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Swindled

43. The Sultan (Anthony Gignac)

Swindled

A Concerned Citizen

True Crime, History, Documentary, Society & Culture

4.7 β€’ 9.7K Ratings

πŸ—“οΈ 22 December 2019

⏱️ 51 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

A lifelong con artist impersonates a Saudi Arabian prince to live a life of luxury. Prelude: Thomas Noe manages the State of Ohio's $50 million rare coin investment. –––-–---------------------------------------- PATREON: Patreon.com/Swindled DONATE: SwindledPodcast.com/Support CONSUME: SwindledPodcast.com/Shop –––-–---------------------------------------- MUSIC: Deformr.com –––-–---------------------------------------- FOLLOW: SwindledPodcast.com Instagram.com/SwindledPodcast Twitter.com/SwindledPodcast Facebook.com/SwindledPodcast Thanks for listening. :-) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

No taft, to my knowledge, has ever neglected a public duty for the sake of gratifying

0:06.5

a private desire.

0:08.6

Until more recently, a taft, Bob Taft, the third of his name, became governor and involved

0:16.0

in the most obscure odd scandals, it was called Coingate.

0:23.2

In 1997, the Ohio General Assembly made an unorthodox decision.

0:30.2

Instead of relying solely on the stability and security of boring old stocks and bonds,

0:34.9

the state legislator voted to loosen its investment policy and grow its workers' compensation

0:40.1

fund by placing $500 million into alternative investments.

0:46.5

Alternative investments like rare coins and old currency, the market is unregulated and

0:51.9

speculative as beanie babies.

0:55.8

The Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensation, or the BWC, is responsible for paying medical

1:01.8

expenses and providing monthly checks to state workers who have been injured on the job.

1:07.6

There's no reason for the department to be so aggressive or unconventional in its investment

1:12.0

strategy.

1:13.7

But on March 31, 2008, the state handed over $25 million to a coin dealer named Thomas

1:20.4

Noe who would rely on his decades of expertise in the coin business to buy and sell and manage

1:26.8

the Bureau's holdings.

1:29.7

Poor's trouble, Noe was entitled to 20% of any realized profits while the other 80% would

1:36.7

be returned to the state.

1:39.7

Sounds great in all but rare coins.

1:41.9

There's not a single other instance of a state government or municipality actively participating

1:48.4

in the unusual investment.

...

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