Fouad al-Zayat

Fouad al-Zayat  Fouad al-Zayat was born in 1941. He is a Syrian born famous trader, capitalist and also a gambler. He emerged many companies most prominently the Mortimer Off-Shore Services Ltd. His son in law and son are operating this resort nowadays.

Al-Zayat’s as a gamester

Fouad al-Zayat is a reputed extravagant bettor. He was called the whale in the casino industry. His rolling style was certainly different. According to his word, while he seemed the rotating wheel it was looped to him and it took away his mind out of all worlds of thought except for the game. He also told that the money wasn’t any fact in gambling! Within few years, al-Zayat bet £91.5 million and spoiled £23.2 million at the Mayfair club. Aspinall brought a petition against al-Zayat and acquitted of loan charges. He clogged in the debt from blackjack losses in 2000. The court-mandated al-Zayat for paying the debt. He appealed against the petition later and was succeeded.

Al-Zayat sued casinos

Fouad Al-Zayat lost a huge wealth at gambling and asserting the casinos were illegally approved his credit. He was one of the famous fruitful and stealthy gamblers. The high roller was called fat man when he was a continuous player in London casinos. Across 15 years, this Syrian rich man lost a huge amount of his profusion under the reel of the gambling wheel. The reason for bringing the petition was partially known. He was possessing assuredly that the casino allowed him to credit unlawfully. Former he won the High Court because his lawyers effectively argued for the removal of debt of Aspinalls.

Fouad al-Zayat was connected to bribery!

Al-Zayat was trying to fudge his contacts with an arms kickback case that was placed in Greece. He was residing in Lebanon from 2013 because he was supposed to get arrested for bribery and money bleaching. At that time, Cypriot minister Dinos Michaelides was also found fault of money bleaching. They along with Al-Zayat also sentenced to prison. When Al-Zayat was charged he and his lawyer refused the charges and told that Michaelides had untruly smeared his clients. Cyprus got issued the arrest permission against him due to having contact with a debt he had taken from Laiki Bank that was unscriptural.

Fouad Al-Zayat’ death

Fouad al-Zayat was suffering from cancer and then died. His dead body was transferred to Cyprus and was buried without any issues.

Tommy Carmichael

Tommy Carmichael  Tommy Glen Carmichael was born in Oklahoma. Previously he worked as a television mechanic but this man is also renowned for producing s perverse cheating devices. He used to cheat the casinos and hoaxed thousands of dollars. This man died in the same place he born at the age of 68.

TV craftsman Carmichael was technically talented

Carmichael was devoted to technological materials and machine’s working tricks. While he started his own TV fixing business it grew so faster. While he met with a school friend having a car tool, he found the key of luck. That was an active and very rare machine at that time.

Carmichael, the technical magician who bluffs casinos

The name Carmichael may come out through mouth very easily but this name was once the reason for shivering down the spine of any casino. The players having a concrete idea on gambling history know that Carmichael spent almost 20 years taming the wizardry to bluff casinos. He applied a freaky trick and bumped the slot machine to cheat the casino. His eloquent discovery was named the monkey’s paw. The slider accustomed to fit up the device’s payout chute. The tiny switch inside the device gees the jackpot payout. How impressive the technique is!

Carmichael was in witness!

Carmichael invented many fabulous techniques to bluff casinos. Many gamblers have heard the name of a reputable ‘light wand’. The casinos were progressing day by day so do Carmichael’s notion. His later ‘James Bond’ style discovery was the light wand. He used a battery and a tiny light bulb to blind the sensor of the slot device. By this wand-like structure, he made the coins to spat out. He earned about thousands of dollar but very soon he fell into the investigation. He was arrested two times in Las Vegas. He also captured in Atlantic City once for his grab of cheating casinos.

Carmichael turned back and introduced anti-cheating devices

The former introducer of several bluffing devices for gambling the casino king once decided to turn around. He thought about developing The Protector devices for welfare in the gambling industry. As a recovery measures of his foul past, he invented new gadgets for protecting casinos. Carmichael’s name was attached in the ‘Black Book’, a manuscript for the banned people in the gambling industry. Despite his efforts for rebuilding things on the right track the decision of keeping his name on the list is still be in force.

Daniel Colman

Daniel Colman  Daniel Colman was born on 11 July 1990 in Holden, Massachusetts, United States of America.

An American professional poker player, he won $1 million at the 2014 World Series of Poker’s Big One for One Drop event in Las Vegas. The win happened during a game of Texas Hold’em Poker.

Growing Up

Colman is a very private person, so there is not much information about him as a child. However, we know that he was fascinated by gambling from an early age, and he first bet on sports.

Even though he was successful, he was ambitious and wanted more. He soon became interested in playing Poker. It was the techniques, the interest, and the exhilaration that made him fascinated with Poker.

Career as a Poker Player

Initially, he had success at the poker tables. However, he wasn’t good at managing his bankroll and would incorrectly raise his stakes.

A year after he was banned for multiple accounts at PokerStars, he was permitted to play again. After that, he behaved himself.

He won $111,942 at the $10,000 No-Limit Hold’em Head-Up Poker event during the 2014 World Series of Poker.

During the same tournament, he defeated Daniel Negreanu, another well-known player of Poker. Additionally, he received a cash prize of $15,306 668 at the conclusion of the competition. In the history of poker tournaments, this was the second largest single payout.

During the 2014 WSOP, he won the only bracelet he has to his name.

What is Daniel Colman Doing Now?

Colman now lives in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, with his Brazilian girlfriend and still plays Poker at various online poker sites. He is currently estimated to be worth $29 million, so he no longer has to count on his poker skills to earn a living and can enjoy the game.

Omar Siddiqui

Omar Siddiqui  Ausaf Siddiqui (also known as Omar Siddiqui) was born in Pakistan in 1966.

During the time he spent working at Fry’s Electronics, he embezzled money, which led to money-laundering and wire fraud, which resulted in him gambling over $162 million in Las Vegas, USA.

Early Childhood

He was born in Pakistan and grew up in the US, but little is known about his childhood.

Fry’s Electronics

Siddiqui began working for an electronics and computer retailer called Fry’s Electronics.

He was promoted to Vice President of the Company in 1999 and was earning $225 000 annually. In an effort to pay higher prices for goods purchased by the Company, Siddiqui made his money by accepting kickbacks from suppliers. Funds were channelled through a shell company called PD International, which he set up.

The Company hid a total of $65.6 million in kickbacks.

A Las Vegas high roller

Siddiqui was addicted to gambling and preferred to play Blackjack. Dealers called him a “blackjack machine” because he liked it when the cards were dealt extremely quickly. A typical bet for him is $200 000.

Arrogant and high-living, he was lavished with luxury suites, private jets, luxurious holidays and casino cash by the casinos.

In addition, they extended him million-dollar credit lines so that when he won at one casino, he used the winnings to repay the credit at another.

Fraud conviction

An Employee saw documents on Siddiqui’s desk in 2005 that showed extraordinary commission payments.

Ultimately, in 2008, the employee exposed his fraud, which resulted in his conviction for money laundering and wire fraud, as well as his jail sentence of six years. This also resulted in him declaring bankruptcy as he could not pay any of his gambling debts.

At the time of his bankruptcy filing, Siddiqui owed $137 million in debt.