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After being swindled by Ohio State quarterback, Anita Barney ready to move forward | |
(about 1 hour later) | |
After years of being painted as both victim and villain, Anita Barney, one fortune later, is doing her best just to earn back the trust of those she and a gambling addict swindled. | |
The story, by the Associated Press, features Barney, who was notably involved in a scheme run by former Ohio State quarterback Art Schlichter. The former Buckeye signal-caller coerced Barney into giving him hundreds of thousands of dollars, which he would use to either gamble or pay off his massive gambling debts. | |
Barney, the widow of a former Wendy’s CEO, was accustomed to helping people. She wrote the check without hesitation. Soon after, Schlichter asked for $100,000 to pay off gambling debts and help other gambling addicts. He promised to repay her with proceeds from his book. More requests followed, with Schlichter enlisting her in what he said was a money-making investment involving the buying and selling of college football, NFL and Super Bowl tickets. | Barney, the widow of a former Wendy’s CEO, was accustomed to helping people. She wrote the check without hesitation. Soon after, Schlichter asked for $100,000 to pay off gambling debts and help other gambling addicts. He promised to repay her with proceeds from his book. More requests followed, with Schlichter enlisting her in what he said was a money-making investment involving the buying and selling of college football, NFL and Super Bowl tickets. |
Barney, the widow of a former Wendy’s CEO, was accustomed to helping people. She wrote the check without hesitation. Soon after, Schlichter asked for $100,000 to pay off gambling debts and help other gambling addicts. He promised to repay her with proceeds from his book. More requests followed, with Schlichter enlisting her in what he said was a money-making investment involving the buying and selling of college football, NFL and Super Bowl tickets. | |
The issue of vilification comes up with Barney because instead of noticing the scheme—which left her broke and “begging Schlichter for grocery and gas money”—she continued to assist Schlichter’s scheme per his demand, as she would call up her wealthy friends and neighbors and request the same kind of money, which would then be gambled away by Schlichter. | |
Many lost tens of thousands of dollars and some, despite Barney’s attempts to renounce material items and seek forgiveness, blame her as much as they do Schlichter for being swindled. | |
“I don’t want anything to do with her because I still don’t feel that she’s sincere in anything she says,” said David Froggatt, a high school classmate of Barney’s and retired truck driver who lost $20,000. | “I don’t want anything to do with her because I still don’t feel that she’s sincere in anything she says,” said David Froggatt, a high school classmate of Barney’s and retired truck driver who lost $20,000. |
“I don’t want anything to do with her because I still don’t feel that she’s sincere in anything she says,” said David Froggatt, a high school classmate of Barney’s and retired truck driver who lost $20,000. | |
Others are more forgiving of Barney, who pleaded guilty to two counts of felony theft charges in 2012 and was “ordered to pay $427,000 to 19 victims.” (Schlichter also pleaded guilty to his charges: federal counts of wire fraud, bank fraud and filing a false income tax return. He will be in prison until 2020.) | |
Barney has pledged to pay back the victims with the money raised from her book, “Quarterback Sneak”, which was published in December. | |
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