Fallout from a
life
that doesn't exist
Al Watson
leaned back in his chair and surveyed his office for the
last time.
His eyes scanned the
college diplomas on the wall, the athletic trophies in
the bookcase and the veterans memos on the coffee
table.
Al Watson looked around,
sighed, got up, and walked to the door where the FBI
agents waited.
Then he surrendered and
left behind the trappings of a life that never existed.
For 11 years, Al Watson
worked on Capitol Hill and lobbied for a K Street firm.
His employers praised his wit and his intellect, talked
about his talent, and predicted a bright future.
But eight weeks ago, Al
Watsons perfect life started falling apart. The
people who sang his praises just days earlier now talk
about how he conned them. His friends speak in bitter
tones about how they were used. A long line of creditors
seek payment from someone who never existed.
"Everybody you talked
to knew Al," says John Hartlett, Watsons boss.
"There was never any question about his skill or his
integrity. We all bought it, lock, stock and
barrel."
Al Watson came to
Washington in 1985. He was an ex-con who served six years
in prison in Georgia for writing bad checks. When he
arrived in Washington, he carried a fake Georgia driver's
license with his real name and a phony Social Security
number.
One night in a bar on
Pennsylvania Avenue, he met a young woman who worked in
the office of Silvio Conte, a Congressman from
Massachusetts. Watson convinced the woman he was a
Cornell graduate who was looking for work in Washington
after a successful career in a brokerage firm in Chicago.
She introduced him to a
friend who was looking for a staff member on a
Congressional committee. Watson aced the interview and
was hired. None of the phony references he furnished were
checked.
Watson used his real
Social Security number for his W-4 forms at work, but
used the phony number to apply for credit. Although he
had no credit record on file whatsoever before 1985,
American Express gave him a credit card. Others soon
followed.
Watson worked on the hill
for seven short months before he met Hartlett, who
offered him a job at his law firm.
"He was bright, knew
budget issues and seemed to be just what we needed, so I
offered him a job," Hartlett said.
Watson fit right into the
Washington lobbying world. He could smooze members of
Congress and count votes with the best of him. His job
performance reviews were glowing.
He bought a town house in
Georgetown, a new Range Rover, and carried a wallet full
of credit cards. Everybody figured Al Watson would be
running the firm one day.
"This kind of thing
should never happen, but it still does because people
believe what they are told," says Bonnie Middleton,
a headhunter who recruits for associations and companies.
"We find that more than a third of the resumes that
come through our door contain inflated claims or outright
lies."
Middletown
says firms like hers now hire people who do nothing but
check the accuracy of resumes.
"Just a few years
ago, most people didnt bother to check educational
references if they were more than 10 years ago. Now we
do. People are not who they seem to be."
Al Watsons phony
world started falling apart two months ago when the
office computer nerd was playing around on the Internet
one afternoon and came across a site that claimed to
contain social security information and background
information on virtually all Americans.
"So he did something
he wasnt supposed to do," Hartlett says.
"He started feeding names and social security
numbers into the computer to see what he could found
about the people he worked with."
What he found out was that
Al Watsons social security number used on the
application for a company American Express card was
issued to a woman in Tempe, Arizona. So then the kid
found a site that listed Cornell graduates by year. When
he checked 1978, the year Watsons diploma said he
earned his degree, he did not find any listing for an
Albert Roy Watson.
When the kid brought what
he had found to Hartlett, he was shown the door.
"I fired the nosy
S.O.B. for snooping into peoples lives," he
said. "But I couldnt ignore what he had
found."
Hartlett turned the
material over to a friend at the FBI. After three weeks
of investigation, two agents came to see him and told him
that Al Watson was really an ex-convict named Edward Lee Cunningham.
Because Watson had filled out credit card applications
and used the mail to send them across state lines, he had
broken a number of federal laws. He also had given false
information to the bank that financed his house, another
federal crime.
Hartlett left the agents
in his office while he went to see Watson.
"I told him I knew,
told him what I knew, and said the FBI was here to arrest
him. He looked me right in the eye and said well, I
guess it couldnt last forever. He didnt
say he was sorry, he just smiled and told me to go get
the agents."
Then Al Watson met the FBI
agents at the door of his office, held out his hands to
be cuffed, and was led out the door.
By weeks end, he was
on a plane to Georgia to face charges of parole
violation.
Hartlett helped clean out
the office, throwing away the phony degrees, the faked
athletic trophies and other evidence of a life that
didnt exist. One of the items he found was an
letter from Marquis Whos Who, informing Al
Watson that he had been selected for inclusion in the
newest edition.
Then Hartlett cleaned out
his own office. The senior partners decided that someone
had to take the fall for bringing a con man into the
firm.
"Guess I would have
done the same thing in their shoes," Hartlett said,
"but it still hurts. I was conned."
Bonnie Middleton says John
Hartlett was stupid to hire someone without checking him
out, but will help him find another job.
"There are a lot more
Al Watsons out there. Most of them will continue to live
their phony lives and they will never get caught. In
todays competitive world, too many people feel like
they have to lie to get ahead. So they pad their resumes,
inflate their accomplishments, and use any tactic, no
matter how dishonest, to stay ahead of the game."
"Whats sad is
that people like John Hartlett will have trouble landing
a new job, but Al Watson will get out of prison, land a
book deal, plus talk show appearances and a movie of the
week."
--Doug
Thompson
Washington, DC
|