The Real Top 10 God of Gamblers
Most
of the time we enter the Casino having the mind set that we will win
lots of money. However, most gamblers walk out losers since every game
is mathematically designed with a house edge. But here is a list of
people who out beat the Casino every time they walk out. Whether it was
through intelligence and cleverness, or by outright cheating, they never
walk out as a loser but always as a winner that’s why they are called
God of Gamblers.
Foto Lengkap ada di : http://lilomag.com/2010/01/30/the-real-top-10-god-of-gamblers/
Many
people may consider the list to be “too American” but it’s just what
research yielded. It can be concluded that the U.S. has a bit more of a
gambling culture than other countries because it is home to Las Vegas,
Atlantic City, and multiple other gambling cities and towns.
10 ) Ron Harris
It
was January, 1995 when Reid Errol McNeal defeated the 1million to 1
odds and hit a monster keno jackpot which is $100,000 at Bally’s Park
Place Casino Resort in Atlantic City, New Jersy. When Reid Errol won the
jackpot he showed no emotion which aroused suspicion among the
officcials. He did not have identification with him and asked to be paid
in cash.
There is a law in
New Jersey that jackpots over $35,000 is to be verified by the state
gaming officials. So they went to McNeal’s hotel room and found Ron
Harris who was said to be a friend of McNeal. McNeal was asked to go
downstairs with the officials to be questioned. He told the officials
that Harris was a computer techincian for the Nevada Gaming Control
Board, which regulates gaming in Las Vegas. When the officials went back
to the hotel room they found out Harris was gone and found computer
equipments, books and notes on how Bally’s jackpot machine’s random
number generator could be beaten.
Later
on they found out that Harris work as a slot machine checker and
tester. He used his knowledge and brilliance to access Bally’s
programming on how the random number generator and uses some
calculations to find out how the machine works. There fore he was able
to predict the outcomes and gave them to his partne, McNeal. They were
both arrested, McNeal was arrested immediately while Harris was arrested
later in Nevada.
9 ) Gonzalo Garcia-Pelayo
Garcia-Pelayo
was actually a Spain record producer who found out that record
producing was not the right thing for him to do so he devote himself all
his time and thinking to became the first person who successfully
exploit wheel bias in the 90s.
Later
on some people suggested him the idea of wheel bias but never took
advantage of it at the casino.Wheel bias is the belief that not all
roulette wheels are perfectly random, and that each individual wheel is
unique in that certain numbers are more likely to drop than others. This
aberration was a result of wheels being ever so slightly off level or
because of other minute inaccurate measurements such as tiny differences
in pocket sizes, or the way the wheel’s gears worked.
He
began in casinos in Spain by tediously staring at a specific wheel for
thousands of spins, recording his results, then analyzing them with a
computer. He also recruited his 5 children to help record results.
Before he bet a cent, he did many observation sessions on the same
wheel. When he felt it was time to bet on the wheel’s “hot numbers” he
swung a 5% house edge to a 15% player’s edge and raked in the cash. When
he began to feel heat he found a new casino and did the process over
again. When every casino in Spain knew who he was he took his method to
the United States and Las Vegas where he continued to profit. When he
became just too well-known by casinos around the world he retired with
an estimated $1.5 million in the bank. One casino sued to recover their
losses but Spain’s Supreme Court ruled in Garcia-Pelayo’s favor saying
that all he did was “ingenuity and computer techniques. That’s all”.
8 ) Dominic LoRiggio
He
was called “The Man With The Golden Arm” and “The Dominator” but
LoRiggio’s was his real name. With many years of practice LoRiggio
learned “controlled shooting” which is a technique of getting the rolls
you want in the game of craps.
This
method involves setting the dice in a certain way while gripping them
precisely and tossing them out so they stay together in the air having
them landing as gentle as possible on the table. He began with his
fellow dice control aficionados as the team known as Rosebud. Together
they were the first to attack the Vegas strip with their specialized way
of shooting. Toll today many people think that controlling the dice is
something impossible, but LoRiggio aka “The Dominator” says that it is
possible with some basic physics.
Eventually
LoRiggio left his group because he feld that they were restraining him
from making some serious money. He teamed up with another famous gambler
and also writter Frank Scoblete, and by using “controlled shooting’
they claimed to win thousands of dollars at various casinos. Although
what LoRiggio doing is not illegal, but because of him many casinos now
identify the controlled shooters and will force them to shoot the dice
using different mechanics.LoRiggio now conducts dice throwing classes so
if anyone wants to learn how to win thousands of dollars in the casinos
with a lot of practice, sign up!
