I Think I Solved the Mystery of the NFL's Secret Scammer and a $5 Billion Check
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Okay, so I should say first of all, happy fucking Thanksgiving.
We made it.
We did it.
And sincerely,
I am deeply grateful.
We here at Pablo Tori Finds Out are deeply grateful for you for being here, for raiding, for reviewing.
I'm assuming you did both of those things because it's self-evident, of course, that that keeps us alive, keeps the premise of our existence viable.
Thank you for that.
Still time to do that.
But I wanted to bring you an episode today on Thanksgiving as the Washington Commanders are on television in the background of some genuinely uncomfortable family conversations.
This episode.
I wanted to bring you this episode because it is the one that I think embodies some of the best of what we do here and also because it ran on the first Friday of the first week that we existed.
And I'm a little worried that people maybe missed it,
even though it is all of the things that I'm alluding to.
So, if you haven't checked it out before, I think you're in for a real treat.
A lot happens.
And please feel free to recap it in variously accurate ways to your family as you're kind of drunk eating turkey.
Please enjoy.
Welcome to Pablo Torre Finds Out.
I am Pablo Torre, and today we're going to find out what this sound is.
My money cuss from white people.
White people.
I don't even know what that means, but okay.
Right after this ad.
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So, Cortez, do you notice anything different about me today at the last
show of our week here?
I mean, instead of wearing like purple pants like you have in the past with me, you're you're wearing shorts for some reason.
We have found out a lot this week on Pablo Torre finds out why I'm wearing shorts.
Go listen to yesterday's episode with Katie Nolan to find out why I will never wear pants again.
That's one thing we found out.
I'm so impressed with your calves, dude.
As someone who used to do calf raises in high school, like yours are better than anything I've ever put out, like for sure.
I do want people to understand that Ryan Cortez used to be a member of a thing called Royd Crew.
Allegedly.
That's a separate finds out investigation.
But we learned, speaking of investigations, that Stu Gotts did better P-tape journalism than Rachel Maddow this week.
We learned that Dan Soder has the best Macho Man Savage impression I've ever heard.
It's incredible.
It's incredible.
But today, Cortez, because I consider us a show on a mission, right?
A journalistic mission, I want to talk about how...
We all have that one like message, email, phone call, letter that we received at some point in our life that we vividly remember receiving, right?
You remember where you were, what you were doing, how it felt to receive this thing.
Dude, you know what's funny is five years ago on this day, you and I were working together on high noon.
This is the fourth show you and I have worked together on.
Debatable, highly questionable high noon.
Pablitori finds out.
Five years ago on this day,
when I was getting ready to go to work for high noon, I got a text message from one of the producers.
And I remember that message.
I remember where I was, how it made me feel.
The message said, Are you cool pouring maple syrup in Pablo's mouth?
And I was like, Dude, I wanted to be a journalist, and this is what my career has come to now.
Yeah, youtube.com slash Pablo Torre finds out, find the archival footage of that happening.
That's a thing we did on ESPN1.
But for me, Cortez, the message I most remember receiving, the message that still is sort of like cattle branded into my brain, happened just this spring.
And it was a text message that I got on a lazy May afternoon in New York City.
I remember I was eating a whole wheat tuna wrap.
It's disgusting.
Alone.
You're pathetic.
Staring out the window of a diner counter.
What's wrong with, I mean, I guess I have been yelled at before that at a time.
Tuna is disgusting and you're eating it alone.
That's what's wrong with it.
I did get yelled at once for eating a tuna wrap on an Acella.
Oh, bro.
You should be kicked off for that.
That's foul.
That sounds terrible.
But I digress.
The reason why I remember this tuna wrap was because I got a message, a text message from my friend Kenny, who happens to live in Washington, D.C.
And Kenny is a DC guy, born and raised.
He's actually now the head basketball coach at Howard University, just made the tournament with Howard for the first time in 31 years in March.
He is the MIAC coach of the year, actually, right?
He's a big deal in DC.
But the text that Kenny sent me in May, I should clarify, was not about any of that.
And it was not actually text.
This message was just an attachment, actually.
It was a PDF of a bank draft.
What is a bank draft?
So, a bank draft is just like a guaranteed check, basically.
It's a form of check that carries a guarantee of funds.
