For AuthorsFor PublishersBookstoreAuthor ResourcesFAQsGPS Login
Fairy Tales, Folklore & Mythology
Home

Shop at BookSurge

Fiction

Fairy Tales, Folklore & Mythology

Under Investigation: The Inside Story of the Florida Attorney General's Investigation of Wilhelmina Scouting Network, the Largest Model and Talent Scam in America

 
 
Under Investigation: The Inside Story of the Florida Attorney General's Investigation of Wilhelmina Scouting Network, the Largest Model and Talent Scam in America
View larger imageEmail a friend

 
 
 
 
 

Under Investigation: The Inside Story of the Florida Attorney General's Investigation of Wilhelmina Scouting Network, the Largest Model and Talent Scam in America

THE WORLD’S LARGEST talent and model scouting company, led by celebrity boy-band promoter Lou Pearlman, recruited over 150,000 members across America from 2000 to 2003. Based in Orlando, Florida, this enterprise operated under many names: Studio 58 Models; WHY Models; eFashionShow.com; emodel.com; Options Talent; Trans Continental Talent; Wilhelmina Scouting Network; and Web Style Network.

It charged upfront fees ranging from $395 to $995 to put an aspiring model’s picture on their website, a service purportedly used by 1000 modeling agencies seeking new talent. “You could be discovered,” their army of talent scouts pitched. “Become a model!” “You have the look!”

Extremely controversial, subject to many local news reports, it also received national attention in Jane, Newsweek, and on Dateline NBC. More than 2000 complaints were filed with the Florida Attorney General’s Office, many with signed and notarized affidavits from consumers who felt they had been scammed. An investigation, led by Assistant Attorney General Jacqueline Dowd, was opened in July 2002.

Everyone expected Attorney General Charlie Crist to act. But he didn’t. Why not? Using previously secret documents obtained through public records requests, Under Investigation takes you inside the Florida Attorney General’s Office to see how the two-year investigation unfolded, and then was ultimately shut down under suspicious circumstances.

SKU: 

ING0968713335

In Stock
Availability: Usually ships in 1 business days
Our Price: $19.95 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25.

Note: Item may be sold and shipped by another company. Learn more.
Product Details:
Author: Les Henderson
Paperback: 512 pages
Publisher: Coyote Ridge Publishing
Publication Date: September 12, 2006
Language: English
ISBN: 0968713335
Product Length: 9.0 inches
Product Width: 6.0 inches
Product Height: 1.03 inches
Product Weight: 1.64 pounds
Package Length: 8.7 inches
Package Width: 6.0 inches
Package Height: 1.4 inches
Package Weight: 1.75 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 8 reviews
 
 

Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review:3.5 ( 8 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

Most Helpful Customer Reviews

5 of 6 found the following review helpful:

4For those who will never see justice...  Mar 15, 2007
By JF
As someone who was conned by the 'businessmen' mentioned in this book, I have to recommend it to anyone else who found themselves unknowingly caught up in this scam.

Whether you were (like me) a talent scout, an aspiring model, a parent of a child who was told that your kid has model ability, a vendor, a franchise owner, a landlord, whatever... we were all duped and none of us will ever see a penny of what we put into this company.

For me, there's a certain amount of closure that this book brought to me. It made me realize that no, I wasn't dumb to get caught up in this, they were just THAT GOOD at the game. And all of the things that I thought were shady, actually were. And that this whole thing was a giant, manufactured LIE of a business.

Yes, it's very detailed. And it's history starts long before the WSN scam. But, the background helps to paint the picture of what was to come. And though the details can get tedious, it's the details that really made this business able to thrive, despite all of our government regulation of business in this country.

It disappoints me that this book couldn't have had a happy ending, but I already knew that. But i'm glad to see that the WSN scam didn't just fade away in some people's minds.

4 of 5 found the following review helpful:

5Justice Denied  Aug 23, 2007
By Craig L. Howe "The Pointed Pundit"
In the late 1990s I stumbled across the web pages of the Wilhelmina Scouting Network. I could not believe that the world renowned modeling agency would cheapen their brand on such a low-grade idea brand. It turns out I was right. They never had.