7 ) Keith Taft
As
you can see in cartoons Taft was actually a real life Inspector Gadget.
He was an electronic genius who spend 30 years of his life to develop
devices which can defeat the casino. His son Marty and him began
planning in the 70s and was considered one of the first who ever create a
computer to capture digital video and a microcomputer.
During
1969 after his vacation he became addicted to blackjack and was
acknowledge on Edward Thorp(see #1) had written that the game was
beatable with some basic mathematical calculations. He tried card
counting but did not found any success in it, so he turn his table by
using computers to help him do his work in casinos.
He
first created a 15 pound computer named George to help him with card
counting which uses his toes which was under his clothes. Being too
bulky, he created a more lightweight device which he named David and was
shockingly advanced for its time. With it he made $40,000 the first
week he used it. Taft then basically spit in the faces of casinos and
marketed his mini-computer for $10,000 apiece and trained people how to
use it. He was eventually detained at a casino and his computer was
found, but because the casino and the FBI had not the slightest inkling
of how to use it, and therefore couldn’t prove it was used for cheating,
Taft was let go with no consequences.
The
“belly telly” was Keith and Marty’s next invention and was a tiny video
camera that was placed in one’s belt buckle and could see the dealer’s
hole card. The image would be relayed to an accomplice who had a
satellite on a pickup truck in the parking lot, and he in turn would
signal back to the player the best move to make. Other genius inventions
included Thor, a computer which could deduce the positioning of cards
in a deck if a perfect shuffle was used, and Naina, a sequencing
computer.
In 1985 Nevada
made it illegal to use electronic devices to aid in gambling, with a
punishment of 10 years in prison. However, this was after Taft had won
thousands upon thousands of dollars over the years. For all his sweat,
blood, and tears and pioneering computer work, Taft was inducted into
the Blackjack Hall of Fame in 2004.
6 ) Ida Summers
With
striking good looks, Ida Summers was not a woman who would seem to be
the epitome of a casino cheater, but in the 60s and 70s she reeled in
tens of thousands of dollars in the casinos using guile and shiftiness.
Her
specialties were “hand mucking” and switching in “coolers” at the
blackjack tables. Hand mucking involves concealing a card that has been
brought to the table or removed from play, then through sleight of hand
returning it to play when it will benefit the player. Her
attractiveness, sociability, and unintimidating frame (5’3” and 100
lbs.) went a long way in deflecting heat from her as she effortlessly
switched cards in and out of the deck. She made her way to Las Vegas and
continued her cunning ways. It should be noted that during this time
many Vegas casinos had mob connections and weren’t as “kind” to cheaters
as they are today. This makes her next move even more brazen.
She
took it a step further and began to insert cold decks or coolers into
the games. Cold decks are pre-stacked decks, brought in by the player,
that are traded out with the deck being used in the game. It is an
incredibly dangerous maneuver to pull in a casino, but somehow Ida was
able to successfully execute it. The fact that there were really no
known female cheats at the time made her nearly invincible for a while.
Soon she became a legend among the shady underworld of casino cheats
since nobody in their right mind had ever attempted inserting a cold
deck before.
Her boldness caught up with her however as the FBI and gaming officials ultimately brought her down.
5 ) Tommy Glenn Carmichael
Tommy
Glenn Carmichael, like Keith Taft, was a gifted individual who created
prodigiously clever devices to gain an enormous edge in the casino.
However, his game was the slots. “Give me a slot machine and I’ll beat
it” was his motto – and he wasn’t kidding around.
His
cheating career began in 1980 at the age of 30 when he used a
“top-bottom joint” to win large payouts. This device was a pretty
simplistic piece of metal that produced payouts when inserted into the
coin slot. Soon, larger casinos replaced their older slot machines with
newer ones that had random number generators. As a result, Carmichael
moved to smaller gambling halls in Las Vegas but he was arrested at one
of these and sentenced to jail. Jail however only strengthened his
reserve and when he was released got back to work evolving his cheating
instruments.
He developed
tools called a Slider and Monkey Paw which when slipped into the machine
tripped a switch and caused the hopper to release coins. When slot
machines went computer-based he immediately went on the offense and went
to a slot machine manufacturer posing as a customer. He had the
salesperson open up the new machines as he studied their innards. That
was all he needed to invent the “light wand”. This gadget consisted of a
camera battery and miniature light and was used to blind a sensor
inside the slots causing it to payout coins. It was nearly impossible
for security to detect a person using this wand because it was so
subtle, and in addition to Carmichael profiting from using it, he sold
it to other cheats making as much as $10,000 on certain days.