So, it's like as good as money, is what a bank draft is.
And the amount of money associated with this bank draft, funds guaranteed by Citibank in this case, specifically, certified by Wells Fargo,
was five billion dollars.
You said B billion?
Five, a five billion dollar bank draft, right?
What was that for?
And so this bank draft,
I learned, was going to be used to purchase the Washington Commanders.
Okay.
Very good.
The NFL team.
And so this weekend, as football is kicking off in earnest, we're going to be on our couches just fusing to them.
All day.
Like those people in shows about how they need to be like, you know, forklifted out of their homes.
Right.
I'm going to be thinking about the Commanders most of all because of the mystery that I plunged into after receiving this text.
My tuna wrap,
delicious as it was, it sat there uneaten.
And I just fell into a rabbit hole inside of which I think I still remain today as we sit here at this table.
Because down in that rabbit hole with me, it turned out, were the Imperial Japanese Army, Bob Marley.
Christian Leitner, the worst owner in all of American sports, my family's ancestral homeland.
Of course.
And also, of course,
these nuts.
Okay,
I'm very interested.
Yeah, well, I'll explain after the break.
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So go ahead, treat yourself to a little luxury, and try Remy Martin 1738 Accord Royale.
Learn more at remymartin.com.
Remy Martin Coggyak Feene Champain, a 4000 Alcohol by Volume, reported by Remy Control, USA, Incorporated in York, New York, 1738, Centaur design.
Please drink responsibly.
Okay, so this story starts back in April 2023, back when Dan Snyder, the worst owner in all of American sports, finally agreed to do the thing that he had refused to do for like a quarter century.
The end of Daniel Snyder's era as owner of the Washington Commanders is rapidly approaching.
According to CBS Sports, Snyder has accepted a $6 billion offer from Josh Harris's group to buy the team.
Harris owns the Sixers.
Before Josh Harris, that finance guy who also owns the 76ers and the New Jersey Devils, nobody had ever agreed to pay $6 billion
to buy any team.
in the entire history of sports.
But the day after this historic announcement, something happened that threatened to change everything.
With breaking news tonight, once again, on the control of the commanders, D, I understand there is yet another twist in this.
As record-setting as the sale was, it was not final, not yet.
The agreement was still in principle, which meant that another bidder was very welcome to come along and pay Dan Snyder even more.
Yeah, Zoe, I just obtained documents that say a Washington, D.C.
resident is in conversations with the Washington commanders after placing a $7 billion bid to purchase the team.
Now, according to these documents, Brian Davis, the founder of Urban Echo Energy LLC, an energy company, originally placed the bid on March 21st.
Now, Davis is a former basketball player for Duke.
He won a national championship there.
That's him in the middle.
So Brian Davis actually won two national championships at Duke, to be specific.
And he he was not at all the best player on that dynasty from the 90s.
Brian had averaged like seven points on teams that had Grant Hill and Bobby Hurley and Brian's roommate, Christian Leitner.
But Brian was their leader.
Brian was the captain they all elected.
And once again,
here was Brian Davis taking charge.
We can confirm Brian Davis' financial documents were sent this morning to the Washington Commanders.
The documents give a general timeline that says the first billion billion dollars could be released to Dan Snyder within 24 hours and the rest of the $6 billion
in a week.
Also, in the letter, I saw Brian Davis is willing to indemnify Snyder as a condition of his offer.
Now, if Dan Snyder accepts, it would set an NFL record for the most expensive sale in global sports history and the NFL's first African-American majority owner.
But there was a problem.
Everybody knew Josh Harris as a billionaire.
When he bought the Sixers, for instance, a New York Times headline called him a private equity prince.
But nobody, nobody, including Bank of America, the bank managing the team sale, had any idea how in the f Brian Davis had all of this money.
The outlet front office sports, they reported that the true source of Brian's billions might be Saudi Arabian investors.
Brian's college coach, Coach K, he had questions of his own, I am told.
And as one Bank of America managing director wrote, replying directly to Brian's submission of financial documents in an email I obtained, quote,
are you able to send us some background and further details regarding the $10 billion of cash that you have on your balance sheet?
Many thanks.
End quote.
All right, hold on.
My head is exploding, Brian, with all due respect.
