What Happened To Sylvan Scolnick, Aka Cherry Hill Fats?<\/h2>\n\n<\/p>\n <\/div>\n\n<\/div>\n
\nSylvan Skolnick, who specialized in filing for bankruptcy for fun and profit and weighed 650 pounds, passed away on September 3, 1976, at his Cherry Hill, New Jersey residence at the age of 46.<\/p>\n
He was a notorious con man from South Florida and a little freak. The Bank of Sark fraud’s mastermind, Phil Wilson, was a diminutive man who worked out of a Fort Lauderdale office. His specialty was creating stunning paperwork that could deceive even experienced investors.<\/p>\n
[image-1]<\/p>\n
His bank, which was actually chartered but never opened, was located in the British overseas territory of the Channel Islands. The space was located above a petrol station. It ran for four years before being discovered. He wrote to us from prison in the 1970s when Gold Coast magazine featured his work.<\/p>\n
\u00a0He was only 37 years old and had spent most of his life defrauding others. In a 1995 incident, he obtained 262 free Super Bowl tickets by pretending to be a Blockbuster executive, which he later sold. Sabatino seems to yearn for praise for his craft, in contrast to most con artists who detest being caught.<\/p>\n
\n<\/div>\n
Sylvan Skolnick, who specialized in filing for bankruptcy for fun and profit and weighed 650 pounds, passed away on September 3, 1976, at his Cherry Hill, New Jersey residence at the age of 46.<\/p>\n
He was a notorious con man from South Florida and a little freak. The Bank of Sark fraud’s mastermind, Phil Wilson, was a diminutive man who worked out of a Fort Lauderdale office. His specialty was creating stunning paperwork that could deceive even experienced investors.<\/p>\n
[image-1]<\/p>\n
His bank, which was actually chartered but never opened, was located in the British overseas territory of the Channel Islands. The space was located above a petrol station. It ran for four years before being discovered. He wrote to us from prison in the 1970s when Gold Coast magazine featured his work.<\/p>\n
\u00a0He was only 37 years old and had spent most of his life defrauding others. In a 1995 incident, he obtained 262 free Super Bowl tickets by pretending to be a Blockbuster executive, which he later sold. Sabatino seems to yearn for praise for his craft, in contrast to most con artists who detest being caught.<\/p>\n