In
1996 he was arrested for using the wand but charges were later dropped.
But in the next three years he was arrested twice in casinos for
possession of a cheating device. The FBI became involved and in 2001
Carmichael was sentenced to time served and probation. Today he consults
casinos and ironically produces anti-cheating devices. It’s quite
amazing that because of one man’s ability to thwart slot machines, the
entire casino industry had to make their technology increasingly more
complex.
4 ) Louis “The Coin” Colavecchio
In
the late 90s law enforcement agencies from various states, the FBI,
Secret Service, and others, descended upon the home of Louis
Colavecchio. There they found thousands of manufactured slot tokens from
dozens of casinos throughout North America.
What
sets Colavecchio apart from other counterfeiters is that he was able to
duplicate just about anything made out of precious metals or stones.
The slot coins found weren’t just counterfeits, they were precisely the
same as the real things in every way; they essentially WERE the same
thing.
In order to pull
this off, “The Coin” needed some seriously specialized equipment. These
hard-to-obtain things included: precious metals such as copper, nickel,
and zinc, laser-cutting tools to cut, shape, and create dies to stamp
out the coins, and a 150-ton press from Italy.
He
was so good, that when coins were brought by officials to one of the
casinos Colavecchio had hit, security experts there did not even believe
they were counterfeit. He was able to decimate casinos in Las Vegas
before law enforcement had any perception of his crimes. They finally
became aware when large surpluses of coins showed up on casinos’
inventory in other parts of the continent and Colavecchio was
suspiciously cashing in large sums of coins.
It
took weeks to sort out just how much “The Coin” stole from the dozens
of casinos he had made coins for. It was impossible to ascertain a
definite amount since those in Las Vegas refused to even acknowledge
that they had been cheated. Estimates range from $100,000 to $500,000,
and it was clear he had no intentions to slow down. The government had
to rent two storage facilities just to store all of the loot they found
in Colavecchio’s possession.
A
plea deal was reached when he promised to show law enforcement exactly
how his operation had worked in order to help in the prevention of
future, similar assaults on casinos.
3 ) MIT Blackjack Team
This
team would be the most famous of them all the MIT blackjack team. There
were books written about their stories and even a movie called 21 was
release during 2008.
21-poster
Beginning
as an after-school club meeting in campus classrooms at The
Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the mid 90s, this team came
into inception when these brilliant students decided to use
statistic-based systems to beat the game of blackjack. They would
subsequently assail casinos for years following.
The
initial core of students and accepted associates then went on a
recruiting campaign and even put up flyers around campus. Applicants
were given tests so only the most suitable ones were chosen in the end,
then they were thoroughly trained in the system. The system was card
counting which, if done correctly, can give the player a slight yet
substantial edge. The idea was not new, and thousands had tried their
hand at it previously, but the MIT team really took it to a new level.
They
created casino mock-ups and environments and took a team-based
approach. This complex arrangement of having a team minimized the chance
of being caught, maximized opportunities, and disguised the betting
patterns that are inherent to all card counters. Casinos were
experienced in identifying counters and making their time there
miserable, but it would be extremely difficult for them to do so if the
team masked their activity well enough. Hours upon grueling hours were
spent perfecting the system and each member had to pass a tedious and
demanding battery of tests before they were allowed to enter live casino
play.
They began in
underground card games to reassure themselves that their calculations
and methods would transfer to real-life conditions. When they were sure,
they acquired financial backing from anonymous investors and created
their own corporation named Strategic Investments. With a bankroll of
hundreds of thousands of dollars they then invaded Vegas casinos. Their
impact was even greater than expected with returns far exceeding their
goals. In one weekend alone they accrued $400,000 in winnings.
Heat
in time began to hamper the team and they were forced to move to
smaller, sometimes unsavory casinos. Eventually they travelled to
European countries but their reputation followed them there as well.
After more than one brush with the law the original members quit the
team. New students joined but casinos all over the globe knew about MIT
students and yearbook photos from the school were downloaded to a shared
database. This effectively ended the team’s reign.
In
all, it was reported that over the span of just a few years the team
amassed a profit of over $5 million, and has also become a legendary
entity in pop culture.
2 ) Richard Marcus
Marcus
may be the best full-blown cheater in the history of casino gambling.
In the beginning he tried to support himself solely on gambling but soon
enough he found himself living under a bridge. He got his act together
and became a blackjack and baccarat dealer, but while he was on the
other side of the gaming table sinister ideas percolated in his head.