So I think what I understood.
all of which is why Brian eagerly called into the sports junkies, a live, super popular sports radio show in Washington, D.C.
What I understood prior to having you on was that you were sort of like the lead guy, and somehow you had, you were kind of like the voice of this money that you had accumulated.
But I never thought for a second that you were ever alleging that your personal net worth was in the billions.
Yeah, my personal net worth
because of my partners, you know, as I said, I wasn't born with a billion dollars, but my partners are multi-billionaires.
Right, so you're representing them.
That's what I'm that's what you're doing.
I'm representing them, but I've sold my intellectual property, which allowed me to have, you know,
a large, a large amount of capital.
And as I said, I'm not Nikolai Tesla, but I am a person who's been doing the same thing for 25 years.
My money cuts from white.
No, Brian had never replicated his success at Duke in the NBA.
The guy was out of the league after playing less than 70 games with the Timberwolves.
But over those subsequent 25 years, Brian had helped develop a real estate venture with Christian Leightner in Durham, North Carolina, called the West Village, which eventually sold for $275 million.
Then they bought and sold an ownership stake in DC United, the major league soccer team.
And since then, and this is the most important part, Brian had launched his own green energy infrastructure business, which he called Urban Echo Energy.
I have $20 billion in my holding company through my business.
That's a fact.
Whether you believe it or not, it's up to you.
Okay, but I don't want it.
It's the NFL's job to make that decision.
I don't want people to issue statements about me having Saudi money or any of these things that are not accurate.
Instead, what Brian wanted to do was issue a statement of his own.
My money comes from white people.
White people, you mean?
I don't even know what that means, but okay.
White people.
No, let me finish.
Let me finish.
White people who are Jewish, who are Italian, who are Sicilian, white people.
And the NFL will find that out.
It comes from white people.
Those are my partners, white people.
All right, hold on.
I think that that's hilarious.
So, yeah, look, if it sounds like Ryan's a bit defensive about his partners here,
it's for good reason.
A source tells me they don't believe Mr.
Davis has the money.
And we learned that Davis has been sued several times.
He's faced civil lawsuits for not paying back loans, breach of contract,
failure to appear in court, and defaulted on loans.
So take the aforementioned real estate development in Durham, for instance, that became that big success.
What Brian doesn't love discussing is how he had tried to replicate that same model in bigger cities.
And then got sued for loans he could not repay, which was a giant humiliation.
Or take that ownership stake in DC United that I told you about.
Brian had also agreed to buy a majority stake in the NBA's Memphis Grizzlies for nine figures.
But then he failed to produce the money he had to personally guarantee with that.
Another giant humiliation.
And in fact, Brian has been sued by NBA Hall of Famer Scottie Pippen, who invested in that Grizzlies deal, and his fellow Duke basketball alum, Johnny Dawkins.
and NFL star Sean Merriman, who immediately called bullshit on Brian's commander's bid
That was 25 years ago.
You asked me about the athletes.
That was a different life.
This life, I have an energy company.
It's called Urban Echo Energy, where I develop infrastructure.
It's a whole different level.
What Brian really wanted America to know here was that he, like his net worth, had changed.
All right, so if you're the owner, let's just fast forward.
No, no, no, this is a learning lesson.
This is what I'm trying to, this is my redemption song.
Imagine me as that hoops, Bob Marley.
That's who I am.
I'm a good guy.
Brian Davis.
That's my redemption song.
Brian Davis, if you take over as the owner of the
and this song, the song that Brian claimed as his own, redemption song by Bob Marley,
that's what played in my head for months.
In May, about a month after that interview, Brian Davis was back at Duke for his son's graduation.
It was supposed to be this big nostalgic celebration.
But instead, what I learned was that Brian was enraged.
Not only was Bank of America refusing to take him seriously, still, as the gatekeepers managing the sale of his childhood team, Bank of America, Brian claimed, was actually refusing to give him back his money.
You see, this whole time, everyone had been asking for proof of Brian's billions.
But what Brian says is that he had already sent by courier a signed and barcoded bank draft, a guaranteed uncancelable check from Citibank for $5 billion.
That's with a B.
And by the way, Brian didn't just send this document to Bank of America.
