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How an Ex-Cop Rigged McDonald’s Monopoly Game and Stole Millions

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  • How an Ex-Cop Rigged McDonald’s Monopoly Game and Stole Millions

    This is a long read but it's worth it. Many people, including myself, forgot about this because the trial started September 10th, 2001.

    Jerome Jacobson and his network of mobsters, psychics, strip club owners, and drug traffickers won almost every prize for 12 years, until the FBI launched Operation ‘Final Answer.’

    On August 3, 2001, a McDonald’s film crew arrived in the bustling beach town of Westerly, Rhode Island. They carried their cameras and a giant cashier’s check to a row of townhouses, and knocked on the door of Michael Hoover. The 56-year-old bachelor had called a McDonald’s hotline to say he’d won their Monopoly competition. Since 1987, McDonald’s customers had feverishly collected Monopoly game pieces attached to drink cups, french fry packets and advertising inserts in magazines. By completing groups of properties like Baltic and Mediterranean Avenues, players won cash or a Sega Game Gear, while “Instant Win” game pieces scored a free Filet-O-Fish or a Jamaican vacation. But Hoover, a casino pit boss who had recently filed for bankruptcy, claimed he’d won the grand prize–$1 million dollars.

    Like winning the Powerball, the odds of Hoover’s win were 1 in 250 million. There were two ways to win the Monopoly grand prize: find the “Instant Win” game piece like Hoover, or match Park Place with the elusive Boardwalk to choose between a heavily-taxed lump sum or $50,000 checks every year for 20 years. Just like the Monopoly board game, which was invented as a warning about the destructive nature of greed, players traded game pieces to win, or outbid each other on eBay. Armed robbers even held up restaurants demanding Monopoly tickets. “Don’t go to jail! Go to McDonald’s and play Monopoly for real!” cried Rich Uncle Pennybags, the game’s mustachioed mascot, on TV commercials that sent customers flocking to buy more food. Monopoly quickly became the company’s most lucrative marketing device since the Happy Meal.

    Inside Hoover’s home, Amy Murray, a loyal McDonald’s spokesperson, encouraged him to tell the camera about the luckiest moment of his life. Nervously clutching his massive check, Hoover said he’d fallen asleep on the beach. When he bent over to wash off the sand, his People magazine fell into the sea. He bought another copy from a grocery store, he said, and inside was an advertising insert with the “Instant Win” game piece. The camera crew listened patiently to his rambling story, silently recognizing the inconsequential details found in stories told by liars. They suspected that Hoover was not a lucky winner, but part of a major criminal conspiracy to defraud the fast food chain of millions of dollars. The two men behind the camera were not from McDonald’s. They were undercover agents from the FBI.

    This was a McSting.

    At the FBI’s Jacksonville Field Office in Florida, Special Agent Richard Dent added the Hoover videotape to his growing pile of evidence. Sandy-haired and highly-organized, Dent was a 13-year veteran of the Bureau, who spent his days investigating public corruption and bank fraud. But in the last 12 months his desk had filled with fast food paraphernalia. Leaflets for “Pick Your Prize Monopoly” and “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?” described McDonald’s games played in 14 countries. He read small print that revealed how the odds were stacked against the customer: McDonald’s makes one piece from each set of properties extremely rare, so while thousands have three of the four railroads, the odds of pulling the Short Line Railroad—and winning a PT Cruiser—were 1 in 150 million.

    Dent’s investigation had started in 2000, when a mysterious informant called the FBI and claimed that McDonald’s games had been rigged by an insider known as “Uncle Jerry.” The person revealed that “winners” paid Uncle Jerry for stolen game pieces in various ways. The $1 million winners, for example, passed the first $50,000 installment to Uncle Jerry in cash. Sometimes Uncle Jerry would demand cash up front, requiring winners to mortgage their homes to come up with the money. According to the informant, members of one close-knit family in Jacksonville had claimed three $1 million dollar prizes and a Dodge Viper.

    When Dent alerted the McDonald’s headquarters in Oak Brook, Illinois, executives were deeply concerned. The company’s top lawyers pledged to help the FBI, and faxed Dent a list of past winners. They explained that their game pieces were produced by a Los Angeles company, Simon Marketing, and printed by Dittler Brothers in Oakwood, Georgia, a firm trusted with printing U.S. mail stamps and lotto scratch-offs. The person in charge of the game pieces was Simon’s director of security, Jerry Jacobson.
    Read the rest here
    https://www.thedailybeast.com/how-an...ons?ref=scroll

  • #2
    McDonald's Monopoly game, I remember that! The game was around 20+ years ago. My how time flies.

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by Theodore View Post
      McDonald's Monopoly game, I remember that! The game was around 20+ years ago. My how time flies.
      It's still around every year in the UK.

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by Theodore View Post
        McDonald's Monopoly game, I remember that! The game was around 20+ years ago. My how time flies.
        And it was all a scam

        Comment


        • #5
          "Dent’s investigation had started in 2000, when a mysterious informant called the FBI and claimed that McDonald’s games had been rigged by an insider known as “Uncle Jerry.” "


          Sounds to me like someone was hating hard on Uncle Jerry for making money moves. And good, atleast someone made out with some money, 1 in 150 million chance to win a PT Cruiser? That was one of the *****tiest cars ever released and McDonalds with all of its money still made near impossible to win it.

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          • #6
            Did anyone ever legitimately win any big prizes from that?

            It seems like the game itself was a scam put on by McDonald's. They knew the guy didn't win because the game is a scam in the first place and the winning stickers don't actually exist.

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            • #7
              Yeah exactly. If it wasn't impossible or near impossible, people wouldn't need to cheat to actually be able to win. I see this as the guy evening the odds. He took something that was incredibly difficult and made it more fair, like in the old days of video games, when you could use cheat codes to beat games you could never beat otherwise. So basically McDonald's cheated people and this guy is being punished for beating them at their own game. Kind of like when someone at a casino gets good at blackjack or poker. Maybe someone should sue McDonald's for making the game impossible and it being a scam.

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