I did not realize that until I read Les Henderson's expose Under Investigation. It is the tale of the largest modeling scam in America and secret political corruption at the Florida Attorney General's Office.

It is the story of models who paid $995 to pursue their dream, only to discover they were scammed. It is the story of more than 2,000 consumers who filed complaints at the Florida Attorney General's Office expecting state action. Instead they got nothing.

I have always been fascinated with great sales people who can only find scams to pursue. The legal road to riches is within their grasp. Instead they dedicate themselves to lives of deceit. Henderson is a skilled investigative journalist of the old school. He spares no one writing this book.

Thoroughly researched and aggressive told, this tale leaves one wondering why we place any faith at all in our government to protect us from ourselves.

10 of 15 found the following review helpful:

1A scam revealed, but a "journalist" shows his biases as well  Nov 03, 2007
By S. Cameron "Sam"
WHAT A DISAPPOINTMENT. I'm a fan of TRUE investigate journalism: Dateline, 20/20, Primetime, and local reporters who do the research.

First, when I lived in Tampa in 2001, my (ex) girlfriend was scouted by these guys, paid $495 and got a whopping 2 jobs (earning about $150 total). So I'm more than familiar with these scammers and was eager to read a great book detailing their nightmarish existence.

I've also taken journalism classes, so I was expecting not just a well documented book on this scam(which the author provides), but a WELL WRITTEN one as well. On the second account, this book fails miserably and it's why I regrettably have to give it a bad rating. I'm rating the BOOK, not whether the companies investigated were scams, which in my opinion they certainly were.

What you get instead is 60 chapters (SIXTY!!) of childish writing by a self-styled "investigator", Les Henderson. He does not list his qualifications as an investigator other than a previous book he wrote.

He then proceeds to lay out the history of some of the bigwigs behind the con. But I started noticing by about the third chapter how his personal hatred was creeping into the language of the book. A scammer was not simply a manipulative person, but described as: "fat, fat cat, wicked webmaster, the deceiver, wolf in sheep's clothing", etc. I actually started writing them down; that's how noticeable they became.

In addition, he points out that one main scammer was born in Egypt, although he is presumably a full US citizen, and another scammer was a Jew. Why didn't he tell us if the rest of the main characters were white Christians? He also calls the Egyptian scammer a "terrorist" late in the book. Writing about the guy, Alec Defrawi, he says Defrawi "decided to attack American financially." Wow. A none too subtle Muslim stereotype. Very classy.

By the end of the book, I was so disappointed in the way the "investigator" let his personal biases creep into the writing that I started marking pages where any editor would have simply taken a red pen and scratched out the ridiculous phrases. In court, a judge would've admonished Henderson, "stop badgering the witness and STICK TO THE FACTS". No editor is listed and the address of the "publishing company" and its website link back to Henderson's first book- making one think that he edited and published this himself. Nothing wrong with self-publishing, but self-editing in this case clearly was a mistake.

My other two big issues with the book may have been out of Henderson's control. First, as we ALL know by now, one of the main scammers, Lou Pearlman, is now in jail, accused of massive financial fraud in some investment scheme.

So as much as Henderson does a good job early on in laying out a history of total fraud by Defrawi and Dave Elliott and Cort Randell, it appears in hindsight that Lou was not some innocent victim unwilling to make the hard changes to improve the program; it appears Lou himself may have been just as bad if not worse than the main scammers.

Second, Henderson's whole conspiracy theory centers around how a former assistant AG (Jackie Dowd) got "fired" for trying to sue TCT/Options. But could it have been that the AG was investigating Pearlman's financial scam, told Jackie to slow down with the modeling stuff because they wanted to get him on the investment scam, and if she refused, they fired her? Nobody knows and the book was written before the Pearlman stuff hit, so I don't begrudge the author.

