Mugshot Mysteries

The McDonald's Monopoly Scam: How Uncle Jerry Stole $24 Million

45 min ¡ 8. juni 2026
episode The McDonald's Monopoly Scam: How Uncle Jerry Stole $24 Million cover

Beskrivelse

He spent his whole career guarding the game. Then he robbed it blind. For more than a decade, McDonald's Monopoly turned a paper sticker peeled off a fries box into the most reliable lottery in America. Cash, cars, grand prizes worth a fortune. There was just one problem. The winners were never random. They were chosen, recruited, and coached by a single man. This week on Mugshot Mysteries, we dig into the McMillions scam, the audacious con that drained an estimated $24 million from the world's most famous fast food chain. At the center of it sits Jerome "Uncle Jerry" Jacobson, a former police officer hired by Simon Marketing as the director of security for the very game he would go on to rig. His one job was to protect the integrity of the contest. Instead, he quietly pocketed the most valuable winning pieces and handed them out like party favors. What began in 1989 as a single $25,000 piece slipped to a relative "just to see if he could" grew into something almost too strange to believe. Jacobson built a sprawling underground network of paid fake winners that, by reporters' accounts, included associates of the Colombo crime family, psychics, strip club owners, convicted felons, drug traffickers, and an entire family of Mormons. Ordinary-looking people stood in front of cameras, smiled for press photos, and accepted prizes they had been paid to pretend they won. Then there is the case's strangest wrinkle. In 1995, a $1 million winning piece arrived anonymously in the mail at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, postmarked Dallas. Game rules said prizes could not be transferred, but McDonald's chose to honor it anyway, paying the hospital in annual installments for years. It became one of the largest anonymous gifts in St. Jude's history. The catch? Jacobson later admitted he was the one who sent it. The empire finally cracked in 2000 over a single anonymous tip. The FBI launched Operation Final Answer and made a discovery that read like a punchline. A startling number of "winners" with out-of-state addresses turned out to live within a short drive of Jacobson's South Carolina lake house. To catch the ring red-handed, agents partnered with McDonald's and staged a fake television commercial, filming fraudulent winners as they described, on camera, exactly how they had "won." In August 2001, Jacobson and seven others were arrested. The case expanded to 21 indictments and, in the end, more than 50 people were convicted of mail fraud and conspiracy. Jacobson was sentenced to over three years in prison and ordered to pay millions in restitution. McDonald's, the actual victim here, went on to pay out additional prize money to the honest customers who had spent years buying fries against odds that were never real. A heist. A children's hospital. A cast of co-conspirators stranger than any screenwriter would dare invent. This one has everything. New episodes drop every Mugshot Monday. Search Mugshot Mysteries wherever you listen. Stay curious. Stay kind. SOURCES: United States v. Jerome P. Jacobson et al., U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida, Jacksonville Division, indictment and sentencing records, 2001 to 2003; Federal Bureau of Investigation, "Operation Final Answer," Jacksonville Field Office investigative records; United States Department of Justice, remarks of Attorney General John Ashcroft announcing the McDonald's Monopoly fraud arrests, August 22, 2001; affidavit and testimony of FBI Special Agent Richard "Rick" Dent, as documented in court proceedings and investigative reporting; account of FBI Special Agent Doug Mathews and the undercover "fake commercial" operation greenlit by Special Agent in Charge Tom Kneir, as documented in HBO's McMillion$ and contemporaneous reporting; Maysh, J., "How an Ex-Cop Rigged McDonald's Monopoly Game and Stole Millions," The Daily Beast, July 28, 2018; McMillion, HBO documentary series, six parts, 2020, directed by James Lee Hernandez and Brian Lazarte, executive produced by Mark Wahlberg, Stephen Levinson, and Archie Gips; "How the 'McMillions' scammers rigged McDonald's Monopoly game and stole $24 million," CNBC, February 7, 2020; "McScam: Report details how McDonald's Monopoly game was fixed by ex-cop" and "McDonald's spent $25 million apologizing