He had forwarded the PDF to one of his Duke teammates, a guy he knew from back in D.C., who is now the head coach at Howard University,
and also an old friend of mine, Kenny Blakeney, who sent that same PDF at Brian's request
to me.
I mean, I very vividly remember how I got sucked into this story because you sucked me into it.
I did.
I mean, I remember getting that text that was just a PDF.
And I clicked that PDF and inside of it is this $5 billion
bank draft.
Yeah.
And when you sent it to me, did you know that it was going to take over my life?
I think that was the whole point of sending it to you.
So Liz and Violet can be like, what the hell is wrong with daddy?
Why is daddy constantly googling?
Why did Brian want to talk to me?
I think, Pablo, at the end of the day, when you look at it,
probably the track record over the last,
you know, 10, 15 years with Brian.
You know, people,
if he's trying to use his own voice to get this message out, it's not as effective.
What Brian really wanted, I realized, was a journalist.
He wanted a journalist who might put down the tuna wrap he was eating, sadly by himself, to personally verify the bank draft, the redemption.
of Brian Davis.
Yeah, when I look at this stuff, it looks
real.
Like I've never seen a $5 billion bank draft before, but this is how I would imagine
it comes.
There is a stamp that says Wells Fargo Statutory Trust, SGSR.
There's a serial number across the bottom and the letterhead on this ICC demand guarantee page that says this is all real.
No doubt about it.
I've never seen a $5 billion check either, Pablo.
So when I look at this, it looks pretty official.
There's some holograms, QR codes.
It talks about the date that it was issued, the guarantee, period of coverage, beneficiary names.
And what are the two signatures there at the bottom of the bank draft page?
Tarciana C.
Rodriguez, Demri Donald Norvell.
These are the two named trustees.
Absolutely.
Solely as trustees.
Now, those two named trustees are are extremely important to the story.
But I should also note here that there is an attached and barcoded financing statement indicating that this whole document addressed to Urban Eco Energy, Brian's company, had been registered with California's Secretary of State, which it actually was.
I checked.
So, Kenny, do you remember the first time you ever met Brian Davis?
I do.
I probably was a sophomore in high school, so 14 years old, 15 years old.
Brian was a
basketball player that was in PG County, right across the road from us at Damatha Catholic High School.
And Brian showed up to Damatha one day wearing a suit.
And I knew who Brian was, but I've never met him at that point.
And I was just kind of like staring at this guy, like,
who's this guy?
Why was young Brian Davis wearing a suit showing up at Damatha?
Well, not knowing it then, but that just who Brian was at the time.
He's always wanted to present himself in a way
that people took him very seriously.
Had you ever seen anybody that age wear a suit, a basketball player wearing a suit to school?
That wasn't a drug dealer?
No.
So for people who aren't familiar with the DMV, explain where Brian came from.
He's from Capitol Heights, but Brian was born in Atlantic City and then moved to DC at a young age, moved to Capitol Heights.
And
the time that we were growing up, Pablo, it was
the crack epidemic.
DC was considered the murder capital of the world.
Given everything you knew about Brian over the course of his life since he was a teenager, what was your first thought when Brian sent you this $5 billion bank draft?
I don't know if you have one of those friends, right?
But he is just one of those guys that
you
I'm talking to our team about some of the things that are that are that's going on at Howard, yes, your basketball
our Duke team
from you know the time when Brian and I are all on the same team from the multiple national championship winning Duke dynasty, yes, sir.
And we're kind of you know going around and having conversations about it, and you know,
everybody consensusly is thinking the same thing.
Like, it can't be true,
but it's Brian.
When someone sends you a $5 billion check and says that, here are the things that I'm thinking about doing, it's kind of like, oh, shit.
Like,
let me kind of sit up in my chair a little bit.
Oh, shit is also how I felt at this point, admittedly.
But as Kenny and I were examining this documented proof, the proof of Brian's redemption, I started squinting at it and looking closer at it.
And at that point,
we both noticed something else.
Brian's $5 billion bank draft, very importantly, was not coming from Brian's own bank account.
It was coming from and was funded by, apparently, an estate.
an entity entrusted with a dead person's assets.
That was why Wells Fargo SGSR statutory trust was attached to this in the first place with all of that official letterhead.
