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Pump & Dump

The man who told you the stock was uninvestible was already covering his short.

A retail investor in Phoenix watched a Citron Research tweet and shorted Roku alongside the man he trusted. Federal prosecutors say that man had already closed his position. The trial of Andrew Left begins this week.

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The thief did not need a truck. He needed a UPS Store mailbox and a name nobody checked.

Aivaras Zigmantas was sentenced May 6 to five years in federal prison for stealing $10.1 million in interstate cargo without breaking a single lock. He used aliases, fake websites, and a load board that takes strangers at their word.

Pump & Dump

The voice on the phone said Grandma. The voice on the phone was a script.

A federal indictment unsealed in Vermont this week names seven more Quebec residents in a cross-border operation that allegedly drained more than $21 million from elderly Americans by impersonating their grandchildren. The call center ran like a business. The grandparents answered like family.

Pump & Dump

The invoices were signed by a boss who never signed them.

Poul Thorsen vanished in 2011 with a federal indictment trailing him and a Harley, a house, and a stack of forged invoices in his wake. On Thursday, May 8, 2026, U.S. Air Marshals walked him into Atlanta.

Pump & Dump

The refund went to the preparer. That is the whole crime.

Tina Louise Yager prepared taxes at a Jackson-Hewitt in Republic, Missouri. Federal prosecutors say she filed returns her clients never authorized and routed the refunds to herself. The total was small. The mechanism was not.

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The Massachusetts default judgment crossed the border on a Monday in May.

Amar Bahadoorsingh did not appear in Boston in 2023. He did not appear in Toronto in 2026 either. The ban arrived anyway, and the machine he allegedly fed has three other B.C. names attached to it this spring.

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The word he used was safe. The fund was a coffee shop, a mine, and a Ponzi.

Vincent Camarda built A.G. Morgan Financial Advisors in a Massapequa storefront and steered at least $138 million of his clients' retirement money into a Philadelphia Ponzi, a western mining bet, and his son's coffee startup. On April 3, 2026, he pleaded guilty.

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The voice on the phone sounded like her grandson. It was a man in a Montreal call center.

Stefano Zanetti ran the U.S. side of a Montreal-built grandparent scam, coordinating couriers who collected cash from elderly victims in cities the network rotated through to stay ahead of police. A federal judge in Pittsburgh just gave him more than fifteen years.

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The straw student was the product. The classroom was the cover.

For nearly a decade, Brandon Robinson fed names into the federal student aid pipeline and the pipeline paid him back. The classrooms were real. The students were not.

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The CFO withdrew six hundred dollars at a time. The restaurant kept smiling.

Aaron Mattison, the former chief financial officer of Atlanta's Bar Vegan, has been indicted on theft, forgery, and money laundering charges tied to alleged withdrawals that walked out of the company in pieces small enough not to trip a wire. The restaurant is closed. The questions are not.

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The teller smiled. The driver's license was a costume.

Shannon Kurrie walked into banks in Michigan and Indiana with someone else's name in her hand. Federal prosecutors say she did it well enough to clear a quarter of a million dollars before the float ran out.

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The pill bottle in Lusaka and the cobalt under the floor

A billion-dollar health agreement that 1.3 million HIV patients are counting on stalled past its April 30 deadline. The record suggests the negotiation was never really about health.

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The pay raise is the reform. The pay raise is also the target.

Zelenskiy rolled out an army pay reform on May 1 that quadruples some frontline salaries and opens a phased demobilization door. The same week, police were still untangling a drone-supply scam that took 1.5 million hryvnia from volunteers. The money is real. So are the men who follow it.

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The rally got narrower. Goldman called it mania. The pitch in your inbox called it opportunity.

The S&P 500 just posted its strongest earnings quarter in five years while oil burned through $126 a barrel and the Strait of Hormuz stayed shut. Goldman analysts called the rally "mania." That word is now traveling through inboxes attached to pitches that have nothing to do with Apple or Caterpillar.

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The headline moved the gold. The pitch moved the retiree.

A Reuters wire moves a market by half a percent. In a strip-mall office a thousand miles from the news, a closer reads the same headline and dials the next number on the list. This is how a geopolitical story becomes a sales script.

Pump & Dump

The board seat was already warm when they gave it away

Susan Watkins had served six years on a board that controls more than $120 million in mandatory farmer money, and she had already been selected as treasurer when the U.S. Department of Agriculture quietly replaced her with someone else. The USDA has not explained why. The board has not explained why. Nobody has explained why.

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The president signed the document. Then he signed a different one.

A South Korean appeals court handed former President Yoon Suk-yeol seven years for obstruction, fabricated paperwork, and using his own bodyguards as a wall between himself and the law. The sentence is the smaller story. The document is the larger one.

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The short squeeze that wasn't: how a merger built the machine that stranded sixty-five thousand shareholders

The SEC says two CEOs sold a short-squeeze story to drive a stock high enough to raise $137.5 million, then spun the oil and gas assets into a private company nobody could sell. The trading halt came on a Friday in December.

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The CFO on the screen was not the CFO. He almost wired the money anyway.

A finance employee nearly sent $100,000 to a fake vendor after a video call with a man who looked and sounded exactly like his boss. The man on the screen was a file. The wire was real.

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The cocoa was Ivorian. The receipts said Ghanaian. The money was already spent.

Ghana's cocoa regulator says some licensed buyers took government money meant to pay local farmers and used it to buy cheaper beans smuggled across the Ivorian border. The farmers are still waiting. The receipts will say what the receipts need to say.