The Guardian (USA)

Conman who swindled $175m in ‘massive’ psychic fraud scheme sentenced to 10 years

- Leyland Cecco in Toronto

A Canadian conman, who swindled more than US$175m (C$241m) from his North American victims through “a massive psychic mass-mailing fraud scheme” has been sentenced to 10 years in prison.

Patrice Runner, 57, who holds citizenshi­p with both Canada and France, was convicted by a jury in June of conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud, eight counts of mail fraud, four counts of wire fraud and conspiracy to commit money laundering. He was found not guilty on four counts of mail fraud.

On Monday, a New York judge handed down a decade-long sentence to Runner, whom US authoritie­s had been pursing since 2014.

“Patrice Runner’s extravagan­t lifestyle, born on the backs of millions of older and vulnerable Americans, has come to an end,” Chris Nielsen, the inspector in charge of the US Postal Inspection Service’s Philadelph­ia division, said in a statement following the sentencing, calling it an “appropriat­e punishment”.

Among Runner’s scams, his companies sent letters, falsely purported to be individual­ized, to millions of people. The correspond­ence, written in cursive, was seemingly from the famed French psychic Maria Duval and promised the recipient an “opportunit­y to achieve great wealth and happiness with the psychic’s assistance”, according to the

US Department of Justice.

Recipients were often “elderly and vulnerable” people and were encouraged to send a fee to Runner’s company for an “astral-clairvoyan­t forecast”. Once payment had been made, the recipient would then receive dozens of additional letters, all seemingly personaliz­ed, requesting additional fees. They were also asked to mail back personal items, such as locks of hair, palm prints and photos – “to conduct additional personaliz­ed rituals and astrologic­al services”, according to the indictment.

Runner has maintained he never crossed a legal line in his mail business, Infogest Direct Marketing, arguing people would have asked for their money back if they were not satisfied.

“Maybe it’s not moral, maybe it’s bullshit,” he said in an interview with the Walrus magazine. “But it doesn’t mean it’s fraud.”

Runner has twice been found guilty of running scams by Canadian authoritie­s. In 1991, a company held in Runner’s name was fined US$31,100 for falsely advertisin­g the services of a clairvoyan­t who could predict winning lottery numbers. In 2000, a company under his name was fined US$362,000 by a Quebec court for misleading advertisin­g about weight-loss products.

In the Walrus interview, made from a New York detention centre, Runner said the appeal of his long-running con lay in his ability to seize the attention of millions of people who, “after a few minutes … sends a cheque, to get a product, to an address or company they’ve never heard of”.

The court heard how letters were printed in Canada and transporte­d by truck to Albany, New York, and then mailed out in large batches. Companies linked to him sent an estimated 56m letters over two decades between 1994 and 2014, raking in US$175m from nearly 1.5 million people across Canada and the US.

“The most lucrative years of the [Maria] Duval letter business were from 2005 to 2010,” Runner told the Walrus, referring to when he made US$23m in a single year.

The DOJ says Runner used a number of shell companies registered in Canada and Hong Kong as a way of masking his role in the fraud. He moved often, living in Switzerlan­d, France, the Netherland­s, Costa Rica and Spain.

Law enforcemen­t began investigat­ing the scam in 2014 and shut down the operation two years later. In December 2020, after lengthy extraditio­n negotiatio­ns, Runner was arrested in Ibiza and eventually flown to New York.

Four other people linked to the mass-mailing scam have all pleaded guilty.

Before the trial, Runner said he did not have enough to pay for a lawyer.

“I used to live like a rock star,” he said. “I was not cautious enough. I thought the mail-order business would be forever.”

 ?? ?? US authoritie­s have been pursuing Patrice Runner since 2014. Photograph: Justin Lane/EPA
US authoritie­s have been pursuing Patrice Runner since 2014. Photograph: Justin Lane/EPA

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