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- In my career as a defense attorney,
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I've handled some of new York's biggest white collar crimes,
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including defending those accused
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of insider trading and political corruption.
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- [Narrator] Today, Vinoo is going
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to review financial crimes and TV and movies
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to determine what Hollywood gets right and wrong.
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[upbeat sleuth music] [coffee pouring]
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[fan whirring]
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[TV dial clicking] [electric humming]
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As you're watching these clips,
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bear in mind that anyone can be a victim
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of financial crime, not some little old lady
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but also the college-educated person who thinks he
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or she knows what he's doing when it comes to money.
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[TV static buzzing] [upbeat sleuth music]
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First step, "Catch Me If You Can."
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- [Frank] Most trusted name in the sky.
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- [Vinoo] In this scene, young Leo playing Frank Abagnale
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is forging checks.
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- [Frank] I have to earn my wings real soon.
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Please get in touch with Joanna Carlton from the 10th grade.
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Tell her I'm sorry that I could
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not take her to the junior prom.
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Love, your son, Frank.
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[bright pleasant instrumental music]
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- So a lot of fun facts here about Frank Abagnale.
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In 1967, he was able to pass the Louisiana bar exam
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without ever having gone to law school.
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There's so much about this guy.
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Ultimately, he became an FBI informant,
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and now he runs a consulting company.
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[pleasant instrumental music] [water sloshing]
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In this scene, he is creating a fake check,
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and he does that by using the actual logo
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by putting it in a tub and pasting it
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onto this piece of paper.
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Today, you could do all of this in 15 minutes.
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Didn't have to go through the whole rigamarole
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that he went through back during the movie
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back in those days.
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So it's a lot easier today, but of course,
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very few people use checks, and therefore, [laughs]
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it makes it these checks are scrutinized more
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when they're actually put into a bank.
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[pleasant instrumental music] [muffled chatter]
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- Hello, how are ya? - Fine, thanks.
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- So bank tellers or people that work
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at check cashing places are trained
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to look out for imperfections in a check.
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Check fraud is actually monitored by the banks.
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So check kiting is the crime.
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They'll see a check, they'll see something off,
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and they will actually call the authorities
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from there while they're processing these checks.
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[TV static buzzing] [intense sleuth music]
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Next up, "Terminator 2."
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In this scene, you see a young John Connor
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using an Atari laptop machine to steal money from an ATM.
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[electric trilling and clicking]
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- [Boy] Will you hurry up? This is taking too long.
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- [John] Go baby, go baby, go baby.
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All right, pin number.
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- Computers, ATMs, they've gotten more sophisticated.
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They're a lot more protection,
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so some of these things will shut down
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and not allow you an opportunity to use
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and get multiple numbers wrong.
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So in essence, is this accurate from today's standards?
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Not really.
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This was something that, back then years ago,
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that you could do which was try
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to randomize numbers to figure out the pin.
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But today it's unlikely that something like this would work.
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- Where'd you learn this stuff from anyway?
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- From my mom, my real mom, I mean.
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Withdraw 3-0-0 bucks. Come on baby.
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Come on, come on, come on, yes!
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- [Boy] Hey, it worked.
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- All right. Easy money.
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- So young John Connor has an accomplice with him.
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So that kid who's with him telling him
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to hurry up clearly is somebody that, in New York,
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would be called acting in concert with him,
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where at the federal level,
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it would be called a co-conspirator
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'cause they worked together
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to get an illegal means accomplished,
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in this case, stealing money.
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- Come on, let's go spend some money.
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- So in 1991 when James Cameron released this movie,
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it would've been a lot more difficult
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to capture John Connor.
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But in 2020, it's gonna be pretty easy
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for the cops and the bags to chase somebody
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because they'll have cameras inside
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and cameras outside, and they can go
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after these people retracing their your steps.
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[TV static buzzing] [intense sleuth music]
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Next up, "Mr. Robot.
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In this scene, the main character has found a way
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to transfer money from a Chinese hacker group
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back into the accounts of the people
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who originally had their money stolen.
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- I don't get it. What's going on?
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- All of the money Whiterose and her cronies
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has been stealing for decades just went back to the people.
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- So in the scene, you see the main character,
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in essence, acting like a Robin Hood
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and taking money from the thieves or the rich
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and giving it back to the poor,
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or in this case, the ones who were defrauded.
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It's a great concept morally, and in reality,
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something like this could happen.
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But you can't do what she's trying to do
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or no individual can do what she's trying to do
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because it does involve fraud over the wires,
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and the US government likes
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to charge everyone with wire fraud.
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[bright futuristic music]
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- How?
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- We found a way to evenly disperse
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and anonymously into everyone's E-coin wallets.
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[muffled chatter]
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- Everyone got this much?
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- Yep, and due to E Corp's insistence
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that E-coin remain independent from the US dollar,
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it is completely impossible for them
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to reverse the transactions.