But this dead person, this dead billionaire, I realized,
did not appear to be white or Jewish or Italian or Sicilian.
No,
this dead person
was a lot more like me.
The name of the estate on Brian's $5 billion bank draft was Severino Garcia Santa Romana.
Say it again.
Severino Garcia Santa Romana.
This episode, we're going to talk about a man named Severino Garcia Santa Romana.
Now, when I initially heard that name, I swear that a tiny radar deep inside my brain just started beeping.
Because of course, this story, this specific story, of course it had to be like this.
Of course, Severino Garcia Santa Romana had to be like me and Dave Batista and Olivia Rodrigo and any number of Asian-looking people people with Spanish names.
Of course, Severino Garcia Santa Romana had to be finging Filipino.
This is just one of many insanely detailed YouTube videos about Severino Garcia Santa Romana, many of which I found are in Filipino, in Tagalog, the main language.
But what I also found was dozens of message board threads about him, with thousands of comments in English about how he was apparently a Catholic priest/slash CIA operative with a dozen aliases, a key figure in what sounded like a legendary treasure hunt.
For 70 years, legends have been told of a buried treasure
shrouded in danger.
It's one of the great mysteries of World War II.
Something very secretive and strange has got to be buried in that mountain.
In a covert operation, infamous Japanese general Yamashita allegedly buried thousands of crates throughout the Philippines near the end of the war.
They were just taking anything about it.
That was from the History Channel.
And after sifting through that and all these shows and movies and books and forums, all these threads, what became clear to me is that Severino Garcia Santa Romana was, yes, a legend unto himself.
He was the person who allegedly wound up finding, stealing, really, all that Japanese gold, billions of dollars of Imperial Japanese gold.
But Severino Garcia Santa Romana, importantly, has also been dead for 50 years now.
And so his estate, according to Brian Davis's personal bank draft, was now controlled by two signed trustees, as aforementioned.
There was a woman named Tarciana C.
Rodriguez, and there was a man named Demerie Donald Norvell.
And so, okay, what I want to do right now is just take a breath and I want to simplify things for everybody, including myself, because at this point, there were exactly two possibilities in my mind.
So, theory number one,
Ryan Davis was legitimately in business with these two trustees.
Brian Davis had cashed in on this fortune that all of those treasure hunters had been chasing, and he had done it by selling his intellectual property with Urban Echo Energy, his green energy business.
He had sold that IP to this Wells, Fargo, and Citibank certified estate.
That's theory number one.
Theory number two, on the other hand, is a bit simpler.
Brian had just used this Filipino conspiracy to forge all of these financial documents himself.
He had personally forged signatures for two undoubtedly imaginary trustees as part of another crazy scheme to finally buy his own professional sports team.
And I should also admit that I, like everybody else, I was leaning extremely heavily toward theory number two.
But then I got a call.
It was Kenny Blakeney, and Kenny had Brian Davis himself
on the other line.
There is no recording of our three-way conversation with Brian, unfortunately.
But what you should know is that it was emotionally volatile, let's say.
Instead of answering my many questions, which Brian found largely insulting, What he wanted me to do very simply was just report that Bank of America was refusing to return his certified and barcoded $5 billion bank draft that he had received from this estate.
And that he, Brian Davis, now had a whole plan to get it back.
So Kenny, I'm thinking about that call, the conference call in which you brought me into your conversation with Brian on the phone.
Brian had a plan to get his bank draft, the $5 billion bank draft back from Bank of America.
What did he tell us he was going to do?
That he was going to sue Bank of America in federal court to get his bank drafts back.
And then Brian Davis
actually did.
And we caught some flack for having him on the show, whatever.
Most people think he's a joke.
Well, just to give you an update on what happened over the weekend, Brian Davis
and his group, They are suing
Bank of America
to everybody, which I believe.
The civil case of Urban Echo Energy, LLC, versus Bank of America, was filed the very same day as my call with Brian and Kenny, and they filed it at U.S.
District Court in Maryland.
Brian was seeking the return in front of a federal judge of his $5 billion bank draft plus damages to be determined at trial.
But that's not all.
Brian had even signed and submitted a verified statement that declared under the penalties of perjury that he, Brian Davis, personally had this bank draft issued and bonded and delivered to Bank of America, and that the bank was, yeah, guilty of never informing the Snyders of its existence, and that it was now refusing to give it back to him.