for man's Monopoly scam," Fox News, 2018; "What Happened To Jerome Jacobson, Mastermind Of The McDonald's Monopoly Fraud?" and "Where Is Doug Mathews, FBI Special Agent Who Helped Crack The McDonald's Monopoly Fraud, Now?," Oxygen, 2023; "How McDonald's Found Out Its Wildly Popular Monopoly Game Was a Fraud," CrimeReads, August 2024; "Donor Turns Fast Food Into Big Bucks for Hospital," contemporaneous wire-service coverage of the anonymous $1 million game piece donated to St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, with remarks from McDonald's U.S.A. president Edward H. Rensi, December 1995; interviews with Robin Colombo, widow of Colombo-family associate Gennaro "Jerry" Colombo, as reported by The Daily Beast; reporting on recruiters and claimed "winners," including Andrew Glomb, Mark Schwartz, Gloria Brown, Michael Hoover, and William "Buddy" Fisher; statements of McDonald's spokesperson Amy Murray and Assistant U.S. Attorney Mark Devereaux, as documented in McMillion and trial reporting; trade-press reporting on the announced feature-film adaptation, with Ben Affleck and Matt Damon attached, 2018; McDonald's Corporation public statements on the 2025 return of the Monopoly promotion and its revised security and audit procedures; "McDonald's Monopoly," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, general reference for timeline, dollar figures, and case summary. DISCLAIMER: This episode discusses financial crime, including mail fraud and conspiracy, corporate fraud, organized crime and associations with the Colombo crime family, drug trafficking among certain participants, and the federal investigation, prosecution, and sentencing that followed. Nothing in this episode constitutes legal, financial, or investigative advice. The Mugshot Mysteries podcast is independently produced and is not affiliated with, sponsored by, or endorsed by McDonald's Corporation, Simon Marketing, Cyrk, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, HBO, Home Box Office, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the United States Department of Justice, or any company, agency, production, or individual referenced in this episode. Our account is reconstructed from publicly available sources, including federal court records, government statements, FBI affidavits as reported in court proceedings, investigative journalism, and documentary reporting. While we make every effort to present this story accurately and responsibly, reporting on historical criminal cases can contain errors, conflicting accounts, and details that evolve over time. We do not claim our narration to be a complete or definitive record, and listeners are encouraged to consult primary sources for verification. Dollar amounts, prize values, participant counts, and the precise timeline of events vary across sources and remain subject to some historical dispute. All individuals named in this episode in connection with the fraud were charged through the United States justice system, and the convictions, sentences, and restitution orders referenced are matters of public record. References to any person, living or deceased, are made strictly in the context of documented reporting and adjudicated outcomes, and are not intended to defame, harass, or cause harm. No living individual is accused of any crime not already adjudicated, and any individual not convicted of a crime is presumed innocent. The views and commentary expressed by the hosts are their own interpretations and opinions and do not constitute statements of fact or legal conclusions. Any third-party names, trademarks, and brands mentioned remain the property of their respective owners and are referenced under fair use for purposes of commentary, criticism, and reporting. Nothing in this episode is legal, financial, medical, or psychological advice. Send us your theories [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2513350/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2513350/support] 🎧 Subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Spotify so you never miss an episode. ⭐ Loved this one? Leave us a review on Apple Podcasts — it's the fastest way to help us grow. 📸 Follow us on TikTok [https://www.tiktok.com/@mugshotmysteriespodcast] and Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/mugshotmysteriespodcast/]for mugshots, mysteries, paranormal, conspiracies, and everything Gabriel said that didn't make the final cut. Stay curious. Stay suspicious.