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- So you're actually viewing the scene,
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in essence, hacking, right?
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Which is ultimately just stealing.
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Now it is a crime.
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Ultimately, if this actually ever happened,
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the US government be in a tough position
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because do they punish the person
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who is actually making people whole?
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It's a tough one. I'm not sure which way they would go.
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- This is illegal. This is stealing.
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- After what the Dark Army did to you?
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Fuck, after what they did to everyone,
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you really wanna start defending them?
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- This isn't what justice is supposed to look like.
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We have laws for a reason.
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- And they were so powerful,
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they wrote the laws to benefit themselves.
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They got away with everything because they banked on us.
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- So let me add this.
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In terms of how easy this for the United States government
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to prosecute someone who's involved in Bitcoin fraud,
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it's not, you know why?
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'Cause US government doesn't understand this space.
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They are really operating in the dark
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and making guesses and trying to use their knowledge
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of traditional wire fraud and try to apply it here.
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But it doesn't really work,
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so you can expect to see a lot of change in the laws
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and the government try to catch up over the next few years.
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[TV static buzzing] [intense sleuth music]
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Next up, "Wolf of Wall Street."
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[muffled chatter]
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- In this scene, you're gonna be watching DiCaprio
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teach his underlings how to run a pump
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and dump scheme involving penny stocks.
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- First, we pitch 'em Disney, AT&T, IBM,
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blue chip stocks exclusively, companies these people know.
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Once we've suckered them in, we unload the dog shit,
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the pink sheets, the penny stocks,
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where we make the money, 50% commission, baby.
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- In the scene, Belfort is teaching his underlings
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how to do a classic pump and dump scheme
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by ultimately selling penny stocks.
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These brokers are gonna get 50% commission.
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This was very profitable
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until the [laughs] FBI shut this down.
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In a pump and dump scheme, a brokerage house
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would buy large quantities of some very cheap stock,
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of penny stock, and hold it, a bunch of it, for themselves
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and then designate somebody to move the stocks.
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And what they do is that they pitch this to clients
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by paying the brokers a high commission
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to motivate them to move it.
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Once the demand peaks,
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the [indistinct] dumpers dump their stock [laughs]
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on the open market at the high price and make it killing.
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This causes a free fall in the stock prices as they sell.
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It's technically not illegal
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to sell an over-the-counter stock like they were doing,
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and even the commission amount is not illegal,
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but no one's gonna buy something
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if they know the broker's got a 50% commission.
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That's a huge red flag.
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So what's illegal is not being honest
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and open about the actual price and the fact
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that there is a nominee there to dump the stock
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once it hits a certain price.
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- You finally found a broker
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on Wall Street that you can trust.
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- [Man On Phone] Sorry, I appreciate the call.
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I really have to give this some thought
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and talk to my wife about it.
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Can I call you back?
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- They don't know, right? They gotta think about it.
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They got talk to the fuckin' wives
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or the fucking tooth fairy.
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Point is, doesn't matter what the fuck they say.
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The only real objection that they have
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is that hey don't trust you guys.
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- So when Leonardo DiCaprio says,
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"You finally found a broker on Wall Street
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who you can trust and consistently make you money,"
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but you watch him and you see what he's doing,
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and he's mocking the person on the other line,
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this is actually what happened.
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The movie is very real.
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Jordan ended up pleading guilty to stock fraud manipulation,
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and his whole company was shut down.
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So what you're seeing here is really how these people
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in these rooms, these boiler rooms,
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and that was another movie, similar concept,
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in these boiler rooms behave.
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[TV static buzzing] [intense sleuth music]
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Next up, "Identity Theft."
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In this scene, Melissa McCarthy, a con artist,
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albeit a funny one, is making a cold call
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to steal someone's identity.
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- [Melissa] From the fraud protection department
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of Identivold Credit Monitoring Service.
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We're calling today because, unfortunately, it appears
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that someone has attempted to steal your identity.
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- Are you kidding me?
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- This is a type of identity theft.
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There's many different types. This is one.
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And in the movie, it's funny because it's Melissa McCarthy,
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but this is actually realistic.
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Stuff like this happens.
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Stuff like this happens when people call elderly people,
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call immigrants, or send them emails like this.
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And then they answer their emails
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and end up giving up their personal information,
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including social security numbers,
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that leads to people opening up credit cards in their names
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and losing lots and lots of money.
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- Are you kidding me? - Gosh, I wish I were.
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We did catch this in time, however,
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but I do suggest you taking advantage
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of our free total protection plan,
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which safeguards your credit rating against theft and fraud.
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- Yes please., if it's free. Absolutely.
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- [Melissa] Just terrific. I went for this plan myself.
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- So one of the things that Melissa McCarthy does
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in this movie, or the writers have done,