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Barry Minkow ZZZZ Best CEO Profiled on CBS 60 Minutes

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    GRAHAM MESSICK: If you were
    going to start a hall of fame
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    for con men, Barry Minkow would
    have to be one of the
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    first inductees.
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    He was one of the most famous
    stock swindlers of the 1980s,
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    and certainly the youngest.
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    Age 20, he was the boy wonder of
    Wall Street, CEO of a $300
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    million company.
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    At 22, he'd been convicted of 57
    counts of fraud and was off
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    to federal prison.
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    Now at age 39, Barry Minkow is
    back in the spotlight, not for
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    committing fraud, but
    for exposing it.
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    He's seeking redemption as an
    evangelical minister and by
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    going undercover to help
    federal law enforcement
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    agencies crack a number of
    important cases, proving that
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    when it comes to con men, it
    takes one to know one.
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    Everything you say today, you're
    going to tell me the
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    whole truth, nothing but
    the truth, right?
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    BARRY MINKOW: Yeah.
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    Brings back memories.
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: As
    well it should.
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    19 years ago, Barry Minkow
    perpetrated a con so audacious
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    that it's still taught as a
    case study in business and
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    accounting schools.
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    BARRY MINKOW: Call me when
    the market closes.
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: He founded ZZZZ
    Best Carpet Cleaning when
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    he was just 16 years old, then
    franchised it into a chain,
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    and finally took it public.
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    BARRY MINKOW: We clean carpets
    with such care, I'll guarantee
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    the work and our price
    in writing.
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: On paper, he
    was worth $100 million.
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    He drove a Ferrari, and even
    appeared on Oprah Winfrey,
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    touting to himself
    and his stock.
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    BARRY MINKOW: Think
    big, be big.
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    OPRAH WINFREY: Really?
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    BARRY MINKOW: End of story.
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    I started with the best
    of intentions.
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    Really, I can say that much.
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    And when economic pressure
    reared its ugly head and I
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    couldn't make payroll, I lied
    and stole and cheated.
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: He borrowed
    money from the mob, cooked the
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    books for accountants, and lied
    to investors about 10s of
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    millions of dollars in insurance
    contracts to restore
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    buildings damaged by
    fire and water.
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    BARRY MINKOW: We were claiming
    to be doing restoration jobs
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    totaling in excess
    of $50 million.
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    We weren't doing any.
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    And so--
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: None?
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    BARRY MINKOW: None.
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    Well, I mean, I did, like, some
    toilet overflows and Mrs.
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    Jones house.
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    But that's certainly didn't
    constitute $50 million.
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: How did you
    manage to convince bankers,
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    and lawyers and investors that
    this was on the up and up?
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    BARRY MINKOW: By getting an
    auditing firm and getting them
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    the paperwork, and much to our
    shame, creating documents that
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    would support earnings and
    contracts, 22,000 documents.
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: All phony?
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    BARRY MINKOW: Cutting and
    pasting, white out.
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: When a major
    accounting firm finally
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    demanded to see one of the
    restoration jobs, Minkow found
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    a brand new building in
    Sacramento, paid off a guard,
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    and brought the auditors in
    on a Saturday morning.
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    BARRY MINKOW: We'd give the
    guard $50 to recognize us.
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    We'd bring the auditors in.
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    They'd say hi.
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    And we'd walk in, just say,
    yeah, we just did all this.
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    We'd put signs about
    ZZZZ Best.
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    It was like a Hollywood
    production.
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    And we went to great lengths
    to fool and to deceive.
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: But it worked.
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    BARRY MINKOW: Temporarily.
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    Most frauds, that's
    the way they are.
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    I call it the second law
    of fraudo-dynamics.
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    They go from order
    to disorder.
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    They work, but it's not
    if you're going to
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    get caught, but when.
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: When it did
    collapse, he left investors
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    holding the bag for $26 million,
    wiping out life
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    savings and ruining lives.
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    He spent seven years and four
    months behind bars.
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    And it was in the hole at
    Terminal Island in Los Angeles
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    that he had an epiphany.
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    BARRY MINKOW: When I was 1988
    in prison, Thanksgiving
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    dinner, I'm sitting there
    with a bank robber.
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    His name's John Hensley, great
    guy, 50 some odd years old.
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    He's got spider web
    tattoos here.
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    There's a toilet here.
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    Here's the bunk.
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    Here's Hensley.
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    They feed me Thanksgiving
    dinner through
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    a hole in the door.