Kommentarer

0

VÌr den første til ü kommentere

Registrer deg nĂĽ og bli medlem av Mugshot Mysteries sitt community!

Prøv gratis

Prøv gratis i 14 dager

99 kr / Müned etter prøveperioden. ¡ Avslutt nür som helst.

  • Eksklusive podkaster
  • 20 timer lydbøker i mĂĽneden
  • Gratis podkaster

Alle episoder

34 Episoder

episode The DC Sniper: One Got the Needle. The Other Is Still Inside. Pt. 3 cover

The DC Sniper: One Got the Needle. The Other Is Still Inside. Pt. 3

November 10, 2009. Inside a Virginia execution chamber, the man at the center of one of the most infamous killing sprees in American history is asked if he has any final words. He says nothing. No confession, no apology, no reason, the same thing he offered every stranger he killed. Minutes later, John Allen Muhammad is pronounced dead. If this were a simpler story, that would be the ending. But the seventeen-year-old pulled from that car beside him is very much alive, and the courts of this country will spend the next fifteen years arguing not about whether he did it, but about what he is. Same crimes. Two completely different questions. One got answered with a needle. The other may never close. This is Part 3 of our three-part DC Sniper series: the reckoning. Kathryn and Gabriel open with the strange auction that decided where these men would be tried, six jurisdictions competing, and a federal government that chose Virginia in part precisely because it could execute a juvenile. We walk Muhammad's trial and the legal knot at its center: Virginia largely reserved the death penalty for the person who pulled the trigger, and with two shooters and a car built so either could fire unseen from the trunk, the state often couldn't prove which man fired the fatal round. So prosecutors reached for a post-9/11 antiterrorism statute and built their capital case on the ransom letter he'd pinned to a tree. The mastermind was, in the end, sentenced to die less for any shot than for what he wrote. And the motive this whole series has argued, that the target was always his ex-wife Mildred and the strangers were camouflage, was ruled not sufficiently proven and kept out of the courtroom entirely. We're honest with you about exactly what that means: it's what the evidence convinces us of, believed by investigators and by Mildred herself, but never declared by a jury. Then the second trial, and the harder question. Lee Boyd Malvo's jury was asked not whether he did it but what he was. The defense put the grooming itself on trial, the abandonment, the control, the indoctrination laid out in Part 2. The jury rejected the insanity defense but also refused to recommend death, landing on the honest, difficult verdict of responsible, but still a child. We follow the law slowly catching up to that instinct, from Roper v. Simmons ending the juvenile death penalty, through Miller and Montgomery, to Malvo's own case reaching the Supreme Court, and then dissolving unresolved when Virginia changed its law underneath it. Today he remains in prison, parole denied once, a Maryland resentencing he legally won now indefinitely postponed because two neighboring states cannot arrange to get him into the same room. We also tell the reckoning that has nothing to do with either man: the rifle, stolen from a Tacoma gun shop that had lost hundreds of firearms, and the victims' families whose lawsuit produced the first time a gun maker paid for the criminal use of its weapon, a door Congress promptly bricked shut, and a fight the Sandy Hook families would pick up years later. And we close on the question the whole series has been building toward: how much of what a groomed child does belongs to the child, and how much to the man who built him. This concludes our three-part DC Sniper series. New episodes drop every Mugshot Monday. Search Mugshot Mysteries wherever you listen. SOURCES: Court records, trial proceedings, and sentencing from the Virginia prosecutions of John Allen Muhammad (for the murder of Dean Harold Meyers) and Lee Boyd Malvo (for the murder of Linda Franklin), the subsequent Maryland prosecutions, and Malvo's Alford pleas in Spotsylvania County; the Virginia antiterrorism statute under which Muhammad was charged and the Virginia Supreme Court's affirmance; documentation of Muhammad's November 10, 2009 execution at Greensville Correctional Center, Governor Timothy Kaine's denial of clemency, and the U.S. Supreme Court's denial of a stay with the separate statement by Justices Stevens, Ginsburg, and Sotomayor; the U.S. Supreme Court decisions in Roper v. Simmons (2005), Miller v. Alabama (2012), and Montgomery v. Louisiana (2016), and the litigation of Mathena v. Malvo, argued in 2019 and later dismissed; Virginia's 2020 juvenile parole legislation and the Virginia Parole Board's August 2022 denial; Maryland's 2021 Juvenile Restoration Act, the Maryland high court's 2022 ruling, and the September 2024 postponement of Malvo's resentencing; federal firearms-inspection findings regarding Bull's Eye Shooter Supply and the September 2004 civil settlement in which Bushmaster and the dealer paid a combined $2.5 million to victims' families, reported as the first case of its kind; the 2005 Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act; reporting on the 2022 Sandy Hook settlement; and contemporaneous coverage from The Washington Post, the Associated Press, and other outlets. DISCLAIMER: Content warning: This episode discusses capital punishment and an execution in detail, multiple murders, the shooting of a child, domestic violence, and the grooming of a minor. Some of this material is distressing. Please take care while listening, and consider stepping away if any of it is difficult. If you or someone you know is experiencing domestic abuse, support is available; in the United States, the National Domestic Violence Hotline can be reached at 1-800-799-7233. The Mugshot Mysteries podcast is independently produced and is not affiliated with, sponsored by, or endorsed by any individual, family, company, agency, court, or news outlet referenced in this episode, including any firearms manufacturer or retailer named. This episode recounts an adjudicated case and its long legal aftermath. John Allen Muhammad was convicted and executed in 2009; Lee Boyd Malvo was convicted and remains incarcerated, and his sentencing situation has continued to move through the courts and may change after this episode's release. The account is drawn from trial evidence, court decisions, official records, and contemporaneous reporting, and reflects the established public and legal record. Where the series argues that Muhammad's true motive was to kill his former wife, the episode states plainly that this reflects the evidence as the hosts and investigators read it and was not established before a jury; it is presented as informed interpretation, not a finding of fact. The discussion of Lee Boyd Malvo's culpability, of his sentence, and of juvenile justice reflects the hosts' opinions and analysis; nothing in it is a claim about what any court, parole board, or official should decide, and the hosts expressly do not argue that he should be released. Statements about the firearms litigation and subsequent legislation reflect the public record and reporting. The victims and survivors of these crimes were real people, and they and their families are discussed with respect. References to any person are made in the context of public records and reporting and are not intended to defame or cause harm. Any third-party names and trademarks remain the property of their respective owners and are referenced under fair use for purposes of commentary, criticism, and reporting. Nothing in this episode constitutes legal advice. Send us your theories [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2513350/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2513350/support] 🎧 Subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Spotify so you never miss an episode. ⭐ Loved this one? Leave us a review on Apple Podcasts — it's the fastest way to help us grow. 📸 Follow us on TikTok [https://www.tiktok.com/@mugshotmysteriespodcast] and Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/mugshotmysteriespodcast/]for mugshots, mysteries, paranormal, conspiracies, and everything Gabriel said that didn't make the final cut. Stay curious. Stay suspicious.

6. juli 202641 min
episode The DC Sniper: The Woman Who Knew Who the Killer Was Pt. 2 cover

