|
Victor Lustig (January 4, 1890 - March 11, 1947) is held to
have been one of the most talented confidence tricksters who ever
lived. He is best known as "the man who sold the Eiffel
Tower".
Victor was born in Bohemia, but soon headed west, demonstrating his talents even
in his early twenties. He was a natural conman, glib and charming in multiple languages. He established himself by working scams
on the ocean liners steaming between Paris and New York City, but eventually decided to stay in Paris for a while and see what he could find there.
In 1925, France had recovered from World
War I, and Paris was booming. Expatriates from all over the world went
there to enjoy being at the leading edge of the latest trends. It was flashy, fast moving, and an excellent environment for a con
artist.
Lustig's master con began one spring day when he was reading a newspaper. An article discussed the problems the city was
having maintaining the Eiffel Tower. Even keeping it painted was an expensive chore, and the tower was becoming somewhat run
down.
Lustig saw a story behind this article. Maybe the city would decide the Eiffel Tower was not worth saving any longer. Lustig
outlined the possibilities and developed them into a remarkable scheme.
Lustig adopted the persona of a government official, and had a forger produce fake government stationery for him. Lustig then
sent six scrap metal dealers an invitation to attend a confidential meeting at the Hotel de Crillon on Place de la Concorde to discuss a possible business deal. The Hotel
Crillon, one of the most prestigious of the old Paris hotels, was a meeting place for diplomats and a perfect cover. All six
scrap dealers replied and came to the meeting.
There, Lustig introduced himself as the deputy director-general of the Ministry of Posts and Telegraphs. He explained that the
dealers had been selected on the basis of their good reputations as honest businessmen, and then dropped his bombshell.
Lustig told the group that the upkeep on the Eiffel Tower was so outrageous that the city could not maintain it any longer,
and wanted to sell it for scrap. Due to the certain public outcry, he went on, the matter was to be kept secret until all the
details were thought out. Lustig said that he had been given the responsibility to select the dealer to carry out the task.
The idea was not as implausible in 1925 as would be today. The Eiffel Tower had been
built for the 1889 Paris Exposition,
and was not intended to be permanent. It was to have been taken down in 1909 and moved
someplace else. It did not fit with the city's other great monuments like the Gothic cathedrals or the Arc de Triomphe, and in any case at the time it really was in poor
condition.
Lustig took the men to the tower in a rented limousine to give them an inspection tour. The tower was made of 15,000
prefabricated parts, many of which were highly ornamental, and Lustig showed it off to the men. This encouraged their enthusiasm,
and it also gave Lustig an idea who was the most enthusiastic and gullible. He knew how to be attentive and agreeable, and let
people talk until they told him everything he wanted to know.
Back on the ground, Lustig asked for bids to be submitted the next day, and reminded them that the matter was a state secret.
In reality, Lustig already knew he would accept the bid from one dealer, Andre Poisson. Poisson was insecure,
feeling he was not in the inner circles of the Parisian business community, and thought that obtaining the Eiffel Tower deal
would put him in the big league. Lustig had quickly sensed Poisson's eagerness.
However, Lustig knew he was walking over dangerous ground. Fraud was bad enough, but the authorities would be very displeased
at his having put over the fraud while impersonating a high government official. And Poisson's wife was suspicious. Who was this
official, why was everything so secret, and why was everything being done so quickly?
To deal with the suspicious Poisson, Lustig arranged another meeting, and then "confessed". As a government minister, Lustig
said, he did not make enough money to pursue the lifestyle he enjoyed, and needed to find ways to supplement his income. This
meant that his dealings needed a certain discretion.
Poisson understood immediately. He was dealing with another corrupt government official who wanted a bribe. That put Poisson's
mind at rest immediately, since he was familiar with the type and had no problems dealing with such people.
So Lustig not only received the funds for the Eiffel Tower, he also got a bribe on top of that. Lustig and his personal
secretary, an American conman named Dan Collins, hastily took a train for Vienna with a
suitcase full of cash. He knew the instant that Poisson called the government ministries to ask for further information that the
whole fraud would be revealed and the law would intervene.
Nothing happened. Poisson was too humiliated to complain to the police. A month later, Lustig returned to Paris, selected six
more scrap dealers, and tried to sell the Tower once more. This time, the mark went to the police before Lustig managed to close
the deal, but Lustig and Collins still managed to evade arrest.
There were others who made a profit selling civic landmarks, of course. In the early 1920s, a rival to Lustig was the fast-talking Scotsman Arthur
Ferguson.
Lustig first arrived in the United States at the port of New York City, onboard the SS Badenia on April 8, 1907 (port of departure was
Hamburg, Germany on March 23, 1907), and calling himself
Count Victor Lustig, conducted a number of scams. Eventually his luck ran out. He was arrested for counterfeiting and
sent to Alcatraz prison. He died at the Medical Center for Federal Prisoners in
Springfield, Missouri.
For More Information
- book The Man Who Sold the Eiffel Tower by Floyd Miller, Doubleday, 1961
External Link
|