Scammers sold fake sports, Pokémon cards in $2M scheme: feds
The feds are trying to catch ‘em all.
Two Washington state men were arrested Thursday for a scheme in which they duped collectors into shelling out hundreds of thousands of dollars for sports and Pokémon trading cards that turned out to be phonies.
Anthony Curcio, 43, and Iosif Bondarchuk, 37, allegedly made the regular cards seem like valuable rarities by fudging their grades, pocketing $2 million over the course of the two-year con, Manhattan federal prosecutors said.

PSA, a reputable card authentication company, charges a fee to card collectors to have their card graded on a scale from 1-to-10, and if cards receive higher grades, they are typically deemed more valuable and rare.
But the pair found a loophole by disguising regular cards that had not been authenticated as graded ones, fooling collectors into purchasing them at false and inflated prices, according to the indictment.
One of the most notable alleged scams was the sale of a 1986 Fleer Michael Jordan rookie card, which had a purported PSA grade of “10,” or “gem-mint,” that sold at a Manhattan marketplace for $171,700 — but the grading card company had not graded the particular card, the feds said.