Authors: Mitchell Zuckoff
Chapter Nine: “Always reaching for the moon”
128 | the Supreme Court took: Leonard Levy, |
128 | “protect a man in falsely”: |
129 | one that would take a heavy toll: The story of Curley's feud with Edwin Grozier and the |
131 | Louis and Charlotte Blass: “Ponzi Winners Include Coupon Wizard's Wife,” |
132 | Henry Neilson: “Many Attend Ponzi Hearings,” |
133 | Charles Ritucci, who ran the Plymouth office: “South Shore Invests in Ponzi's Coupon Scheme,” |
133 | the North End branch: |
133 | index-card system: “Ponzi to Be Called in Federal Hearing,” |
134 | In May alone, 1,525 investors: Monthly investment totals come from the federal audit that led to the closure of the Securities Exchange Company and were evidence at Ponzi's 1922 trial. “How The Bubble Grew,” |
134 | “A little dollar could start on a journey”: Ponzi, p. 93. |
134 | If flight or surrender crossed his mind: Only much later would he recognize his hubris, writing of this time period, “But I lacked judgment and caution. I thought I'd reach for more. It was there in plain sight. I did not look beyond it. If I did, I did not see. I must have been blinded by ambition and conceit.” Ibid., p. 89. |
134 | “The average man is never satisfied”: Ibid., p. 89. |
134 | Gneccos and the Donderos had poured: List of Unsecured Creditors, in Summary of Debts and Assets of Charles Ponzi in Bankruptcy, Schedule A, Case 28063, on file at the National Archives and Records Administration in Waltham, Massachusetts. |
135 | a tentative step toward flight: Nancy Wrynne, “Ponzi's Home Life Is Simple and Devoid of Ostentation,” |
135 | “What was I going to do?”: Ponzi, p. 109. |
135 | He consoled himself with a story: Ibid., p. 114. |
136 | a vacant house on Slocum Road: Details of the house come in part from a June 3, 2003, tour of the home and property records found at Lexington Town Hall. The amount and method of Ponzi's purchase of the house was long subject to dispute, but the figure of thirty-nine thousand dollars was ultimately deemed most credible by the bankruptcy trustees. For purchase and decoration details, see “Understood He Paid $29,000 for Home,” |
138 | Ponzi received his first notice: “Dear Old âGet Rich Quick' Pops out of Postal Guide,” |
139 | Ponzi mollified Cassullo: “Swell Ponzi's Assets $15,500,” |
139 | Cassullo was not satisfied: “Says Three-Fourths of Police Ponzi Investors,” |
140 | June was on track: Monthly investment totals come from the federal audit that led to the closure of the Securities Exchange Company and were evidence at Ponzi's 1922 trial. “How the Bubble Grew,” |
140 | Daniel Desmond: “Desmond Resigns from Lawrence Trust Company,” |
140 | Blasses spun the wheel of fortune: “Ponzi Winners Include Coupon Wizard's Wife,” |
Chapter Ten: “I never bluff.”
