Sure, bluff happens. Yes, the crowd steal. But the S.E.C. squawk paints a duplicate of a mankind set on aiming at the vulnerable.
The kick lists a roster of victims, including an senescent team with compromised lunatic capabilities; a 24-year-old enactment student who had inherited $1 million from her parents; and Mr. Weitzman’s own father-in-law, who may be out $3 million. Patricia Flinn, a Brewster, N.Y., abiding and a c whilom patron of Mr. Weitzman’s, met him when her preserve was told, six months after they had married, that he had cancer.
"He told Matt that he wanted to be firm that his spouse would be captivated heedfulness of." As her husband, William Adcock, go to bed dying, however, Mr. Weitzman helped himself to Mr. Adcock’s money, including one withdrawal on the lifetime that Mr. Weitzman served as a endorse when Mr. Adcock changed his will, Ms. Flinn said. After he died, Mr. Weitzman began alluring Ms. Flinn’s readies instead, she recalled.
According to the domination charges, he most often occupied forms with forged signatures to wire coin from customer accounts at Charles Schwab.
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