Have You Ever Bought Those Kevin Trudeau Books....

Search

New member
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
7,948
Tokens
...on getting money from the Government?

Seems like there is a lot of FREE money laying around that we can collect. One woman claims to have collected $2 million. Could this be possible?
 

Member
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
34,790
Tokens
trudeau_girls_caller.jpg


ILL TAKE SARA AND KARA ON though....
 

New member
Joined
Jun 3, 2009
Messages
13,242
Tokens
It ain't real. Kevin Trudeau is a scammed who's spent his life trying to scam people for their money.

Look at his wikipedia page. He's always been involved in scams and pyramid schemes.
 

New member
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
7,948
Tokens
But it's true that there are Gov't programs out there that you can get free money from. If he's showing you how to do it, how can it be a scam?

Has anyone ever read one of his books is the question.
 

Member
Joined
Dec 12, 2006
Messages
16,073
Tokens
But it's true that there are Gov't programs out there that you can get free money from. If he's showing you how to do it, how can it be a scam?

Has anyone ever read one of his books is the question.

They sell the books at local book stores that show you how to get the grants and stuff.
 

Oh boy!
Joined
Mar 21, 2004
Messages
38,362
Tokens
In September 2004, Trudeau agreed to pay $2 million ($500,000 in cash plus transfer of residential property located in Ojai, California, and a luxury vehicle) to settle charges that he falsely claimed that a coral calcium product can cure cancer and other serious diseases and that a purported analgesic called Biotape can permanently cure or relieve severe pain. He also agreed to a lifetime ban on promoting products using infomercials, but excluded restrictions to promote his books via infomercials. Trudeau was the only person ever banned by the FTC from selling a product via television.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kevin_Trudeau#cite_note-Tapper-14 Lydia Parnes, speaking for the FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection stated: "This ban is meant to shut down an infomercial empire that has misled American consumers for years."
 

New member
Joined
Jun 3, 2009
Messages
13,242
Tokens
"In 1990, Trudeau posed as a doctor in order to deposit $80,000 in false checks, and in 1991 he pleaded guilty to larceny. That same year, Trudeau faced federal charges of credit card fraud after he stole the names and Social Security numbers[5] of eleven customers of a mega memory product and charged approximately $122,735.68 on their credit cards.[55] He spent two years in federal prison because of this conviction.[37] Later, in an interview, he explained his crimes as: "... youthful indiscretions and not as bad as they sound, and besides, both were partly the fault of other people, and besides, he has changed. The larceny he explains as a series of math errors compounded by the 'mistake' of a bank official. As for why the bank thought he was a doctor, that was just a simple misunderstanding, because he jokingly referred to himself as a 'doctor in memory'. He still can't quite believe he was prosecuted for the larceny charges. 'Give me a break,' he says."[6]
 

Money Management, Focus, & Discipline
Joined
Sep 9, 2006
Messages
2,553
Tokens
Scammer.

Guy has been trying to sell several things over the years.....

There was a cure book also, I believe he claimed he had the cancer cure in it???
 

Member
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
34,790
Tokens
http://news.msn.com/crime-justice/tv-pitchman-kevin-trudeau-gets-10-year-sentence

[h=1]TV pitchman Kevin Trudeau gets 10-year sentence[/h]<section class="storyimage">
_h353_w628_m6_otrue_lfalse.jpg
MCT: Adam Wolffbrandt, Chicago Tribune
Kevin Trudeau, center, leaves the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse in Chicago on November 6, 2013. The TV pitchman was found guilty of criminal contempt for airing misleading infomercials after a federal jury deliberated for an hour on Tuesday, Nov. 12, 2013.
<section class="partnerlogo">
_h17_w0_m6_otrue_lfalse.jpg
<time data-always-show="true" datetime="2014-03-18T01:00:00.000Z">41 min ago</time> By MICHAEL TARM of Associated Press </section> </section>