The DC Sniper: The Woman Who Knew Who the Killer Was Pt. 2

While five million people were afraid of a stranger, one woman was afraid of a name. She lived in the Maryland suburbs of Washington with her three children, watched the same coverage as everyone else, the faceless sniper, the white van, the lone white male the experts kept describing, and did not believe a word of it. Because she was the one person in America who understood that this was not really about strangers at all. Her ex-husband had given himself a new name the year before: John Allen Muhammad. For two years she had been telling anyone who would listen that he intended to kill her. The country spent twenty-three days asking who and why. She never had to ask either one. This is Part 2 of our three-part DC Sniper series, and it answers the question Part 1 left hanging: the randomness was the design. Kathryn and Gabriel trace the case back years before the killings began. We follow John Allen Muhammad, born John Allen Williams, from a cold childhood in Louisiana through the Army, where he qualified as an expert marksman, not, despite what the country was told for three weeks, a trained military sniper, just a soldier the Army certified could put a round where he aimed. We cover the troubled service record and an unproven wartime allegation, and then the thing that actually explains everything: a marriage to Mildred that curdled into control and fear, a custody fight, protective orders, and the moment in 2000 when he abducted all three of their children and vanished overseas for more than a year. The grievance everyone went hunting for, a cause, a faith, a politics, was never there. The real motive was a custody order. Then the darker thread: Antigua, where a man who collected children met a quiet, badly neglected, fatherless teenager named Lee Boyd Malvo. We walk, carefully, through what the record describes as grooming, the control of diet, body, schedule, and mind, the rifle training that left rounds buried in a tree stump for investigators to find later, and the slow remaking of a lonely boy into an instrument. By the time the shooting started, the partner pulled from that car may not have been a partner at all. How much of what Malvo did belongs to Malvo is the question we hold for Part 3. We lay out the grandiose plan Malvo later described, the ten-million-dollar extortion, the fantasized compound and army of recruited boys, and the cross-country trail of earlier shootings, in at least seven states, that no one connected until both men were caught. And we arrive at the answer that reframes the entire case: of every city in America, why Washington? Because that is where Mildred had moved to get away from him. The map of the terror was drawn around her front door. Ten strangers were not killed instead of her. They were killed so that her death, when it came, would vanish into the noise as one more random name on the list. He came within one undelivered shot of walking away clean from his own wife's murder. The person who understood this case most completely, from the first week, was the woman it was built to kill. This is Part 2 of our three-part DC Sniper series. New episodes drop every Mugshot Monday. Search Mugshot Mysteries wherever you listen. SOURCES: Court records and trial proceedings from the Virginia and Maryland prosecutions of John Allen Muhammad and Lee Boyd Malvo, including Malvo's own later accounts of the plan and the period of his recruitment; the U.S. Army service record of John Allen Muhammad, including his marksmanship qualification, and reporting on the unproven Gulf War allegation against him; family-court and custody records and protective orders relating to Mildred Muhammad, and her own subsequent memoir and public advocacy describing the marriage, the 2000 abduction of the children, and her belief during the spree that she was the intended target; documentation of the earlier 2002 shootings later attributed to the pair across multiple states, including the killing of Keenya Cook in Tacoma and its connection to the custody dispute; reporting on Lee Boyd Malvo's background in Jamaica and Antigua and his relationship with his mother, Una James; the December 2001 immigration detention in Washington state that placed Malvo's fingerprints in the federal system; ballistics evidence matching test-fired rounds recovered in Washington state to the rifle seized at the arrest; and contemporaneous reporting from The Washington Post, the Associated Press, and other outlets. Some figures regarding the total number of people killed and wounded across 2002 vary by source and are presented as the range investigators and reporting have described. DISCLAIMER: Content warning: This episode discusses domestic violence and coercive control, the abduction of children, the grooming and psychological manipulation of a minor, multiple fatal shootings, and the planned murder of a specific person. Some of this material is distressing. Please take care while listening, and consider stepping away if any of it is difficult. If you or someone you know is experiencing domestic abuse, support is available; in the United States, the National Domestic Violence Hotline can be reached at 1-800-799-7233. The Mugshot Mysteries podcast is independently produced and is not affiliated with, sponsored by, or endorsed by any individual, family, agency, or news outlet referenced in this episode, including any law enforcement agency, court, or media organization named. This episode recounts a fully adjudicated case. John Allen Muhammad was convicted of capital murder and executed in 2009; Lee Boyd Malvo was convicted and is serving life sentences. The account presented here is drawn from trial evidence, sworn testimony, official records, and contemporaneous reporting, and reflects the established public and legal record. Where the episode describes John Allen Muhammad's motive, the planning of the attacks, and the targeting of his ex-wife, it relies on evidence presented at trial, investigators' conclusions, and Mildred Muhammad's own account. The Gulf War allegation discussed is expressly noted as suspected and never proven. The episode's description of how Lee Boyd Malvo was recruited and conditioned as a minor, and any view the hosts express about his relative culpability, reflects testimony, expert evidence, and the hosts' own interpretation; it is offered as analysis and context, not as a legal excuse, and the question of his responsibility is one the courts have addressed and the series explores further. The victims and survivors of these crimes were real people, and they and their families are discussed with respect. References to any person are made in the context of public records and reporting and are not intended to defame or cause harm. Any third-party names and trademarks remain the property of their respective owners and are referenced under fair use for purposes of commentary, criticism, and reporting. Nothing in this episode constitutes legal advice. Send us your theories [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2513350/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2513350/support] 🎧 Subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Spotify so you never miss an episode. ⭐ Loved this one? Leave us a review on Apple Podcasts — it's the fastest way to help us grow. 📸 Follow us on TikTok [https://www.tiktok.com/@mugshotmysteriespodcast] and Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/mugshotmysteriespodcast/]for mugshots, mysteries, paranormal, conspiracies, and everything Gabriel said that didn't make the final cut. Stay curious. Stay suspicious.

