Pheran
Diamond Member
This one is just bizarre. Also, absolutely epic facepalm at the stupidity of the victim.
News Article
Another article with some different details
News Article
A New York couple have been charged with defrauding a wealthy musician to the tune of $20 million (£12.3 million) after he innocently visited their computer servicing company to have a virus removed from his laptop.
The hard-to-believe story started started in 2004 when moneyed pianist Roger Davidson asked Mount Kisco computer store owners Vickram Bedi, 36, and his Icelandic girlfriend Helga Invarsdottir, 39, to rid his computer of a virus.
On learning of Davidson's wealth, the pair are alleged to have concocted an elaborate social engineering scam that defrauded him of somewhere between the $6 million the police have been able to confirm with an upper figure of as much as $20 million.
Exactly how they executed the fraud reads like something out of an implausible movie plot.
According to police, the pair were able to convince Davidson that the virus was in fact a symptom of a much larger plot in which he was being menaced by government intelligence agencies, foreign nationals and even priests associated with Catholic organisation, Opus Dei.
So convinced was the victim he is said to have agreed to pay the pair $160,000 per month for 24-hour protection against the fictitious threats, payments which continued until recently.
As book readers will recall, Opus Dei were central to the fanciful plot of Dan Brown's The Da Vinci Code, later made into a high-profile film.
"The suspects were isolating the victim and were basically trying to control every dollar that he had," said Police Chief Anthony Marraccini. "They did it very systematically and infiltrated every aspect of his life. It was almost a brainwashing technique."
Westchester County District Attorney Janet DiFiore concurred.
"These two defendants preyed upon, duped and exploited the fears of this victim with cold calculation and callousness. The systematic method with which they continued the larceny over a period of more than six years is nothing short of heartless," she said.
If convicted, the couple could spend between 8 and 25 years in prison.
Unlikely frauds of this kind are not unheard of. Two years ago, a reverend in Oregon was warned to stop transferring money to Nigerian 419 scammers after giving them $400,000 in compulsively gullible acts.
Another article with some different details
All Roger Davidson – a Grammy-winning composer and heir to a massive oil fortune – wanted was to get his computer fixed.
According to authorities in New York State, he ended up being scammed out of as much as $20 million (U.S.) by the computer store’s owner, Vickram Bedi.
Bedi, 36, spun a bizarre story for Davidson, 58, about a multinational plot to take over the U.S. government. Bedi and his Icelandic girlfriend, Helga Invarsdottir, now face charges in what police say was an elaborate scam, The Wall Street Journal reported.
The story begins in August 2004, when Davidson brought his malfunctioning computer into Bedi’s Mount Kisco, N.Y., store.
Bedi told Davidson that the computer was infected by a suspiciously malevolent virus. He said he had traced the virus to a hard-drive hidden in Honduras and that his uncle, an Indian army officer, had flown there to retrieve it.
While there, Bedi said, the uncle had also uncovered a plot by Polish priests in the Roman Catholic Opus Dei organization to destabilize the government of the United States.
Bad news for Roger Davidson the American was also bad news for Roger Davidson the private citizen. Bedi told Davidson he had also been targeted by Opus Dei for assassination.
Opus Dei has become a familiar boogeyman in the literature of conspiracy, including Dan Brown’s The Da Vinci Code.
However outlandish, the story appears to have convinced Davidson. He began paying Bedi and Invarsdottir for around-the-clock protection, most of it virtual. The reported price tag for these services was $160,000 (U.S.) per month.
“The suspects were isolating the victim and were basically trying to control every dollar that he had,” Harrison, N.Y., police chief Anthony Marraccini told the Journal. “They did it very systematically and infiltrated every aspect of his life. It was almost a brainwashing technique.”
When they were arrested, Invarsdottir and Bedi were sitting on bank accounts holding $7.6 million. Both are being held on a count of grand larceny.
Police told the Journal the scam was uncovered as part of an investigation into a separate criminal matter.
Davidson, through an intermediary, refused comment.
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