The Curious Cons of the Man Who Wouldn't Die

The Curious Cons of the Man Who Wouldn't Die
AP Photo/Elise Amendola, File

When Mark Olmsted contracted HIV, in the early 1980s, he figured the disease was a death sentence. And so he hatched a scheme to live out his last years in style—swiping credit cards, bilking insurance companies, even faking his own death. What's the problem with some forgery, fraud, and crystal meth if you'll soon be gone? A better question might have been: What the hell happens if you survive?

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