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Related: About this forum(Patrice Runner) Canadian Man Sentenced for Operating $175M Psychic Mass-Mailing Fraud Scheme
Source: U.S. Department of Justice
Canadian Man Sentenced for Operating $175M Psychic Mass-Mailing Fraud Scheme
Monday, April 15, 2024
For Immediate Release
Office of Public Affairs
Scheme Defrauded Over 1.3 Million Victims in the United States
A Canadian man was sentenced to 10 years in prison today in the Eastern District of New York for perpetrating a massive psychic mass-mailing fraud scheme that stole more than $175 million from more than 1.3 million victims in the United States.
Following a two-week trial, a federal jury convicted Patrice Runner, 57, a Canadian and French citizen, in June 2023 of conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud, conspiracy to commit money laundering and multiple counts of mail fraud and wire fraud.
Runner operated a mass-mailing fraud scheme from 1994 through November 2014. As part of the scheme, Runner sent letters to millions of U.S. consumers, many of whom were elderly and vulnerable. The letters falsely purported to be individualized, personal communications from well-known so-called psychics Maria Duval and Patrick Guerin and promised that the recipient had the opportunity to achieve great wealth and happiness with the assistance of the psychics in exchange for payment of a fee. Once a victim made a single payment in response to one of the letters, the victim was bombarded with dozens of additional letters, all purporting to be personalized communications from the psychics and offering additional services and items for a fee.
Although the schemes letters frequently stated that a psychic had seen a personalized vision regarding the recipient of the letter, in fact, the scheme sent nearly identical form letters to tens of thousands of victims each week. Runner and his co-conspirators obtained the names of elderly and vulnerable victims by renting and trading mailing lists with other mail fraud schemes. In reality, Duval and Guerin had no role in sending the letters, did not receive responses from the victims, and did not send the additional letters after victims paid money. In fact, no psychics played any role in Runners operation. Some victims made dozens of payments in response to the fraudulent letters, losing thousands of dollars.
Runner directed the scheme for the entirety of its twenty-year operation, directing co-conspirators, who ran the day-to-day operations of the scheme through a Canadian company. Runner used a series of shell companies registered in Canada and Hong Kong to hide his involvement in the scheme while living in multiple foreign countries, including Switzerland, France, the Netherlands, Costa Rica and Spain.
Spanish authorities extradited Runner to the United States to face federal charges in December 2020.
This case demonstrates that the Justice Departments Consumer Protection Branch and its partners in the U.S. Postal Inspection Service (USPIS) are committed to investigating and prosecuting transnational fraud schemes targeting Americans consumers, said Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Brian M. Boynton, head of the Justice Departments Civil Division. The global nature of this scheme meant that we had to rely on law enforcement from around the globe to provide evidence of criminality. We want to thank officials from France, Liechtenstein, Switzerland and Canada, and in particular the Canadian Competition Bureau, for providing assistance in securing evidence in this matter, as well as Spain for arresting and extraditing Runner, ensuring that justice could be done.
Patrice Runners extravagant lifestyle, born on the backs of millions of older and vulnerable Americans, has come to an end, said Inspector in Charge Chris Nielsen of the USPIS Philadelphia Division. ...
-snip-
Read more: https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/canadian-man-sentenced-operating-175m-psychic-mass-mailing-fraud-scheme
Karadeniz
(23,404 posts)Arne
(3,597 posts)Honestly.
muriel_volestrangler
(102,456 posts)I can see that this one was morally repugnant - targeting vulnerable individuals. But why is this fraud, when there are loads of psychics who also make claims about their powers?
I read the Wikipedia article on this, and it still hasn't helped me see what the particular fraud was here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maria_Duval_scam
Is it just this one was really profitable because it chose vulnerable targets?
Eugene
(62,633 posts)The Duval fraud also falsely claimed its letters came from famous psychics.
Fortune telling for a fee is a centuries-old grift traditionally prosecuted as low-level street crime.
If it doesn't carry a big enough fig leaf like "this is for entertainment purposes only,"
the authorities can shut it down.
muriel_volestrangler
(102,456 posts)I suppose it could be the "great wealth" the OP mentions that tipped this over into criminal prosecution.
Though Oprah and many others have got away with it, with "The Secret": https://www.oprahdaily.com/life/a30244004/how-to-manifest-anything/