29. juni 202632 min
episode The DC Sniper: 23 Days, 10 Dead, and the Hunt for the Wrong Man Pt. 1 cover

The DC Sniper: 23 Days, 10 Dead, and the Hunt for the Wrong Man Pt. 1

October 2002. For twenty-three days, an invisible killer turns the suburbs around the nation's capital into a shooting gallery. People are cut down doing the most ordinary things imaginable, pumping gas, mowing a lawn, reading on a bench, loading groceries, stepping off a bus. Ten will die. A region of five million will learn to weave across parking lots and crouch behind car doors. And for almost the entire siege, the largest manhunt in the area's history will hunt, with total confidence, a lone white man in a white van, a person who does not exist, in a vehicle that does not exist. This is the Beltway Sniper, Part 1 of 3. In this first installment, Kathryn and Gabriel reconstruct the twenty-three days as they unfolded, hour by hour, beginning with a bullet through a craft-store window and the murder of James Martin in a grocery-store parking lot, then the unprecedented morning of October 3rd: four people killed in two hours and seventeen minutes, all within a few miles, by a single rifle round fired from somewhere no one could see. We lay out why this case broke every tool investigators had. The victimology was no victimology at all, victims of every age, race, and background, with nothing in common but that they were outdoors, still, and visible from a distance. The geographic profile pointed nowhere, because the killer's pattern was simply access to highways. We set the case in its raw historical moment, thirteen months after September 11th and weeks after the anthrax letters moved through the same postal system, when a population already braced for the unthinkable was handed a faceless threat in its own school-drop-off lines. And we trace the single most consequential failure of the case: how a broadcast description of a white van anchored tens of thousands of tips while the truth, repeated sightings of a dark Chevrolet Caprice, sat in the files as noise. The car that carried the rifle was run by police, seen, and released, again and again, because everyone knew they were looking for something else. We cover the turns that defined the siege: the shooting of a thirteen-year-old outside his middle school and Chief Charles Moose breaking down on live television; the tarot card reading "Call me God"; the four-page letter pinned to a tree demanding ten million dollars; the botched arrests of innocent men at a pay phone; and the surreal spectacle of a police chief reciting a killer's chosen proverb on the nightly news because the broadcast had become the only working channel to the man he was hunting. Then Alabama, a fingerprint from an earlier crime the snipers themselves pointed police toward, and the names that finally emerged: John Allen Muhammad and Lee Boyd Malvo. We end at the rest stop off Interstate 70, where a truck driver who heard a license plate on the radio parked his rig across the exit ramp and waited in the dark, and at the modified trunk that explained twenty-three days of witnesses who saw nothing. But the story the country went to bed with that night, a senseless, random spree, does not survive what investigators found next. The randomness, it turns out, was the design. That is Part 2. This is Part 1 of our three-part DC Sniper series. New episodes drop every Mugshot Monday. Search Mugshot Mysteries wherever you listen. SOURCES: Court records and trial proceedings from the Virginia and Maryland prosecutions of John Allen Muhammad and Lee Boyd Malvo; Charles A. Moose and Charles Fleming, Three Weeks in October: The Manhunt for the Serial Sniper (2003), the Montgomery County police chief's own account of leading the task force; contemporaneous reporting from October 2002 by The Washington Post, The Baltimore Sun, CNN, and the Associated Press covering the shootings, the daily briefings, and the public response; ATF ballistics and firearms-tracing records connecting the recovered Bushmaster XM-15 rifle to the shootings and to the Tacoma, Washington gun shop from which it was unaccounted for, and reporting on the resulting civil litigation, which settled in 2004 with Bull's Eye Shooter Supply and the rifle's manufacturer paying a multimillion-dollar award to victims' families; law-enforcement and court documentation of the September 2002 Montgomery, Alabama liquor-store shooting and the fingerprint evidence that identified Malvo; reporting on the prior immigration detention that placed Malvo's fingerprints in the federal system; and the timeline and physical evidence recovered from the blue Chevrolet Caprice, New Jersey plate NDA-21Z, including its modification as a shooting platform. Victim details are drawn from public reporting and memorial accounts. DISCLAIMER: Content warning: This episode describes a series of fatal shootings, including the shooting of a child, and the deaths of ten people. It discusses gun violence, terrorism fears, and community trauma in detail. Please take care while listening, and consider stepping away if any of this is difficult. The Mugshot Mysteries podcast is independently produced and is not affiliated with, sponsored by, or endorsed by any individual, family, agency, or news outlet referenced in this episode, including any law enforcement agency or media organization named. This episode recounts a fully adjudicated case. John Allen Muhammad was convicted of capital murder and executed in 2009; Lee Boyd Malvo was convicted and is serving life sentences. The account presented here is drawn from trial evidence, official statements, and contemporaneous reporting, and reflects the established public and legal record. Descriptions of the crimes, the investigation, and the evidence are based on those sources; where accounts differ or details remain contested, the hosts have aimed to represent the documented record. Any analysis of motive or psychology, including matters explored further in later parts of this series, reflects evidence presented at trial and the hosts' own interpretation, not established fact beyond what the courts determined. The victims and survivors of these crimes were real people, and they and their families are discussed with respect. References to any person are made in the context of public records and reporting and are not intended to defame or cause harm. Any third-party names and trademarks remain the property of their respective owners and are referenced under fair use for purposes of commentary, criticism, and reporting. Nothing in this episode constitutes legal advice. Send us your theories [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2513350/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2513350/support] 🎧 Subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Spotify so you never miss an episode. ⭐ Loved this one? Leave us a review on Apple Podcasts — it's the fastest way to help us grow. 📸 Follow us on TikTok [https://www.tiktok.com/@mugshotmysteriespodcast] and Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/mugshotmysteriespodcast/]for mugshots, mysteries, paranormal, conspiracies, and everything Gabriel said that didn't make the final cut. Stay curious. Stay suspicious.