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    And they nuke it, the salad
    and everything.
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    Because by the time it got to
    the hole from the kitchen it
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    was cold, so they nuke it, salad
    and all, Jello and all.
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    I look at Hensley.
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    I look at the nuked Jello.
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    I look at the toilet.
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    I look at the door
    that don't open.
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    And I'm thinking, you
    know, maybe it's me.
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    Maybe there's something
    wrong with me.
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    Maybe when they go to all this
    trouble to put you in a place
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    like this, you better
    do some changing.
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: And he did.
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    He earned masters degrees in
    religion and divinity, and now
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    preaches to 1,400 parishioners
    at his Community Bible Church
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    in San Diego.
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    But he doesn't go near
    the collection box.
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    BARRY MINKOW: The better part
    of wisdom says alcoholics
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    shouldn't be bartenders.
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    I mean, I just don't want
    to be part of it.
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: Do you
    talk about your sins?
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    BARRY MINKOW: All the time.
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: Evangelism
    has been known to be a
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    refuge for con men.
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    BARRY MINKOW: Yeah.
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    Our church, we we're
    not like that.
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    We tell people who are
    visiting not to give.
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    We're not a TV ministry.
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    We don't say, if you
    don't send me money
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    I'm going to die.
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    It's not that kind of
    ministry at all.
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    There's this God who
    created you--
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: But
    not all of his
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    preaching is done in church.
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    He founded a company called the
    Fraud Discovery Institute,
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    and lectures business students,
    law enforcement
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    officers, and corporate
    executives on
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    white collar crime.
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    He actually began investigating
    white collar
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    crime two years ago when a
    friend asked him to check out
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    a questionable investment.
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    BARRY MINKOW: I'd looked
    at the thing.
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    It was volumes of information
    and websites.
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    And I thought to myself, if I
    was a crook, what would I do
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    to pull this off?
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    And I thought, there's
    a unique approach.
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: He quickly
    discovered the company, Mx
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    Factors, was operating without
    a business license and
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    appeared to be a scam.
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    So he wrote up a report and
    sent it off to a federal
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    postal inspector named
    Tim France.
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    TIM FRANCE: He urgently asked
    me to look into it.
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: It turned
    out to be a big fraud.
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    TIM FRANCE: Yes, $35
    million in losses.
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: And you wouldn't
    have known about this
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    unless Barry Minkow had
    brought it to you.
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    TIM FRANCE: That's
    absolutely right.
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    I probably would not have known
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    about it until it collapsed.
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: Since then,
    Minkow has helped law
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    enforcement expose 11
    suspected scams.
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    He's even gone undercover for
    the FBI wearing a wire.
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    The biggest case involved
    Financial Advisory
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    Consultants, run by James Lewis,
    who's charged with
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    bilking investors out of $300
    million in retirement money.
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    BARRY MINKOW: I took
    one look at him and
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    it was like a flashback.
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    I could just look in his eyes
    and know he had 80 balls
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    juggling in the air.
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    Phone calls were starting
    to come in.
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    You have that look.
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    And unless you've been a
    perpetrator about to be
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    exposed, you don't know
    what that look is.
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    And I could just tell
    in his eyes.
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: But despite all
    the help he's given to law
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    enforcement, working with Minkow
    can be a frustrating
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    experience.
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    TIM FRANCE: He is a bull
    in a China shop.
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    He expects us federal
    investigators to immediately
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    jump on it and have this
    thing shut down
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    within a couple weeks.
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    You just can't do that.
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    First of all, the information
    that I'm getting
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    is from Barry Minkow.
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    So I have to re-verify
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    everything he has done already.
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: You trust him.
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    TIM FRANCE: Trust but verify.
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: Minkow is much
    less interested in prosecuting
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    frauds than he is in
    exposing them while
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    they're still going on.
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    He searches public records,
    employs private detectives,
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    and goes undercover to perform
    the kind of due diligence most
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    investors don't know
    how to do.
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    BARRY MINKOW: The problem that
    I have the minute I get the
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    call, Steve, is here's
    what happens.
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    I get a probable cause.
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    And I'll listen in my mind.
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    The clock ticks.
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    And I know that every day I
    don't do something, somebody's
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    pouring money into this deal.
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    And they're going to end up
    feeling like I made people
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    feel back in the 1980s.
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    And that clock is just
    ticking in my head.
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    I got to just--
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    I got to shut this down.
