By Stefan C. | TheFinancialSurveillance.com
There’s a moment in surveillance work that every experienced officer knows.
You’re watching someone on camera and something feels off. You can’t articulate it yet. Nothing illegal has happened. But something in their behavior — a glance, a hesitation, a movement that’s slightly too deliberate — tells you that this person is not here for the reason they want you to think.
That feeling, developed over years of watching people try to deceive, has turned out to be one of the most transferable skills I own.
Because scammers — whether they’re at a casino table or in your Instagram feed — are running the same playbook. They exploit the same human vulnerabilities. They rely on the same blind spots. And once you know what to look for, they become surprisingly easy to spot.
Two Systems, One Vulnerability
Before we go further, a quick detour into how your brain actually works — because understanding this changes everything.
Daniel Kahneman, Nobel Prize winning psychologist and author of Thinking Fast and Slow, identified two systems that govern human decision making. System 1 is fast, automatic, and emotional — it responds instantly to perceived threats and opportunities without stopping to analyze. System 2 is slow, deliberate, and rational — it does the careful thinking, but it requires time and mental effort to engage.
The problem is that System 1 is always on. And System 2 is lazy.
Every scammer — in a casino and in the financial world — is essentially a System 1 specialist. They craft situations designed to trigger your fast, emotional brain before your slow, rational brain has a chance to catch up. Urgency. Fear. Excitement. Social proof. These are System 1 triggers. And they work on almost everyone — regardless of intelligence.
Knowing this doesn’t make you immune. But it gives you the most important tool in your protection arsenal: the ability to recognize when your System 1 has taken the wheel.
What Casino Cheaters and Financial Scammers Have in Common
In twelve years of casino surveillance I’ve seen every category of cheater.
At the bottom of the hierarchy are the opportunists — small-time players who exploit momentary inattention. A dealer distracted by collecting losing bets. A brief moment when attention is elsewhere. These players bet on the winning number at roulette after the result is clear, or mark cards at poker to gain an edge in future hands. They’re not sophisticated. They’re just patient and opportunistic.
Then come the professionals — organized teams with clear roles, sometimes using electronic devices to gain advantage. These people are harder to catch not because their methods are more complex but because their behavior is more controlled. The amateur cheater is nervous — you can see the agitation, the unnecessary glances, the slightly too casual posture of someone trying to look casual. The professional is almost invisible. Calm. Consistent. Ordinary looking. The only tell is in the subtle communication between team members — a glance, a hand signal, a word that means something different than it sounds.
And then there are card counters at blackjack — not cheaters in the traditional sense since counting cards is legal, but players who have developed a genuine skill advantage. Catching them requires your surveillance team to know how to count cards themselves. You have to understand the method to recognize it.
Here’s what connects all three categories: they all exploit the gap between what you’re paying attention to and what’s actually happening.
The opportunist exploits your momentary distraction. The professional exploits your assumption that ordinary looking people have ordinary intentions. The card counter exploits your lack of knowledge about the game at a deep level.
Financial scammers work exactly the same way.
The Threat From Inside — When the People You Trust Are Working Against You
Here’s the part that surprises most people: not all casino fraud comes from players.
Staff collusion is one of the most serious threats any casino faces — and it exists on a spectrum. At the softer end you have dealers who empathize with a losing player and subtly bend the rules in their favor. A small mercy that feels harmless. At the other end you have sophisticated, pre-planned operations — dealers who place incorrect bets, who fail to collect losing wagers, who briefly expose cards to give accomplices an advantage. Organized, deliberate, and difficult to detect precisely because the threat is coming from someone the system already trusts.
The financial world has its own version of staff collusion — and it is far more widespread than most people realize.
The financial advisor who recommends products that pay him the highest commission rather than the ones that serve you best. The bank employee who pushes insurance or investment products you don’t need because his monthly targets depend on it. The mortgage broker who steers you toward the lender who pays the highest referral fee. The “independent” financial influencer who is secretly paid to promote specific platforms while presenting himself as a neutral voice.
These are all forms of the same thing — someone in a position of trust, using that trust against you for personal gain.
Robert Cialdini in Influence calls this the authority principle — we defer to people we perceive as experts or insiders, often without questioning whether their interests are actually aligned with ours. A dealer in a casino uniform looks trustworthy. A man in a suit with a financial license looks trustworthy. The uniform and the credential create an assumption of safety that sophisticated bad actors exploit deliberately.
The question to always ask — in a casino and in a financial relationship — is not “does this person seem trustworthy?” but “whose interests does this person’s income actually serve?”
The Modern Scammer’s Playbook
The False Influencer
The most widespread financial scam of our generation doesn’t happen in a dark alley or a suspicious email. It happens on Instagram and TikTok, in broad daylight, with millions of views.
A young man — almost always a man — shows you his lifestyle. The car. The apartment. The watch. The screenshots of trading profits. He’s living the life you want. And he’s offering to show you how — for a course fee, a subscription, a percentage of your investment.
What he’s selling is a feeling, not a strategy. And his primary targets are young men — teenagers and young adults who are lost, who haven’t been taught by school or family how to recognize false financial models, and who are at exactly the age when the desire to shortcut the long road to success is most powerful.
Cialdini identifies social proof as one of the most powerful triggers of human compliance — we look to others to determine what is correct behavior, especially when we are uncertain. A young person with no financial education, no role models, and a deep desire to escape a difficult starting point is the perfect target for someone who has mastered the performance of success.