You should know here, at this point, that nothing about Brian's lawsuit was making sense to me as, again, a theory number two guy.
And it also didn't make sense to at least one former federal prosecutor that I was speaking to.
Because if theory number two, that Brian masterminded all of this himself, if that was correct, Brian had just taken this verifiably fake citibank check and handed it to federal authorities to investigate,
which felt to me
like shockingly suicidal, right?
And so what I started thinking about for the first time
was a theory number three.
So, this is where I do need to reiterate that I spent months of my life turning Brian's bank drafts into my own insane personal treasure hunt.
And I started with the Los Angeles phone number for Wells Fargo SGSR Statutory Trust, the entity allegedly managing the Severino Garcia Santa Romana estate.
Hi, is this Wells Fargo?
No, you got the wrong number.
Sorry,
who are you guys?
Who am I calling?
This is not Wells Fargo.
Yeah, are you guys?
Sorry, you guys, what are you guys?
I was just confused.
This is a company.
A little fishy, this company, I would say, but
it got even fishier.
Yeah, what company are you guys i'm just wondering why someone gave me the number for wells fargo i wasn't sure what you guys are this is a seafood vendor
a seafood vendor yes
got it apologies thank you so much all right
and so then i called the other number listed on the trust's website in connecticut and an actual office worker this time physically picked up
in the office this is richard
Richard was more than happy to double-check any and all details that I had questions about with this bank draft.
How the estate's chosen bank was indeed Citibank, how the amount was $5 billion,
a number I felt insane saying aloud, but Richard apparently did not even blink at it.
And also, how this bank draft listed the signatures of those two specific trustees.
Can I just read you the name one more time to make sure that it's the same name?
Percianas Rodriguez.
Yes.
That's the,
she's the trustee.
Yes.
My hairs at this point were
kind of standing on end.
Okay, great.
And so, and the other person's name, Demery, that's another trustee.
Is that correct?
That's correct.
So again, this person's first name typed out on this document was Demery.
His kind of weird last name, one word, was Donald Norvell.
Demery Donald Norvell.
But here's what was even weirder.
The signature below this name was signed in handwriting, Donald Norvell Demery.
Backwards.
And Richard did not seem to care.
Yes, yeah, you can say Mr.
Demery is fine.
Mr.
Demery.
Okay, great.
This was the precise moment when I felt myself falling down a rabbit hole that is so much deeper than I can possibly, I think, ever get into.
Like, it got to the point where rabbit hole stopped being an appropriate metaphor for this.
What it felt like was that I was running a blacklight under like the motel couch of the American economy.
For instance, Wells Fargo SGSR Statutory Trust.
What I realized about that was that they had no actual ties to Wells Fargo the bank at all.
Documents that I found showed that Mr.
Demery was leasing, yeah, a small office space inside the Wells Fargo Center in LA.
But Mr.
Demery was not a Wells Fargo employee in any way.
And in fact, until last year, I discovered Wells Fargo SGSR statutory trust went by a different name.
It was Quantum Trust SGSR.
SGSR.
As in
man named Severino Garcia Santa Romana.
But that's not all.
No, Mr.
Demery, it turned out, also had a ton of aliases himself, including, but not limited to, Demery Donald Norvell, Donald Demery Diaz, and then his actual birth name,
Donald Norvell
Calhoun.
So, who is Donald Norvell Calhoun?
Well, according to one lawsuit from July 2022, quote, Donald Calhoun is a career con man who has swindled millions of dollars from people and businesses across the United States.
Donald Calhoun's scams all seem to share a common characteristic.
Donald Calhoun makes promises of financing to people and businesses that need money.
End quote.
So in 2003, I discovered Mr.
Calhoun/slash Demery got sentenced to 37 months in federal prison after pleading guilty to a fraud scheme that cost investors $1.8 million.
And in 2018, Mr.
Demery was back and involved in a lawsuit from a movie production company over a fake $150,000 check.
A check I saw that had the name of, yes,
I think you guessed it at this point, Severino Garcia Santa Romana and Tarciana C.
Rodriguez.
And then in 2021, I saw Mr.
Demery and Ms.