22. juni 202632 min
episode The McDonald's Monopoly Scam: How Uncle Jerry Stole $24 Million cover

The McDonald's Monopoly Scam: How Uncle Jerry Stole $24 Million

He spent his whole career guarding the game. Then he robbed it blind. For more than a decade, McDonald's Monopoly turned a paper sticker peeled off a fries box into the most reliable lottery in America. Cash, cars, grand prizes worth a fortune. There was just one problem. The winners were never random. They were chosen, recruited, and coached by a single man. This week on Mugshot Mysteries, we dig into the McMillions scam, the audacious con that drained an estimated $24 million from the world's most famous fast food chain. At the center of it sits Jerome "Uncle Jerry" Jacobson, a former police officer hired by Simon Marketing as the director of security for the very game he would go on to rig. His one job was to protect the integrity of the contest. Instead, he quietly pocketed the most valuable winning pieces and handed them out like party favors. What began in 1989 as a single $25,000 piece slipped to a relative "just to see if he could" grew into something almost too strange to believe. Jacobson built a sprawling underground network of paid fake winners that, by reporters' accounts, included associates of the Colombo crime family, psychics, strip club owners, convicted felons, drug traffickers, and an entire family of Mormons. Ordinary-looking people stood in front of cameras, smiled for press photos, and accepted prizes they had been paid to pretend they won. Then there is the case's strangest wrinkle. In 1995, a $1 million winning piece arrived anonymously in the mail at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, postmarked Dallas. Game rules said prizes could not be transferred, but McDonald's chose to honor it anyway, paying the hospital in annual installments for years. It became one of the largest anonymous gifts in St. Jude's history. The catch? Jacobson later admitted he was the one who sent it. The empire finally cracked in 2000 over a single anonymous tip. The FBI launched Operation Final Answer and made a discovery that read like a punchline. A startling number of "winners" with out-of-state addresses turned out to live within a short drive of Jacobson's South Carolina lake house. To catch the ring red-handed, agents partnered with McDonald's and staged a fake television commercial, filming fraudulent winners as they described, on camera, exactly how they had "won." In August 2001, Jacobson and seven others were arrested. The case expanded to 21 indictments and, in the end, more than 50 people were convicted of mail fraud and conspiracy. Jacobson was sentenced to over three years in prison and ordered to pay millions in restitution. McDonald's, the actual victim here, went on to pay out additional prize money to the honest customers who had spent years buying fries against odds that were never real. A heist. A children's hospital. A cast of co-conspirators stranger than any screenwriter would dare invent. This one has everything. New episodes drop every Mugshot Monday. Search Mugshot Mysteries wherever you listen. Stay curious. Stay kind. SOURCES: United States v. Jerome P. Jacobson et al., U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida, Jacksonville Division, indictment and sentencing records, 2001 to 2003; Federal Bureau of Investigation, "Operation Final Answer," Jacksonville Field Office investigative records; United States Department of Justice, remarks of Attorney General John Ashcroft announcing the McDonald's Monopoly fraud arrests, August 22, 2001; affidavit and testimony of FBI Special Agent Richard "Rick" Dent, as documented in court proceedings and investigative reporting; account of FBI Special Agent Doug Mathews and the undercover "fake commercial" operation greenlit by Special Agent in Charge Tom Kneir, as documented in HBO's McMillion$ and contemporaneous reporting; Maysh, J., "How an Ex-Cop Rigged McDonald's Monopoly Game and Stole Millions," The Daily Beast, July 28, 2018; McMillion, HBO documentary series, six parts, 2020, directed by James Lee Hernandez and Brian Lazarte, executive produced by Mark Wahlberg, Stephen Levinson, and Archie Gips; "How the 'McMillions' scammers rigged McDonald's Monopoly game and stole $24 million," CNBC, February 7, 2020; "McScam: Report details how McDonald's Monopoly game was fixed by ex-cop" and "McDonald's spent $25 million apologizing for man's