A Poker Champ, a Car Dealer, the Cartel and $3.2M in Credit Union Fraud

A Poker Champ, a Car Dealer, the Cartel and $3.2M in Credit Union Fraud

It almost sounds like the story in a Coen brothers’ film. A four-time World Series of Poker champ and car dealer kidnapped by the cartel escapes and is found zip tied and bloodied by the side of the road. In his wake, $3.2M in cartel extorted fraud. At least that’s what the car dealer facing Federal charges claims.

The Complaint

On February 26th, 2025, the FBI filed charges in a Michigan Federal Court accusing 42-year-old George Paul Janssen, Jr., a four-time World Series of Poker champ, and Michigan car dealer of scamming at least 20 financial institutions, with losses totaling $3,289,834 between 2016 and October 2023.

A Poker Champ, a Car Dealer, the Cartel and $3.2M in Credit Union Fraud

The Michigan native with over $440,000 in poker winnings, disappeared on November 13, 2023. Coincidentally two weeks after state authorities revoked his dealership license for falsifying records.

The Kidnapping

During his absence, a family friend discovered Janssen’s abandoned car. The floor littered with $50 bills. Relatives also received a cryptic handwritten letter containing seemingly random names: Kirby, Iggy, Daisey, Noah, Anthony, and Parker. (KIDNAP)

A Poker Champ, a Car Dealer, the Cartel and $3.2M in Credit Union Fraud
The cryptic letter Janssen wrote while missing appeared to spell out the word “KIDNAP” (Monroe County Sheriff’s Office)

On December 16, 2023, 33 days after his disappearance, a motorist in rural Bad Axe was flagged down at about 12:30 am by a man on the side of the road, bloodied and hands zip tied, it was Janssen.

Janssen’s car with the $50’s.

Describing his harrowing ordeal, Janssen claimed he was abducted by a masked man as he was leaving a Detroit poker tournament. He claims he was then driven by two or three people to the Toledo area, where he was held captive in the basement of a home.

He was then allegedly driven back to Huron County on December 16th to recover some money that was hidden to give to his extorting cartel kidnappers.

He told family he had been paid criminal organization approximately $2 million over two years, leaving $25,000 in various drop locations given to him by text messages on a cartel provided phone..

Huron County Sheriff Kelly Hanson would only say that there were “a lot of things that need to be looked into.” Arrested on Wednesday February 26th, Janssen faces charges in Bay City, Michigan, federal court, with no attorney listed.

The Credit Unions

Central to the case is a massive hit to a Michigan credit union that occurred a week before Janssens disappearance. On November 8, 2023, just days before his disappearance, the COO of COPOCO Credit Union of Michigan contacted the FBI to report a possible fraud. Janssen allegedly deposited $1.4 million in checks into his Bay Auto Brokers account and the funds were credited immediately, allowing him to write $1.3 million in checks.

But soon after, the checks bounced due to insufficient funds, leaving the institution reeling. Five days later, Janssen vanished. Describing his last contact with him before the disappearance, a friend stated to detectives that he’d sounded “broken.”

The credit union losses underscore a broader pattern of deceit. Throughout October and early November 2023, Janssen withdrew nearly $75,000 from ATMs and wrote himself over $44,000 in checks from his shuttered dealership.

Phantom Auto Loan Fraud

Yet the complaint hints these moves masked a financial unraveling, tied to an earlier August 2023 state audit that exposed “discrepancies in his sales and inventory” after a suspicious car loan complaint. Investigators found he’d reused “the same fictitious vehicles in multiple loan applications,” leading to his license revocation on October 30.

A Poker Champ, a Car Dealer, the Cartel and $3.2M in Credit Union Fraud
Accused: 42-year-old George Paul Janssen, Jr.

While missing, Janssen’s web ensnared others. The FBI uncovered $3.9 million in unpaid loans linked to his associates, and friends like Earl McKee approached agents “to clear their names and express concern they had been defrauded.”

McKee, was allegedly paid $600 per vehicle loan by Janssen. “There’s been a lot of collateral damage due to what George has done,” adding, “If there was one guy I thought was doing everything the right way, it was George.”

Janssen’s son, Connor, admitted to the FBI he knew his father was “robbing Peter to pay Paul,” crafting fake loan documents, possibly using Microsoft Word, and juggling funds between banks.

The FBI’s complaint doesn’t outright debunk the abduction but does paint an unflattering picture of a man cornered by his own schemes, leaving the banks, credit unions, and those closest to him to reckon with the fallout of his audacious collapse.

Source: The Independent

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