<section itemprop="articleBody">CHICAGO (AP) — Best-selling author Kevin Trudeau, whose name became synonymous with late-night TV pitches, was sentenced to 10 years in prison Monday for bilking consumers through ubiquitous infomercials for his book, "The Weight Loss Cure 'They' Don't Want You to Know About."
As he imposed the sentence prosecutors had requested, U.S. District Judge Ronald Guzman portrayed the 50-year-old Trudeau as a habitual fraudster going back to his early adulthood. So brazen was Trudeau, the judge said, he once even used his own mother's Social Security number in a scheme.
"Since his 20s, he has steadfastly attempted to cheat others for his own gain," Guzman said, adding that Trudeau is "deceitful to the very core."
Trudeau, whose trademark dyed black hair turned partially gray as he awaited sentencing in jail, showed little emotion as the stiff sentence was handed down at the hearing in Chicago.
Addressing the judge earlier in a 10-minute statement, Trudeau apologized and said he's become a changed man. He said he's meditated, prayed and read self-help books while locked up at Chicago's Metropolitan Correctional Center.
"I have truly had a significant reawakening," said Trudeau, who was dressed in orange jail clothes. "If I ever do an infomercial again ... I promise: No embellishments, no puffery, no lies."
While Trudeau appeared calm throughout the hearing, one of his supporters interrupted the judge at one point and began to speak. After cutting the judge short a second time, the man dropped to the floor and refused to leave. U.S. marshals carried him out of the courtroom.
Jurors convicted Trudeau of criminal contempt in November for defying a 2004 court order barring him from running false ads about the weight-loss book. Despite the order, he aired the infomercials at least 32,000 times, according to prosecutors.
He sold more than 850,000 copies of the weight-loss book, generating $39 million in revenue, prosecutors say. And the judge agreed with prosecutors that the amount of loss stemming from Trudeau's deception was more than $37 million — nearly the amount in revenue.
But in remarks Monday asking for a sentence of less than two years for his client, defense attorney Tom Kirsch said the harm Trudeau caused was minor compared to fraud in which some people are cheated out of their life savings.
"A 10-year sentence might be appropriate for a defendant who destroyed lives," Kirsch said. "(But) Trudeau — if he swindled anyone — swindled them out of $30 (the price of the book)."
Another defense attorney, Carolyn Gurland, added that Trudeau's legal troubles had already cost him his businesses and his home, and nearly all his other worldly possessions.
"He has a suitcase containing his personal artifacts. That's what he has left," she said.
But Guzman showed little sympathy, appearing angry as he said that Trudeau had thumbed his nose at the justice system by violating multiple court orders since the 1990s.
"He has treated federal court orders as if they were mere suggestions ... or impediments to be side-stepped, out-maneuvered or just ignored," the judge said.
Trudeau's weight-loss book describes a grueling, 500-calorie-a-day diet, as well as hormone treatments. The deception, Guzman explained, came in Trudeau's infomercials that misrepresented the contents of the book as laying out "a simple, no hunger ... diet-free method of losing weight," which enticed more people to buy the book.
Trudeau became rich selling millions of books with titles such as "Natural Cures 'They' Don't Want You to Know About" and "Debt Cures 'They' Don't Want You to Know About," touting them in commercials with a news-interview formats.

As legal scrutiny intensified over the years, Trudeau claimed the U.S. government was out to get him, and he accused agencies and other vested interests of conspiring to suppress low-cost, common remedies to diseases, including cancer.
His weight-loss book, which once topped best-seller lists, was the focus of the criminal conviction for which he was sentenced. It also was the subject of related civil case brought by the Federal Trade Commission, in which Trudeau was ordered to pay a $37 million judgment.

In that civil case, Trudeau said he couldn't pay the judgment because he's broke. But FTC lawyers balked at that claim, accusing him of hiding money in shell companies. Trudeau, they noted, has spent lavishly in recent years, including $359 on two haircuts.


</section>
 

Forum statistics

Threads
1,108,622
Messages
13,452,994
Members
99,426
Latest member
bodyhealthtechofficia
The RX is the sports betting industry's leading information portal for bonuses, picks, and sportsbook reviews. Find the best deals offered by a sportsbook in your state and browse our free picks section.FacebookTwitterInstagramContact Usforum@therx.com