Monopoly scam," Fox News, 2018; "What Happened To Jerome Jacobson, Mastermind Of The McDonald's Monopoly Fraud?" and "Where Is Doug Mathews, FBI Special Agent Who Helped Crack The McDonald's Monopoly Fraud, Now?," Oxygen, 2023; "How McDonald's Found Out Its Wildly Popular Monopoly Game Was a Fraud," CrimeReads, August 2024; "Donor Turns Fast Food Into Big Bucks for Hospital," contemporaneous wire-service coverage of the anonymous $1 million game piece donated to St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, with remarks from McDonald's U.S.A. president Edward H. Rensi, December 1995; interviews with Robin Colombo, widow of Colombo-family associate Gennaro "Jerry" Colombo, as reported by The Daily Beast; reporting on recruiters and claimed "winners," including Andrew Glomb, Mark Schwartz, Gloria Brown, Michael Hoover, and William "Buddy" Fisher; statements of McDonald's spokesperson Amy Murray and Assistant U.S. Attorney Mark Devereaux, as documented in McMillion and trial reporting; trade-press reporting on the announced feature-film adaptation, with Ben Affleck and Matt Damon attached, 2018; McDonald's Corporation public statements on the 2025 return of the Monopoly promotion and its revised security and audit procedures; "McDonald's Monopoly," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, general reference for timeline, dollar figures, and case summary. DISCLAIMER: This episode discusses financial crime, including mail fraud and conspiracy, corporate fraud, organized crime and associations with the Colombo crime family, drug trafficking among certain participants, and the federal investigation, prosecution, and sentencing that followed. Nothing in this episode constitutes legal, financial, or investigative advice. The Mugshot Mysteries podcast is independently produced and is not affiliated with, sponsored by, or endorsed by McDonald's Corporation, Simon Marketing, Cyrk, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, HBO, Home Box Office, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the United States Department of Justice, or any company, agency, production, or individual referenced in this episode. Our account is reconstructed from publicly available sources, including federal court records, government statements, FBI affidavits as reported in court proceedings, investigative journalism, and documentary reporting. While we make every effort to present this story accurately and responsibly, reporting on historical criminal cases can contain errors, conflicting accounts, and details that evolve over time. We do not claim our narration to be a complete or definitive record, and listeners are encouraged to consult primary sources for verification. Dollar amounts, prize values, participant counts, and the precise timeline of events vary across sources and remain subject to some historical dispute. All individuals named in this episode in connection with the fraud were charged through the United States justice system, and the convictions, sentences, and restitution orders referenced are matters of public record. References to any person, living or deceased, are made strictly in the context of documented reporting and adjudicated outcomes, and are not intended to defame, harass, or cause harm. No living individual is accused of any crime not already adjudicated, and any individual not convicted of a crime is presumed innocent. The views and commentary expressed by the hosts are their own interpretations and opinions and do not constitute statements of fact or legal conclusions. Any third-party names, trademarks, and brands mentioned remain the property of their respective owners and are referenced under fair use for purposes of commentary, criticism, and reporting. Nothing in this episode is legal, financial, medical, or psychological advice. Send us your theories [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2513350/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2513350/support] 🎧 Subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Spotify so you never miss an episode. ⭐ Loved this one? Leave us a review on Apple Podcasts — it's the fastest way to help us grow. 📸 Follow us on TikTok [https://www.tiktok.com/@mugshotmysteriespodcast] and Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/mugshotmysteriespodcast/]for mugshots, mysteries, paranormal, conspiracies, and everything Gabriel said that didn't make the final cut. Stay curious. Stay suspicious.