The tell — just like the casino cheater — is in what they’re distracting you from. The flashy lifestyle is the distraction. The question you should be asking — how exactly does this strategy work, where are the audited returns, what are the real risks — never gets answered because you’re too busy looking at the car.
The Urgency Scam
Your bank account is about to be closed. Your package couldn’t be delivered. Your relative is in hospital and needs money urgently.
These scams work because they hijack System 1 completely. When we perceive an emergency, rational thought slows down. We react. We don’t analyze.
The casino equivalent is the player who creates a distraction — a commotion, a complaint, an argument — while an accomplice does the actual cheating elsewhere. Your attention is a limited resource. Scammers — in casinos and in life — know this better than you do.
The rule is simple: any financial request that comes with artificial urgency is a red flag. Legitimate banks, delivery companies, and relatives don’t need you to transfer money in the next ten minutes.
The Hidden Defect
When I bought my first car in 2012 — a VW Golf 4, modest and practical — I thought I had done my research. I checked the obvious things. I didn’t check everything.
Years later, when the front bumper needed repair, I discovered it had been repaired before. The car had been in an accident. Nobody had lied to me directly. They simply hadn’t told me the truth.
This is the most sophisticated form of deception — not the lie but the omission. The investment opportunity that shows you the potential returns but doesn’t mention the fees. The financial product that emphasizes the upside and buries the risk in paragraph fourteen of the terms and conditions. The second-hand car seller who answers every question you ask honestly — and counts on you not knowing which questions to ask.
In surveillance we call this passive deception. It’s harder to prove and easier to execute than active lying. And it’s everywhere in the financial world.
The Miracle Promise
Miracle health treatments that don’t deliver. Investment strategies with guaranteed returns. Courses that promise transformation but deliver generic information available for free online.
These work because hope is a powerful System 1 trigger — especially for people who are desperate, in pain, or deeply unhappy with their current situation. The more someone needs a solution the less critically they evaluate the solution being offered.
I know people personally who paid for treatments that delivered nothing. In almost every case the response was silence — not outrage, not a warning to others. Just quiet absorption of the loss. Which leads us to perhaps the most important part of this article.
Why People Don’t Admit They’ve Been Scammed
The victims of financial scams rarely announce it.
They don’t warn their friends. They don’t post about it online. They sometimes don’t even fully admit it to themselves.
Kahneman explains this through ego protection — our brains are wired to protect our self-image automatically. Admitting you were scammed means admitting you were foolish. System 1 finds this unacceptable and constructs an alternative narrative instead. The treatment didn’t work because of something else. The course wasn’t a scam — I just didn’t apply the knowledge correctly.
Cialdini adds another layer — commitment and consistency. Once we’ve publicly committed to something — told friends about the amazing investment opportunity, posted about the course we’re taking — our brains resist any information that contradicts that commitment. We double down rather than admit we were wrong.
And this silence is exactly what allows scammers to keep operating. Every victim who doesn’t speak up is protecting the next victim.
People celebrate their financial wins loudly and bury their losses quietly. Social media is a highlight reel of good decisions. The full picture — including the mistakes — almost never gets shared.
TheFinancialSurveillance exists partly to change that. Real financial education requires honest conversations about failure — not just strategies for success.
How to Think Like a Surveillance Officer
After twelve years of watching people try to deceive, here’s what I’ve learned about spotting a scam before it costs you anything:
Follow the distraction. Whatever they’re showing you loudly and enthusiastically — the lifestyle, the returns, the urgency, the social proof — ask yourself what’s being kept quiet. The distraction is always pointing away from the weakness.
Slow down when pressure speeds up. Legitimate opportunities don’t expire in 24 hours. Legitimate banks don’t need your password in the next ten minutes. Any artificial urgency is designed to bypass your System 2 thinking. The moment you feel rushed — stop completely.
Ask whose interests this person’s income serves. Before trusting any financial advice — from an influencer, an advisor, a bank employee, or a broker — understand how they get paid. If their income depends on your decision, their advice is not neutral.
Ask the questions they’re not expecting. Ask for audited results. Ask for the full fee structure. Ask what happens if you want to exit. Ask who regulates this. The professional will have rehearsed answers — but even rehearsed answers to unexpected questions reveal something.
Check what you’re not being told. Before any significant financial decision make a list of everything you don’t know yet. Then find out. The hidden defect is almost always in the gap between what you asked and what you didn’t know to ask.
Remember that ordinary looking is not the same as trustworthy. The most dangerous casino cheaters look completely unremarkable. So do the most effective financial scammers. The flashy ones — the loud ones, the ones performing confidence — are usually the amateurs.
The Real Protection
James Clear in Atomic Habits talks about the power of systems over willpower. You don’t resist bad decisions through heroic self-control — you build systems that make bad decisions harder to make.
The best financial protection isn’t intelligence or suspicion. It’s a system.
Never make financial decisions under time pressure. Never send money to someone who contacted you unexpectedly. Never invest in something you can’t explain simply to someone else. Never trust returns that significantly exceed the market average without a very clear explanation of the risk involved. Always ask how the person advising you gets paid.
These aren’t complex rules. They’re the financial equivalent of the casino’s surveillance system — not designed to catch every possible threat, but to make deception significantly harder than it would otherwise be.
The cheaters I’ve watched over the years weren’t stopped by smart people alone. They were stopped by systems. Cameras in the right places. Trained eyes watching the right things. Procedures that closed the gap between intention and execution.
Build your own system. Watch your own blind spots.
I’ll be watching too.
Books referenced: Influence — Robert Cialdini | Thinking Fast and Slow — Daniel Kahneman | Atomic Habits — James Clear
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