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Fantastic Frauds

Created by catamount

Fun Trivia : Quizzes : Frauds & Hoaxes
Fantastic Frauds game quiz
"Since the dawn of recorded history people have been trying to take advantage of one another's gullibility. Can you be fooled?"

15 Points Per Correct Answer - No time limit  



1. Frank Abagnale, Jr., became (in)famous for impersonating one of these. Which was it?
    Airline pilot
    Heir to a European throne
    Research scientist
    Movie producer


2. Arthur Ferguson once convinced an Australian tourist that the Statue of Liberty was up for sale for $100,000. The "sale" fell through when the tourist tried to arrange for financing and the bank became suspicious. Ferguson was arrested and sentenced to five years for his fraud. But this was not the first time he had tried to sell landmarks to gullible tourists. Which of the following was NOT one of the items Ferguson "sold"?
    Buckingham Palace
    Westminster Abbey
    Lord Nelson's Column
    Big Ben


3. The bust of Queen Nefertiti is one of the most famous examples of Ancient Egyptian art. It was found in the workshop of royal sculptor Thutmose, together with a bust of her husband King Akhenaton. Interestingly the king's bust is in such poor condition it is barely recognizable, while the head of Nefertiti is almost perfectly preserved, including its coloration. This has led to some speculation that its discoverer has not been entirely honest about his find. There have been accusations that he commissioned the bust from a local sculptor, that he refreshed the paint from some of the original pigment powders also found in the workshop, or at the very least that he used some underhanded trickery to get the bust out of Egypt. What was this archeologists name?
    Hermann A. J. Kees
    Heinrich Schliemann
    Ludwig Borchardt
    Max Uhle


4. During the 1920s and 30s, Oscar Hartzell conducted an elaborate fraud concerning the estate of which British personality?
    Sir Francis Drake
    William Shakespeare
    Sir Isaac Newton
    Mary Queen of Scots


5. By what nickname did people call Glenn Turner, the founder of Koscot Interplanetary, Inc?
    The Pharaoh of Pyramids
    King Con
    The Duke of Deception
    Prince of Thieves


6. Joshua Norton, the Emperor of America, may have been insane rather than a fraud, but he did manage to make a living from collecting Imperial Taxes and issuing Imperial Treasury Bonds. People went along with his delusion and paid him willingly as he had become quite famous over the 20 years of his "reign". True or false: in his later years he fell out of favour with his public and died in poverty.
    True
    False


7. The policies of the Catholic Church in the Middle Ages were based on a forged document.
    True
    False


8. The Internet has made perpetration of certain frauds a lot easier. One famous fraud consists of a letter, supposedly written by an official or the relative of an official in some wartorn country, soliciting the reader's help in smuggling millions of dollars out of the country. For his help, the reader will be rewarded with anywhere between ten and thirty percent of the booty. This fraud is so well known that it has its own name in law enforcement circles, named for the country of origin of the first one of these letters. What is the name of the country?
    Nigeria
    Somalia
    Ghana
    Angola


9. The "Hokes Archives" are a project by artist Beauvais Lyons. In addition to "lost civilizations" such as the Apasht and the Arenot they also claim ownership of fossil evidence of which mythical creature?
    Mermaid
    Sphinx
    Griffin
    Centaur


10. Finally, what is the name of the Israel-born, spoon-bending "psychic" who gained fame and fortune during the 1970s and 80s?
    Answer: (Two Words, 3 letters and 6 letters)


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Compiled May 24 13