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    I've got to--
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: Before anybody
    else puts more money in it.
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    BARRY MINKOW: And it's
    a race against time.
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: While we were
    researching the story, he
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    received a tip about
    this Texas couple,
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    Debby and Eric Berry.
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    They control two Dallas-based
    companies called Genesis
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    Capital Management and Genesis
    Alliance, which bankroll a
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    nonprofit organization called
    the Nehemiah Fund.
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    It promises a 100% matching
    grant to churches willing to
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    put a minimum of $500,000 into a
    bank account controlled by a
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    representative of the Berrys.
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    BARRY MINKOW: Genesis Capital,
    Genesis Alliance, and the
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    Nehemiah Fund is what
    I believe a
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    financial crime in progress.
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: What makes
    you so convinced
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    it's a crime in progress?
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    BARRY MINKOW: All the red flags,
    every one of them.
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    No accountability
    from the Berrys.
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    They just are one man shows.
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    The untenable business model--
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    normally and regularly, people
    who are in the grant business
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    don't ask for your money first
    before they double it.
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: He decided to go
    undercover and apply for a
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    matching grant.
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    Wearing a hidden camera provided
    by 60 Minutes, which
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    was concealed in a pair of
    glasses, and carrying a phony
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    bank statement prepared by the
    FBI, stating his church add an
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    excess of $2 million, he met
    the Berrys in a Dallas
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    restaurant.
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    One of the first things he asked
    was how much money was
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    in the fund.
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    BARRY MINKOW: What can I say
    without being misrepresenting
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    to my elder board?
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    DEBBY BERRY: Tens of millions.
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: The Berrys told
    him the money from the
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    matching grants comes from
    a commercial venture they
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    control called Genesis Capital
    Management, which they claim
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    pays out a return of 300% on
    investments totaling more than
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    a billion dollars.
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    BARRY MINKOW: So you guys invest
    ethanol plants, various
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    apartment complexes,
    resort hotels?
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    You're in all that stuff?
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    ERIC BERRY: Different
    stuff, yeah.
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    BARRY MINKOW: Amazing.
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: Minkow searched
    the public records,
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    but was unable to turn up assets
    or holdings consistent
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    with the Berry's claims.
  • 9:19 - 9:23
    He did find outstanding tax
    liens against them totaling
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    more than $240,000, and
    discovered that they were
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    operating out of three
    small rooms in this
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    Dallas office park.
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    BARRY MINKOW: They give you
    three to one your money back
  • 9:32 - 9:34
    if they're in a business with
    you commercially, one to one
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    if you're a nonprofit?
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    They claim to have
    $1.5 billion?
  • 9:39 - 9:41
    And yet they operate out of
    900 square feet where they
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    share a secretary with everybody
    else on the floor?
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    I mean, I have a church and our
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    budget's like $1.8 million.
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    It tastes like eight
    elders and 17
  • 9:48 - 9:50
    employees to run $1.8 million.
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    How much the more
    $1.5 billion.
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    It's just misrepresentation
    after misrepresentation.
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: To get an
    independent evaluation of the
  • 9:57 - 10:01
    Berrys' operation, we went
    to Sean Delany, a former
  • 10:01 - 10:04
    Assistant Attorney General in
    New York state, and an expert
  • 10:04 - 10:05
    in charity fraud.
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    We gave them Minkow's report,
    and transcripts of all the
  • 10:08 - 10:10
    tape conversations.
  • 10:10 - 10:12
    SEAN DELANY: It has the indicia
    of a Ponzi scheme.
  • 10:12 - 10:14
    And yes, it appears to be
    in its early stages.
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: What's your
    general impression of the work
  • 10:16 - 10:18
    that Barry Minkow has
    done on this?
  • 10:18 - 10:20
    SEAN DELANY: For someone who
    does not have the tools of a
  • 10:20 - 10:24
    law enforcement agency at his
    disposal, Mr. Minkow does
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    quite thorough work.
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    I was impressed with
    his report.
  • 10:27 - 10:29
    GRAHAM MESSICK: He's familiar
    with the field of fraud.
  • 10:29 - 10:30
    SEAN DELANY: I've heard
    that he is.
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    GRAHAM MESSICK: If you had money
    with the Berrys right
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    now, knowing what you know,
    would you call up the Berrys
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    and say I want my money back?
  • 10:36 - 10:38
    SEAN DELANY: I'd demand my money
    back in writing and I'd
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    hire myself a good lawyer.