143 | Napoli Macaroni Manufacturing Company: “Well-Known Men Got Big Hauls from Ponzi,” |
144 | Ponzi walked unannounced: Ponzi, pp. 106â8. Although Ponzi is the only source of the exchange between himself and Poole, his account is supported by verifiable facts about his purchase of the company. See Summary of Debts and Assets of Charles Ponzi in Bankruptcy, Schedule B(2), Case 28063, on file at the National Archives and Records Administration in Waltham, Massachusetts; “Ponzi Creditors May Get Back 47 Percent,” |
145 | He bought a small tenement house: Summary of Debts and Assets of Charles Ponzi in Bankruptcy, Schedule B(2), Case 28063, on file at the National Archives and Records Administration in Waltham, Massachusetts; “Ponzi Creditors May Get Back 47 Percent,” |
145 | forty thousand dollars to Charles Pizzi: “Bank Cashed Ponzi Notes for $240,000,” |
145 | The smallest, for five hundred dollars: Summary of Debts and Assets of Charles Ponzi in Bankruptcy, Schedule B(2), Case 28063, on file at the National Archives and Records Administration in Waltham, Massachusetts; “Well-Known Men Got Big Hauls from Ponzi,” |
145 | He bought fifty shares: Summary of Debts and Assets of Charles Ponzi in Bankruptcy, Schedule B(2), Case 28063, on file at the National Archives and Records Administration in Waltham, Massachusetts. |
145 | Hanover Trust, a bank with about $5 million: Annual Report of the Massachusetts Commissioner of Banks, 1920, p. vi, and 1921, pp. viâxv. |
146 | The largest mortgage loan Ponzi made: Summary of Debts and Assets of Charles Ponzi in Bankruptcy, Schedule B(2), Case 28063, on file at the National Archives and Records Administration in Waltham, Massachusetts. |
146 | he controlled about six hundred: Ponzi, p. 100. |
146 | issue another two thousand shares: |
146 | Ponzi was depositing more: Ibid. Also “Story of Hanover Trust Company and Ponzi,” |
147 | One afternoon in early June: The narrative account of Ponzi's effective takeover of the Hanover Trust Company comes from Ponzi himself; see Ponzi, pp. 100â103. Ponzi engages in a certain amount of self-aggrandizement on the subject of Hanover Trust, but his version fits with the findings of the Massachusetts bank commissioner, the testimony of Hanover Trust officials in Ponzi's bankruptcy and criminal court cases, and the rulings of several judges, including the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, in |
147 | Chmielinski was a bull of a man: “Polish Industrial Association Was Closed Up Today,” |
148 | bank's annual meeting of stockholders: |
148 | The more he bought: Ponzi, p. 105: “The more I bought, the more I wanted to buy.” |
149 | a latter-day Count of Monte Cristo: Ibid., p. 106; Alexandre Dumas, |
149 | he wanted to “test its power”: Ibid., p. 99. |
149 | “Wrap it up, please”: Ibid., p. 106. |
150 | “The more servants, the less freedom”: “Ponzi Long Had Plan for Riches, Says Wife,” |
150 | a glittering diamond bracelet: “Mrs. Ponzi Would Not Take Gems,” |
150 | a string of lustrous pearls: Clarence White, “Mrs. Ponzi Says, âWe Will Stay Here and Square Debts,' ” |
151 | a Boston terrier puppy: “Ponzi Pursued,” |
151 | Ponzi was dealing with: The colloquy between Ponzi and the inspectors comes from his autobiography, pp. 109â11. Confirmation comes, in part, from court testimony by Al Ciullo, who confirmed that he had received a package of reply coupons from Italy and brought them to Ponzi. “Hope to End Ponzi Case by Wednesday,” |
152 | John Elbye of Everett: “ |
152 | an unassuming man with a prominent nose: The Securities Exchange Company note issued to Principio Santosuosso was reproduced in “Mr. Ponzi and His Ponzied Finance,” |
153 | J. Rufus Wallingford: George Randolph Chester, |
154 | wired more than five thousand dollars: Nancy Wrynne, “Ponzi's Home Life Is Simple and Devoid of Ostentation,” |
154 | Rose worried: Charles Merrill, “His Pretty Girl Wife Sorry When Ponzi Quit $50 Job,” |
154 | Roberto de Masellis: “Reporters Convinced of De Masellis' Honesty,” |
155 | “Mr. Ponzi bears a favorable”: A copy of the credit report, which describes the June 30, 1920, visit and was dated July 26, 1920, was found among the oldest stories on Ponzi in the |
155 | obtain coupons from Poland: Ponzi, pp. 111â13. |
155 | “I was left high and dry”: Ibid., p. 113. |
155 | clerks had filled wastebaskets with greenbacks: Ponzi, p. 99. |
155 | In June alone: Monthly investment totals come from the federal audit that led to the closure of the Securities Exchange Company and were evidence at Ponzi's 1922 trial. “How the Bubble Grew,” |
155 | prohibiting post offices from redeeming: “Seeking Source of Big Profits,” |
156 | a ten-thousand-dollar loan: |
156 | He paid all Gnecco Brothers' creditors: The Bradstreet Company credit report dated July 26, 1920. |