Rodriguez both signed a certificate from Quantum Trust SGSR
for $300 million.
This time to back a penny stock of some kind that listed the same exact Connecticut phone number that I had called before.
The office is a richer.
All of which is how it became clear to me that theory number two, that you know, Brian Davis made up all of this himself, that it was actually wrong.
Brian did not invent the SGSR scam.
For years and years, long before Brian's $5 billion bank draft ever existed, Mr.
Demery had been running the same exact con.
preying on desperate people who desperately needed money and or redemption.
People like Brian Davis.
No, no, no, this is the learning lesson.
This is what I'm trying to, this is my redemption song.
Imagine me as that hoops, Bob Marley.
That's who I am.
I'm a good guy.
Brian Davis.
Brian Davis, if you take over as the owner of the game.
All of which finally brings me back to this theory number three.
Because what if, and I need you to stay with me here,
what if Brian Davis, after decades of desperation, was not the only scammer in this story?
What if, in trying to scheme up the money to buy the Commanders by, you know, selling his supposed green energy IP to Mr.
Demery, Brian Davis had also himself gotten scammed?
If Brian had been conned, scammed by the SGSR estate into believing that the bank draft was real, it would at least explain why he had presented it in federal court in that lawsuit to get it back.
Now, I tried contacting Mr.
Demery to attempt to get to the bottom of this.
Dude did not return my messages.
Not totally surprised.
But what I did wind up getting was a good look at him.
Because another thing I discovered about Mr.
Demery underneath this motel couch
is that the guy loves trademarks.
For instance, he recently tried trademarking the phrase king of NFTs because of course he did.
And what he also tried to do was trademark a cartoon.
Now, this cartoon is described in the U.S.
Patent and Trademark Office records as, quote,
Tan animated cashew nut with human face featuring black eyebrows and eyes with muscular arms, hands and legs, wearing high-top gray and black tennis shoes.
End quote.
And I gotta say, if you're not watching this on YouTube,
accurate.
Very accurate.
But the reason I bring up this insanely jacked California raisin-ass nut is to say that when I first found a Getty image of a human being tagged as Donald Demery, I did not immediately know if this was the Mr.
Demery.
Like, this Donald Demery in the Getty Image photo was a happy-looking black dude with a gray beard and black-rimmed glasses and like an ornately patterned shirt and a leather Kangol-style cap pointed forward.
He was also notably throwing up deuces with both hands.
But then...
I noticed something off to this human being's right.
On the white backdrop right behind him.
Because there, right there, grinning back at me, was an insanely jacked animated cashew with a human goddamn face and tennis shoes, right near the logo for what appeared to me as a trail mix company named These Nuts.
In all caps, these nuts
with with a Z
nuts.
And my first thought, as I was processing all of this, which took a while, was that here I was gazing finally
into the face of the real Mr.
Demery, the Donald Norvell Calhoun,
and that I really needed to talk to Brian.
I really needed to tell him everything I had found here.
But by then, Brian was back in the news,
busy becoming a joke
again.
I have no idea what's gonna happen, but it doesn't matter.
No, I'm gonna have just taken Brian Davis's money.
Eric, I'm not saying it's not.
I'm not saying it's not.
By May, Bank of America had declared in federal court to a federal judge that Brian's $5 billion bank draft looked, quote,
fictitious, end quote.
Because, yeah, of course it did.
But within days, what Brian did was
hard, I imagine.
He voluntarily, shamefully, withdrew his lawsuit entirely.
And then Brian Davis just disappeared.
The wireless customer you are calling is not available.
Please try again later.
Kenny and I tried calling Brian over and over again, but that's the message we heard.
And not only did his phone number just stop working, when Kenny sent an email to Brian's old yahoo.com address, what we learned there was that that account was also deactivated.
How much did Brian talk to you, Kenny, about what he was going to do once he bought the Washington Commanders?
Brian is one of those guys that, like, and this is the beauty of him,
he's on to the next project.
So in his mind, it was like, I've already bought the Washington Commanders.
These are the next things that we're going to work on.
Like, here are the next things that we're going to take a look at.
These are the next franchises that I want to buy, properties I want to take a look at.
So, it was rolling conversations into the future of what he was going to do being one of the wealthiest guys in the world.