The other issue for me was that my ex DID actually get two modeling jobs off the website in Tampa. Didn't pay the "hundreds per hour" they lied and said, but she did make about $150. Yet Henderson does not interview one single model of the 150,000 who signed up who got booked on one single job??? Was my ex the ONLY ONE out of 150,000 to get a job?

She still feels she got ripped off (as do I), but I can't believe he couldn't locate a single model who got a job to ask them about it and offer some factual balance. After all, he's an "investigator."

In the end, the ONLY reason these scammers were shut down was because Monster.com and Hotjobs.com refused to let them advertise for scouts. Without scouts they couldn't recruit new models and they died quickly.

Yet he underplays that. That and that alone appears to be the only reason they're out of business. If Henderson's conspiracy is to be taken at face value (the new Pearlman financial scam notwithstanding), then every single one of the 150,000 models got ripped off and yet the Attorneys General of dozens of state did nothing. The New York consumer protection board couldn't do anything. The economic crimes unit of Florida did nothing. The Financial Litigation units of Florida did nothing. THE LARGEST class action law firms in the country thought about suing but did nothing. (????!!!!!) The Orlando Police did nothing. Only 1 local TV station did any pieces and they took "bribe hush money" to stop running bad stories.

Personally, I know this company was a rip off from my own experience. Yet Henderson takes 400 pages with all sorts of insider info and all he can come up with is that one new Assistant A.G. killed the case for unknown reasons. None of that explains how any OTHER Attorney General in another state couldn't sue to shut the local franchises down. Or why the class action law firms (including the one that beat Microsoft) wouldn't want to sue a billionaire like Lou Pearlman???

It just doesn't add up, much as I'd like it to.

In the end, there probably were some models who got work. But "investigator" Henderson didn't find a single one who could explain why employees like Chris Roberts (who provided lots of info to the AG) would keep working there instead of running for the door after a week. So not everyone could've thought they got ripped. My ex only paid $495. Maybe when they raised prices people got more suspicious??

Who knows the real truth.

But as glad as I am that these guys are out of business and Lou is in jail, I have a hard time swallowing 400 pages of a huge conspiracy theory as well as Henderson's terribly biased, childish name calling of people he clearly wants us to hate because they're "fat, Egyptian" or whatever personal biases he holds.

Next time I humbly suggest the author hire an editor (there were also about half a dozen typos, missing words, etc.) and leave the name calling for the schoolyard, not a presumably serious journalistic tome.



4 of 6 found the following review helpful:

5Encyclopedic and yet the tip of the iceburg  Aug 14, 2007
By J. Moore "hierophant"
Mr. Henderson was definitely on to something huge here, and provides tons of evidence to show that fraud was taking place with the tacit blessing of then Attorney General and now Governor Charlie Crist. Henderson probably wasn't even aware that the wheels were already in motion to uncover the largest Ponzi scheme and bank fraud case the US has every seen.

Recently boy-band Svengali Lou Pearlman (featured prominently in this book) was taken into Federal custody and has been indicted for bank fraud. Simultaneously, civil suits and forced bankruptcy proceedings are taking place. Transcontinental Talent (aka Wilhelmina, Options Talent, eModel, Studio 58 and others) is one of the businesses alleged to have been used to move and launder money for Pearlman's fake investment scheme estimated to have stolen half a billion dollars.

Lawsuits allege that Crist knew this was going on, and allowed it to happen. Certainly he received campaign contributions and special favors from Pearlman and his companies.

Mr. Henderson is to be commended for his simply amazing depth of research, getting his hands on documents the state of Florida certainly wouldn't want you to see. Unfortunately, we will probably never see a prominent republican like Crist prosecuted for virtually giving Pearlman the green light to steal.

5Definitive book on talent scams  Sep 14, 2008
By Anne Henry "henryshowbizbooks"
So much information and so many details! An absolutely incredible primer for those interested in understanding how the criminal mind works, and how the government in Florida doesn't work.

If every actor and showbiz parent could take the time to read this book, the scams would be non-existent. It's a long read, but a great investment of your time!

See all 8 customer reviews on Amazon.com
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Web business powered by Amazon WebStore