Confessions of a Gold Scammer

A federal judge next month will sentence the man who authorities say took advantage of the booming gold market, by scamming more than 1,400 people out of tens of millions of dollars.

But before he goes to prison, the mastermind of the scheme, Jamie Campany, sat down with ABC News' Chief Investigative Correspondent Brian Ross to reveal how he tricked his hundreds of victims out of nearly $30 million.

The most promising victims of the gold scam, Campany said, were spotted through Google earth satellite images. Campany and his team matched phone leads to addresses to find victims with the biggest homes, and therefore the most money to invest in gold and silver.

But in reality, there was no gold despite the legitimate-looking transaction papers from the Global Bullion Exchange -- a company that Campany said was "completely bogus."

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The Global Bullion Exchange was an invention of Campany's, who took ABC News back to the now-empty telephone boiler room in Florida where his telemarketers worked their victims, mostly upper middle class business people who Campany said let their egos get the best of them.

"Quite frankly, little old ladies are a lot more astute and a lot more skeptical about making investments with people they don't know," he said.

The pitch worked off the falling stock market and the rising price of gold as Campany recalled his lines for ABC News.

"Come on. Everybody knows what's going on in the markets today. Are you living in a cave?" he would say.

There was an answer for everything -- even if victim's protested by saying they didn't have any money.

"Sure you do," Campany or one of his telemarketers would say. "You've got a 401k, you have a stock portfolio... You have dead dogs that are not performing."

Dave Blomberg of Hialeah, Fla., said he was caught up in the scam after he received those calls.

"I did end up giving them a considerable amount of money, cause I thought if I invested more, I would get the money back," Blomberg said.

He never will, losing $75,000, and nor will the other investors. By the time the scheme collapsed and this place was shut down, all the money was long gone.

"I think about it every day. These people have to live with the pain that I caused them," Campany said. "It's going to hurt them for the rest of their lives. Hopefully this is one way I can stop it from happening to anybody else."

Campany faces up to 25 years in prison and told ABC News he's hoping his public confession will show the judge that he's truly sorry for his crimes.

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2,709 comments

  • R  •  6 months ago
    Why do all these people when caught break into tears saying how sorry they are? They didn't seem to mind when they were doing these things for years at a time.
    • John 6 months ago
      I'm guessing that he is really sorry... (that he got caught) He's hoping an attitude of contrition will help reduce the sentence that's going to be handed down soon.
    • monphillipe 6 months ago
      Some years ago, when I was trading commodities, I suspected that a gold investment scheme was Ponzi based, and reported my suspicions to the authorities. Except for a thank you note I heard nothing further... until about two years later when it made a minor splash by being busted. More than five years later I was contacted by a similar group and I think that the principal was the same man. A leopard doesn't change it's spots.
    • 2k 6 months ago
      because if it was the death penalty, he would NOT DO IT before hand! Now he is worried how long he will be in prison instead.
  • Rowell  •  6 months ago
    He is only sorry because he got caught.
    • Pat Cataan! 6 months ago
      Truth...
    • 7 6 months ago
      just like mike vick
    • ckbaker 6 months ago
      I agree, hoping to get a lighter sentence. I guess once a conniver always a conniver.
  • Zombie Birdhouse  •  6 months ago
    ....and he'd still be stealing and scamming if the plan did not cave-in on his fat, bald head.
    • Jim 6 months ago
      thats a good one wise man
    • don 6 months ago
      Hey c'mon...I'm bald but that does,nt make me a bad person....
    • daddy2010 6 months ago
      One of my friends has a fat head, but he's never cheated anyone!
  • jon  •  6 months ago
    he's hoping his public confession will show the judge that he's truly sorry for his crimes........
    I hope the judge is not tricked by his scam !
    • Jasmine 6 months ago
      and hope the judge says where is the $30Million?????
    • Pat Cataan! 6 months ago
      No, they'll just promote him to a government agency...
    • Iolanthe 6 months ago
      Nah. They'll give him a directorship in a Wall Street firm.
  • Joe P  •  6 months ago
    So where did the money go? Did he hide it offshore, only to move there after his sentence and enjoy it?
    • Jasmine 6 months ago
      That's what I said, why don't he give BACK allll the money he took? where is it????
    • Hoo Suk Dong 6 months ago
      He probably spent the loot on #$%$ and booze...
    • Peter Griffin 6 months ago
      He spent the money on #$%$ and other forms of entertainment.
  • Rodgman  •  6 months ago
    I'm sure he's got a nice stash of money tucked away in some overseas bank account waiting for him when he gets out.
  • Chris  •  6 months ago
    He's sorry because he got caught. I hope the judge sees right through him.
  • Verne  •  6 months ago
    So where is all the money, it must have gone somewhere, someone knows where it is. It can't all have vanished. The authorities should squeeze his bollox till he tells what happened to it all.
  • Jim  •  6 months ago
    How is it that wealthy people are so easily duped out of their cash? If someone calls me wanting to talk about my money I hang up on them. It's always a scam. ESPECIALLY after Madoff. I don't get it.
  • Bobby  •  6 months ago
    Stole $30 million....and only get at most....25 years in jail....It should be life, without parole.....He didn't care about others, so why should anyone care about him....Funny, how they become "truly sorrow"....after they are caught....
  • beezy  •  6 months ago
    Whats sad is that if im starving and steal from the grocery store to feed my kids, our justice system will be harder on me than this #$%$
  • Roger  •  6 months ago
    Guys like this are NEVER sorry, he's doing it to get a lighter sentence. It takes a sociopath to do this in the first place.
  • Vote For Pedro  •  6 months ago
    People, please be aware of the emotion of greed. It is stronger than you think. It must go back to our cave man days but it strips the mind of rational thought.
  • HalfMarathonDon  •  6 months ago
    a fool and his money are soon parted
  • lew  •  6 months ago
    Where did the money go??? There is no way he could have spent that much miney in the time he was scamming people.
  • Retired_LC  •  6 months ago
    I get plenty of phone calls like this all the time, for the most part I look at caller ID and just ignore them. Occasionally I will answer the phone if I am bored to have a little fun.

    I love the scammers who call and say "I just heard of this AMAZING stock tip!" My reply is "So why in the he|| are you calling a stranger instead of running to your stock broker?"

    Another thing I like to do is simply answer "I like cheese!" no matter WHAT the other person says. This often drives them nuts.

    Or I simply pass gas into the receiver and hang up.
  • AM  •  6 months ago
    So they say the money is long gone.. Gone where? Surely if it's gone he purchased things with the money and has assets that can be seized...it was MILLIONS not thousands...that kind of money just doesn't disappear.
  • A Yahoo! User  •  6 months ago
    How many times have you heard this when a criminal gets caught?
    1. I am sorry.
    2. I hope GOD will forgive my sins
    3. I wish I could repay the people I hurt.
    4. I learn my lesson from now on I will abide by the law.
  • juan_human_being  •  6 months ago
    Defraud the rich and your prosecuted, defraud the public and your are awarded with bonuses.
  • Robert T  •  6 months ago
    He would say anything to get people's money... Now he's say anything to get out of a long prison term.