my older daughter she was two years old at the time when i was finally arrested the other one was
38:3020 days old where did i leave my wife and my kids out here with nothing
38:39he felt extremely guilty about how his crime had affected his children
38:46he seemed like he definitely wanted to get out and and fix things so he really became a model prisoner
38:54while he was in prison he wrote a children's book
39:02called my daddy's in jail what up y'all this is gangster puppet coming at you straight out of the bird
39:09cache i just wish that my kids knew how much i love them how much i'm sorry that i messed up
39:16the children's books helped launch his career when he stepped out of prison i will give you a tour of
39:26my office oh i'm in the wrong room this is just a mop closet or is it secret office he really was able
39:38to take this kind of a tragedy and turn it into a story of redemption he rebuilt his entire life
39:46based on that this is where i do a lot of my drawings so he kind of took on this leadership role
39:54in helping other people not go astray he put himself forward in that way i'm a great example of
40:00what not to do you should get a job not like steal money right i shouldn't have stolen that money
40:09i looked around at all these guys and it's like man nobody i i don't have anything anymore no money
40:15no power no friends i had nothing and i started to look at my life a different way i've been sober and
40:23clean i haven't even had a tylenol pm i believe you went on to do some public speaking i finally was
40:29like hey anthony you put yourself here curcio makes it his mission to educate the community about
40:36opiate addiction i care about you guys not making the choices that i made that put me there he really
40:42rebranded his image as a guy who had a troubled past with drugs that led him down the wrong path
40:52it sells better than i'm a greedy prick and i needed money and i'm willing to commit crime to do it
41:06what the flip what
41:16convicted bank robber anthony curcio has a new scheme in a 1.9 billion dollar industry loved by fans and
41:22entrepreneurs alike pokemon cards seemed like he was not causing any problems no crimes until fairly
41:31recently he was selling counterfeit trading cards and he got caught federally again and got arrested
41:38he hadn't changed as profoundly as he led folks to believe he was involved in a scam involving pokemon
41:44cards that netted him and an accomplice about two million dollars two million dollars i think that he
41:53really enjoyed the idea of himself as a named bandit as somebody who captured the reluctant admiration of
42:04people around the world i think he was definitely the hero of his own imagination
42:13at some point you just start thinking this is just what i do i'm just that good at it and i'm going to
42:17keep doing it because they're never going to catch me you know until they do i'm not sure i'm criminal i
42:26regret nothing my name is swagman i'm artist music producer i'm the boss he made almost all his money
42:35on bitcoins swagman said give me the money in two weeks i will give you three times this money i saw all
42:41the red flags it disappeared catch me if you want i post my locations this case was a big setup shame on me bro
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