8. juni 202645 min
episode The Truth About Gypsy Rose Blanchard | Munchausen by Proxy, Murder & the Pink House cover

The Truth About Gypsy Rose Blanchard | Munchausen by Proxy, Murder & the Pink House

A twenty-three-year-old woman has never walked in public. Has never eaten without a feeding tube. Has leukemia, muscular dystrophy, epilepsy, brain damage from a premature birth. Has been to more than a hundred doctors. Has had her teeth removed and her head shaved weekly to mimic chemotherapy. Has spent her entire life in a wheelchair in a little pink house in Springfield, Missouri, where the whole town calls her mother a saint. None of it is true. This week on Mugshot Mysteries, Kathryn and Gabriel unpack the case of Gypsy Rose Blanchard: twenty-three years of Factitious Disorder Imposed on Another, known more commonly as Munchausen syndrome by proxy, and the murder of Clauddine "Dee Dee" Blanchard on June 10, 2015. It begins with a Facebook post no one who knew Dee Dee believed she could have written, a pink house found locked and cold, and a beloved local mother stabbed to death in her own bed. What turned a homicide into a statewide emergency was the daughter missing from it. An Amber Alert went out for a fragile, wheelchair-bound young woman who supposedly could not survive a day alone. Then deputies traced an IP address to an apartment in Big Bend, Wisconsin, knocked on the door, and Gypsy Rose Blanchard answered it standing up. From there we walk the whole structure. How a healthy child was medicated, operated on, and convinced she was dying. How Hurricane Katrina conveniently erased a paper trail. How more than a hundred doctors were paraded past the same impossible case, and how the one pediatric neurologist who suspected the truth, Dr. Bernardo Flasterstein, wrote it in his notes and never reported it. How a girl who taught herself she could walk by sneaking to the kitchen at night met Nicholas Godejohn online, and how the only exit she could imagine had a corpse in it. We do not stop at the verdicts. We get into why. The clinical shape of the disorder, the unsettling fact that the reward is sympathy rather than money, and the generational thread running back to Dee Dee's own mother, Emma Pitre. We talk about trauma bonding, about why Gypsy still refuses to call her mother a monster, and about the question the case actually leaves open now that the girl raised inside a lie is raising a real daughter of her own. A victim and a co-conspirator. Both true at once. This is the full story. New episodes drop every Mugshot Monday. Search Mugshot Mysteries wherever you listen. SOURCES: State of Missouri v. Gypsy Rose Blanchard, Greene County Circuit Court, guilty plea to second-degree murder and sentencing, July 2016; State of Missouri v. Nicholas Godejohn, Greene County Circuit Court, conviction for first-degree murder and armed criminal action (November 2018) and sentencing to life without parole (2019); plea-agreement reporting involving Greene County Prosecutor Dan Patterson; Greene County Sheriff's Office incident and case records and public statements of Sheriff Jim Arnott, June 2015; Dean, M., "Dee Dee Wanted Her Daughter To Be Sick, Gypsy Wanted Her Mom Murdered," BuzzFeed News, 2016; Mommy Dead and Dearest, HBO documentary, 2017, directed by Erin Lee Carr; The Act, Hulu limited series, 2019; Gypsy's Revenge, Investigation Discovery, 2018; The Prison Confessions of Gypsy Rose Blanchard and Gypsy Rose: Life After Lock Up, Lifetime, 2024; Blanchard, G.R., with Moore, M. and Matrisciani, M., My Time to Stand: A Memoir, 2024; Gypsy Rose Blanchard, ABC News and ABC 20/20 interviews, including "Gypsy Blanchard on what happened the night her mother was stabbed to death," https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ysUtZexaZTI [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ysUtZexaZTI]; examination findings and the Munchausen-by-proxy suspicion of pediatric neurologist Dr. Bernardo Flasterstein (2007), as documented in court proceedings and investigative reporting; interviews with Rod Blanchard and Kristy Blanchard, Bobby Pitre family interviews, and reporting on Emma Pitre and Claude Pitre across multiple outlets; Meadow, R., "Munchausen syndrome by proxy: the hinterland of child abuse," The Lancet, 1977; Bass, C., and Glaser, D., "Early recognition and management of fabricated or induced illness in children," The Lancet, 2014; Mart, E.G., Munchausen's Syndrome (by Proxy) Reconsidered, 2002; American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children (APSAC) practice guidelines on Factitious Disorder Imposed on Another; reporting on Gypsy Rose Blanchard's December 2023 parole from Chillicothe Correctional Center, her Ehlers-Danlos syndrome disclosure, and the December 2024 birth of her daughter, Aurora Raina Urker, across multiple outlets, 2023 to 2025. DISCLAIMER: Content warning: This episode discusses prolonged child abuse, Factitious Disorder Imposed on Another (Munchausen syndrome by proxy), medically unnecessary procedures and induced illness inflicted on a child, physical restraint, coercive control, and homicide. It also references autism spectrum disorder and Ehlers-Danlos syndrome. Please take care while listening. Nothing in this episode constitutes medical, legal, or psychological advice. The Mugshot Mysteries podcast is independently produced and is not affiliated with, sponsored by, or endorsed by any individual, family member, hospital, agency, network, or production referenced in this episode, including HBO, Hulu, Lifetime, Investigation Discovery, or any party connected to the productions named above. Our account is reconstructed from publicly available sources, including court records, sworn testimony, law enforcement statements, peer-reviewed and clinical literature, investigative journalism, documentary reporting, and Gypsy Rose Blanchard's own public statements, interviews, and 2024 memoir. Characterizations of Clauddine "Dee Dee" Blanchard's psychological history reflect published clinical research on Factitious Disorder Imposed on Another together with family interviews, and do not constitute a formal posthumous diagnosis. The generational history of the Pitre family is drawn from family interviews as reported by multiple outlets. Patient counts, procedural records, and the precise timeline of events vary across sources and remain subject to some historical dispute. Nicholas Godejohn was convicted of first-degree murder and is serving a life sentence, and that conviction is a matter of public record. Gypsy Rose Blanchard pleaded guilty to second-degree murder, served her sentence, and was released on parole. References to any person, living or deceased, are made strictly in the context of documented reporting and adjudicated outcomes, and are not intended to defame, harass, or cause harm. No living individual is accused of any crime not already adjudicated. The views and commentary expressed by the hosts are their own interpretations and opinions and do not constitute statements of fact or legal conclusions. Any third-party names and trademarks remain the property of their respective owners and are referenced under fair use for purposes of commentary, criticism, and reporting. Nothing in this episode is medical, legal, or psychological advice. Send us your theories [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2513350/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2513350/support] 🎧 Subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Spotify so you never miss an episode. ⭐ Loved this one? Leave us a review on Apple Podcasts — it's the fastest way to help us grow. 📸 Follow us on TikTok [https://www.tiktok.com/@mugshotmysteriespodcast] and Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/mugshotmysteriespodcast/]for mugshots, mysteries, paranormal, conspiracies, and everything Gabriel said that didn't make the final cut. Stay curious. Stay suspicious.

1. juni 202636 min