  • 10:40 - 10:41
    GRAHAM MESSICK: The Berrys
    have not been
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    charged with any crime.
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    They declined our request for
    an interview, and for copies
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    of their latest financial
    statements.
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    But since Minkow issued his
    report, the FBI, the Texas
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    Attorney General, and the
    Montana Auditor's Office have
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    all begun investigations.
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    Minkow sees uncovering fraud
    as an extension of his
  • 11:00 - 11:03
    ministry, but wants everyone
    to know it's not easy.
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    BARRY MINKOW: One report
    is wrong, I'm done.
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    When you're Barry Minkow and you
    say something's a fraud,
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    get law enforcement involved,
    blow the whistle, and you're
  • 11:13 - 11:15
    wrong, it's over, over.
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    It's called one and done.
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    And that's why I'm so afraid
    to take on new stuff.
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    Because I'm like, I've been
    right, like, 11 of 11 times.
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    And it's like, nobody
    bats 1,000.
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    And I'm going to be wrong
    and I'm not perfect.
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    And I make mistakes and I don't
    want to take on cases.
  • 11:27 - 11:29
    And then, the ticking clock, the
    investors investing, and
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    you've got to move, and
    you've got this--
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    but I can't be wrong.
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    But this guy's going to
    lose money, and the--
  • 11:34 - 11:35
    [SIGHS]
  • 11:35 - 11:37
    GRAHAM MESSICK: He's now helped
    authorities uncover far
  • 11:37 - 11:39
    more fraud than he
    ever perpetrated.
  • 11:39 - 11:42
    And as a result, Judge Dickran
    Tevrizian, who originally
  • 11:42 - 11:46
    sentenced Minkow 25 years,
    released him from the terms of
  • 11:46 - 11:47
    his probation.
  • 11:47 - 11:49
    DICKRAN TEVRIZIAN: He has
    done some good things.
  • 11:49 - 11:52
    He's uncovered several hundreds
    of million dollars
  • 11:52 - 11:53
    worth of frauds.
  • 11:53 - 11:55
    And I give them credit
    for that.
  • 11:55 - 11:57
    GRAHAM MESSICK: So you,
    I mean-- this is real.
  • 11:57 - 12:00
    You've heard from federal
    authorities, federal agencies,
  • 12:00 - 12:03
    that he has helped them in
    various investigations.
  • 12:03 - 12:05
    DICKRAN TEVRIZIAN: Not only the
    federal agencies, local
  • 12:05 - 12:09
    agencies, but the insurance
    industry in covering the loss
  • 12:09 - 12:11
    of frauds that have
    been committed.
  • 12:11 - 12:13
    Autographed copy
    of this book--
  • 12:13 - 12:15
    GRAHAM MESSICK: And Minkow
    has not lost his
  • 12:15 - 12:16
    flair for self promotion.
  • 12:16 - 12:18
    He's written a book called
    Cleaning Up.
  • 12:18 - 12:21
    And his agent is negotiating
    with several production
  • 12:21 - 12:23
    companies to film
    his life story.
  • 12:23 - 12:25
    What do you want?
  • 12:25 - 12:27
    What are you looking for?
  • 12:27 - 12:29
    BARRY MINKOW: I want everybody
    who's ever failed to know that
  • 12:29 - 12:30
    they can come back
    from failure.
  • 12:30 - 12:33
    You can take what you used to
    use for evil and manipulative
  • 12:33 - 12:36
    reasons and to hurt people, and
    use those same talents and
  • 12:36 - 12:37
    abilities to help them.
  • 12:37 - 12:41
    And I believe people
    can change.
  • 12:41 - 12:44
    GRAHAM MESSICK: One footnote,
    Genesis and Nehemiah are
  • 12:44 - 12:46
    common names used by
    many legitimate
  • 12:46 - 12:47
    companies and charities.
  • 12:47 - 12:50
    For more information on the
    enterprises operated and
  • 12:50 - 12:53
    funded by the Berrys, as well as
    more of our interview with
  • 12:53 - 12:58
    Barry Minkow, go to our website
    at 60minutes.com.
  • 12:58 - 13:01
    [TICKING CLOCK]
  • 13:01 - 13:02
    SPEAKER 1: 60 minutes.
  • 13:02 - 13:04
    We're always on cbsnews.com.
Title:
Barry Minkow ZZZZ Best CEO Profiled on CBS 60 Minutes
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
13:05

English subtitles

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