These ideas would come to fruition and in turn would wreak havoc on the
casinos.
One simple, but
extremely difficult-to-pull-off, move made Marcus such an elite cheat.
He dubbed it “The Savannah” and it involved betting a low denomination
of chips, such as three $5 ones at the roulette table – nothing at all
that would draw any attention. If he won, he would become very excited,
screaming and yelling while throwing his hands up in the air. However,
the dealer would be perplexed as to why a player was so elated over
winning such a modest sum. Marcus would then alert him to the fact that
there was a brown $500 chip underneath the three $5 chips, and when the
dealer lifted the top three, he would in fact see himself that there was
a $500 chip resting there.
On
the other hand, if Marcus’ bet lost he would quickly and
surreptitiously remove the $500 chip from the bottom of the stack as the
dealer was turned toward the wheel and he would only be out $15. It was
only a rudimentary optical illusion, yet a brilliant one. The smaller
denomination chips were pushed just slightly forward to cover up the
larger one; the dealer never saw the brown chip – unless the player
wanted him to. The idea of switching out chips, or past posting as it’s
known, was not new, but what made Marcus’ method so innovative was that
he performed it backwards. Past posters would bet small, and if they won
would stealthily add more chips to their original bet. Marcus started
with a large bet then changed it to a small one if he lost. It may not
seem like it was a drastic change, but casinos had never seen this
before and were not looking for it because security was trained to only
look at wins, and his wins were completely legitimate, it was his losses
that weren’t! At the pinnacle of their game, he and accomplices were
dropping $5,000 chips under $100 ones.
Richard
Marcus was eventually caught and prosecuted but not after he bilked an
estimated $5 million from casinos around the world. He currently sells
gambling books and claims on his website that he is still involved in
casino cheating but in a way law enforcement officials can never catch.
1 ) Edward Thorp
Thorp
is the father of card counting. Not only was he successful using it in
real-world situations, he was the one who invented the original system. A
mathematics professor who possessed a master’s degree in physics and a
doctorate degree in mathematics, he clearly had above-average
intelligence.
As an adult
in the early 60s, Thorp knew next to nothing about casino games and the
world of gambling. But when a friend, Claude Shannon, brought him and
his wife to Las Vegas he became interested in blackjack, and after
playing the game a number of times became convinced that there was a
mathematical way in which the player could gain an advantage.
He
studied the game in a systematic method and exhaustively examined every
facet of the game. Using a computer owned by the university he taught
at, he simulated billions of blackjack hands to delve even further into
the mathematics of the game. This computer was so massive it filled an
entire room, yet it was less powerful than today’s laptops. Through his
calculations and observations he created his system which “accounted for
the variations in those (cards) that remained after certain hands were
dealt”. Basically, he realized that smaller cards were more advantageous
for the dealer and when they left the deck, advantage shifted in the
player’s favor so they should bet more. Concurrently, larger cards were
more advantageous to the player and when they left the deck the
advantage shifted to the house, or dealer, so less money should be bet.
Using this method Thorp calculated that the player could own a 1% to 5%
advantage over the house.
Thorp
and Shannon hit the casinos and would return with their pockets filled
with cash. One typical weekend would net $70,000 in today’s money. The
gambling industry was no match for Thorp’s flawless execution of his
card counting method. After all, card counting did not yet exist to them
so they had no idea what was happening. Thorp drew the attention of
casino bosses when he began winning unusually high sums and most were
convinced he was cheating. They intensely watched him play and studied
videotapes of his play, but they could see nothing nefarious occurring.
Before long, some casinos asked Thorp to leave because he was simply
winning too much, yet they still did not know how he was doing so.
In
1962 Thorp wrote his book “Beat the Dealer” which detailed his card
counting “ten count system” and became an instant hit as well as a
modern-day classic. With its sales he amassed a pretty handsome fortune.
In 1966 he wrote a second edition which expanded on the intricacies of
the system. It’s interesting to note that the sudden explosion in card
counting worked in favor of the casinos since many people attempting to
do it just couldn’t pull it off as effectively as Thorp did. However,
his findings and methods have been the basis for every card counting
system following, including that of the aforementioned MIT team’s.
Following
his gambling exploits, Thorp applied his mathematical genius to the
stock market and made a huge fortune in securities and hedge funds. Due
to his dominance over the casinos and revolutionary thinking, Thorp was
one of the first seven inducted into the Blackjack Hall of Fame.
0 comments