Editor’s note: Sociopaths can fool anyone — even former fraud investigators. Here’s what a Lovefraud reader says about his experience.
I am a banking attorney, now in the private sector, but formerly conducting criminal bank fraud investigations when I worked for the government. A friend of mine who is a psychiatrist says I am one of the few people he’s ever met who can size up a person accurately within 10 seconds.
However, I am here to tell you from an experience I’ve been going through the last week or so that no matter how intuitive or streetsmart a person is, sociopaths can fool anyone. They are a breed unto themselves.
I am a gay man and was introduced to my sociopath back in February through my accountant who thought we had a lot in common. The sociopath is an interior designer by trade, but told me about a real estate deal he was trying to put together, to the tune of 40 million plus, to restore one of the legendary estates in the US and reconfigure it into high-end condos. I have to admit I was intrigued by his passion for the project.
We could talk for hours about everything—I tend to be pretty guarded by nature, but I found myself opening up around him. The sexual chemistry was amazing. I also found that he evoked feelings in me that surprised me—I was actually starting to envision a “white picket fence” future with this man and felt incredibly protective of him.
Inconsistencies in the story
Then this past weekend, while he was out, I noticed his wallet on the kitchen table. There were already a few inconsistencies in his story that were nagging at me — and we had only been seriously dating for six weeks. Anyhow, I found a Medicare card, which I found really unusual since he is 41 and I thought you had to be 65 to receive Medicare benefits.
To make a long story short, by the time I finished my investigation I discovered that he had at least 30 unsastisfied judgments against him, going back to 1991, well in excess of $200,000.
Read more: Fraud and other white-collar crimes — big and getting bigger
He had also told me that his landlord was trying to buy out his lease. No wonder, since the judgment searches revealed that in 2004 the landlord tried to force his way into the apartment and eject him. So, he probably hasn’t paid a penny in rent in years.
When I spoke to the attorneys on the last judgment entered against him in 2005 for $50,000, they told me he not only hadn’t any assets, but he also told them, at the time the lawsuit was filed in 1998, that he was dying of leukemia.
During a rant this weekend, he also mentioned how angry he was at a friend of his who recommended a certain design firm to another friend and how dare she do that when she knew the firm had fired him during the week his mother had died. I asked a friend who is a designer to get the story for me.
It seems he was head of the firm’s designers, but intercepting customer orders as they came in and selling the goods through someone he knew, then stalling the clients. When he was out that week, the firm finally did an inventory check and reviewed customer invoices and figured out what was going on. They didn’t press charges because they didn’t want the bad PR.
Fortunate escape
Of course, I had let myself get sucked into his vision of redoing this grand estate by this time. I thankfully didn’t open up my wallet, or let him move in. But I did ask a few friends who were bankers to take a look at the project. Once I conducted my investigation, I grabbed the phone, told them what I learned and to spike the project.
All the classic signs. Fortunately, I got out financially intact and with my reputation intact.
My friend who is a psychiatrist told me I should be proud of myself in that I figured him out within six weeks— even trained psychiatrists can get conned by these people longer than that. I have to admit I’m still sorting through all my conflicting feelings.
While I realize intellectually that what feelings he had for me are probably pure surface, it still hurts. My friend the psychiatrist told me that this guy probably actually liked me on some level, but also realized that with my background I was going to figure out his game ultimately, and then the jig would be up. I guess that’s a nicer way for me to think about it than to simply think that I was a means to an end.
Psychic sociopaths
I’ve come to the conclusion that sociopaths are psychic. Ever since I made my discoveries earlier this week, the last few days he has been bombarding me with phone calls and emails wanting to know if I am okay, etc. and proposing we get together. Mind you, I haven’t brought up any of what I’ve learned with him, since my psychiatrist friend and a police officer friend told me that he could turn violent on me.
Getting these people out of your life definitely poses a challenge. Both suggested that if he doesn’t vanish on his own once he discovers that I’ve outlived my usefulness by not being able to get the banks I sent his business proposal to to come through with the loans, that I tell him that an ex-boyfriend has re-entered the picture and that he is (a) a detective with the NYC Frauds Unit or (b) an FBI agent, the theory being that either will send the sociopath scurrying for the hills.
Anyhow, your webpage serves a real purpose. Keep up the good work. Tell your readers to trust their guts— sociopaths can fool anyone. If something is nagging at them, there’s probably a real reason for it.
I’ve spoken to a few friends this week, and I learned that there’s a real growing trend out there — after a first date, if you like someone and want to see them again, it’s becoming common to run a background check of them through Intellisearch or US Search. I’m now joining that club. If I had known about his chaotic financial history, I would have run for the hills before I ever got involved with him.
Learn more: How to report your abuser’s crimes so the police take you seriously
Lovefraud originally posted this article on July 1, 2007.
StarG, we never know when something will overtake us with emotions … that too is what life is all about.
At least it worked and those memories no longer plague you or are stored in your memory banks as they once were, you get to look at them with a new perspective … it allowed them to come to the surface so you could purge and renew yourself.
Peace.