The question I have for you, most of all, is whether Brian
believed that this bank draft, the $5 billion bank draft, his fortune, whether he believed that that was real.
From our conversations and from the tone, absolutely he believed this was real.
All summer, all NFL offseason, really, I could not stop thinking about Brian, about the difference between desperation and delusion and mental health, about how sports ownership actually was kind of the perfect treasure hunt for Brian Davis specifically.
I mean, Dan Snyder, let's do the accounting here, had drawn state and national and NFL investigations into his own sexual and financial misconduct.
And that dude cashed in for a record $6 billion.
Because, yeah, an NFL team is a money printing machine.
It really is.
It's a money printing machine that seems impossible to mess up, no matter how embarrassing or embarrassed you are, so long as you buy one.
And now, after 25 years,
Brian Davis had to accept the reality that he never would.
But then,
out of nowhere,
I got a text from Kenny Blakeney.
A text that told me to check my email
because Brian Davis
was back.
Weeks before Josh Harris would be formally introduced as the new owner of the Washington Commanders, Brian had forwarded Kenny a new email out of nowhere.
It was the first he'd heard from him all month.
And this email was an email that Brian had just sent to Bank of America.
Bank of America, the same bank that he had recently sued and been humiliated by by in federal court.
The subject line.
Washington Commander's backup offer.
I asked if Kenny would read the rest.
Good morning and happy 4th of July.
I wanted to follow up with you to inform your group that we have posted in excess of $10 billion at BNY Mellon in New York City.
We would like to have the opportunity to escrow the capital in your account immediately.
We would like to wire it after the holiday this coming week.
To be clear, there was zero acknowledgement anywhere in this email that Brian Davis had just sued these same exact people.
We would like to give Mr.
Snyder 8.1 billion, 7.9 billion for the acquisition of the franchise.
100 million for the breakup fee for the other group, 70 million for Mr.
and Mrs.
And it kept going like this.
Brian was offering more and more money, more than ever before.
And it was almost like he was trying to prove that humiliation only hurt if you let it, if you acknowledged it, and that he, Brian Davis, and his checks
could still be redeemed.
Our bankers at BNY Mellon and Wells Fargo are available at any time to answer any of your questions.
We look forward to hearing from you and thank you for your time and consideration.
And then Brian Davis
signed off.
Warmest regards,
Brian.
All pirates, yesterday, Rabbi
Soldier to the merchant ships
minutes after day to guide
the buttons.
So, at the end of every episode of Pablo Torre Finds Out, I take the time to sit down at my computer and tell you what it is exactly that I found out today.
And today, as we reflect upon this Russian nesting doll of scams, I should really start with this.
Brian Davis is the single most relentless human being that I have ever personally encountered.
Because in Brian's mind, the game is never over.
Even when it is actually,
obviously, undeniably
over.
I fully believe that Brian is still attempting to purchase a pro sports franchise as we speak.
And I expect him to resurface one day with even taller tales, taking even bigger swings.
And despite all the lies, despite all the alleged scams, or maybe really
because of them,
this story to me
is just as much about Mr.
Demery, the man who I suspect,
scammed a scammer.
And so it's about the untold other predators, also.
The predators who are still hiding right now in the nooks and crannies of fraudulent documents and pump and dump schemes and reverse mergers and these various Potempkin financial services websites, all waiting to scam you
and me.
What I found out today, in the end,
is this:
if you dare to run a blacklight under the motel couch of the American economy,
what you'll discover inevitably
are these nuts
with a Z.
This has been Pablo Torre Finds Out, a show that has way more producers than David Sampson's show.
And they are
Michael Antonucci, Ryan Cortez, Sam Daywig, Patrick Kim, Neely Lohman, Rachel Miller-Howard, Ethan Schreier, Carl Scott, Matt Sullivan, Chris Tumanello, Complete List Studio Engineering by Viridian Tech, post-production by NGW Post, Theme Song by Gian Bravo, and also Mike Ryan, Dan Levittard, Stugats, thank you to you guys.
John Skipper, Bimel Capadia, Jenny Rutherford, Frankie, and Frankie's gun.
Shout out to you.
Violet Torre, who could forget?
Liz, my wife.
I am so sorry for being an absentee father.