Wini,
I feel that the pain I am dealing with is at the core of the borderline personality disorder, which I was once diagnosed with many years ago. Granted I don’t think of myself as a BPD these days, but the abandonment pain seems unlike the regular ups and downs and emotional upheavals people go through in their lives. I cannot talk to many people about it. But I just go through it. This particular round of it is so painful I actually had to knock myself out with a virus to deal with it. I will get through it. I cannot thank you and Beverly enough for your words of encouragement. I do realize it is not the whole picture. If you knew me, I’m actually a very lighthearted person. I’m usually laughing and goofing around. I know I’m a strong person because all I’ve been through. But I’ve dealt with so much of it in isolation, which makes me feel like a weirdo. I’m trying to change that and to share my pain with others, even if they don’t understand.
StarG, I hear you … and the best book to read for children who had parents that were out of control as you grew up is “People of the Lie” … an absolute must read.
As far as feeling like a weirdo … we can all relate to that … it’s “them” and their horrific antics that they destroy our selves in their wake … we look around at first knowing this is so surreal and that no one else is experiencing what we are experiencing.
I remember when September 11th happened. I was home that week scheduled for depositions for my suit. Of course the depositions were canceled, but I took that week off anyway. I remember thinking about the horror that was unfolding on our TV sets… and I said to myself “now the rest of the world knows the horror that I am going through”. It was that suspended animation that the world just stopped and everyone was in the same disbelief as I was … for obvious reasons … but, I didn’t feel alone for that brief minute … because, I too, felt like I was in a horrific plane crash, that a I was the only survivor … and there was no one I could talk with that could relate, they just didn’t have something like this happen to them … so you move on looking around and everything isn’t the same … as time goes by, you met others that they too, experienced something just as horrific, just as surreal … and are trying to heal… then more time goes by and you met another, and another, and another …
We are all in this together, remember that.
Peace.
I think my friend may be involved with one of these dangerous con men. I wanted to post this to see if it might ring a bell with anyone. Based on the details below, has anyone had contact with this man? He currently lives in MA.
My friend is a 34 year old woman who really wants to settle down, get married, and have a baby. She met this guy at the gym about 8 months ago. She was completely infatuated with him. Sounded like he was telling her all kinds of things about how into her he was, right from the beginning. I hung out with them about two months into their relationship, and they were already talking about babies and school systems and buying a house. Total red flag as far as I was concerned. I also just didn’t really like the guy… He seemed very guarded and didn’t show a sense of humor or a desire to get to know her friends.
I barely ever see her anymore, but when I do she seems really unhappy, although she claims to be in love. Here’s what she told me: He’s a former Green Beret who now works as a programmer and makes “a lot of money.” However, he’s still married, to his second wife, from whom he has been “separated for three plus years,” but hasn’t obtained a divorce. He has all the excuses for why he’s not divorced. Apparently his wife is an evil psycho who is unemployed, yet spends all his money on “jewelry and furniture,” and lives this high class lifestyle in an affluent town. The guy apparently continues to let her take and spend all of his money, due to the fact that they have a 10-year-old daughter together. He doesn’t want to anger the wife, for the sake of the daughter. He also drives up to see his daughter “at least twice a week.”
Meanwhile, he has moved in with my friend, into her tiny studio condo, and does not pay her any rent. It’s all, “poor me, my wife spends all my money and I can’t do anything about it. I want to get divorced but I can’t afford to and I don’t want to do anything to make my ex angry, blah blah blah.”
Sounds like he has it made, doesn’t it? He gets to live with a woman rent-free (and my guess is she gives him money too), and also have time free when he’s supposedly visiting his daughter, to do whatever he wants! Plus he is supposed to have emotional problems from having been a green beret, which probably gives him a free pass from having to talk about stuff.
I don’t believe any of this. I wouldn’t be surprised if there is no wife, no daughter, and no high-paying job.
Does this sound familiar to anyone?
Thanks!
Connie,
There are red flags all over the place here. He was talking about marriage right away–red flag number 1. Her friends don’t like him–red flag #2. He’s married (allegedly)–red flag #3. Why isn’t he getting out of his marriage? Have you tried googling his name (first, middle, and last) to see what comes up? Also, if he’s married, there should be public records.
Sorry, Cookie, I called you Connie.
Thanks Stargazer, that’s what I thought too… Why is claiming to be married a red flag? Is this common?
Wini,
I read People of the Lie a long time ago, but I’m thinking I should read it again. I didn’t have the same reaction you did to 9/11. It actually made me feel more isolated. I just felt how alone I was, and couldn’t relate to all the people calling their loved ones. It was the worst because I didn’t even feel like part of the human race. I was not having the same reactions others were having. At a time when people were feeling so connected and empathic toward total strangers, I was just feeling how alone I was.
No, Cookie, the fact that he IS married and dating someone else (to me) is a red flag. If he’s lying about his marriage, that’s another red flags. Oh my, you could start a flag company here!
Stargazer, I agree! I myself am divorced, and I find it pretty much impossible to believe that someone can be in this situation:
1) Separated for 4 years, but can’t tell their wife that he’s dating
2) Continues to let the wife have total control of the finances and “spend all his money on jewelry and furniture,” to the point where he himself cannot afford a place to live
3) Is not pusuing a divorce
4) Claims he can’t do so, has a million excuses including “we have to fix up the bathrooms before we can sell the house”
I have a strong feeling this guy is a scam artist, but don’t know what to do about it