AP move or just cheating?

Jack_Black

Well-Known Member
#1
Don't know if this should be here or in the "law" section. Mods, feel free to move it. I read this off of Richard Marcus' website. Don't know if this is legal or not:

Blackjack Cheat Scam #1

Spill, Cut and Steer

A cheat receives an Ace on the deal. He then casually spills his drink on it. The casino will immediately remove the wet Ace from the game and replace it with another brand-new Ace from an identical deck. How does this replacement work for the blackjack cheat?

Well, assuming he spotted when the new decks of cards were loaded into the blackjack card shoe, all he'd have to do is wait after two shoes were dealt to spill his drink on the Ace. Then when the replacement Ace is inserted into the pack of six or eight decks, he would be able to distinguish it by the brighter white edge the new card would have over the rest of the cards when the dealer presents the pack for him to cut. In other words, the new Ace would stick out like a sore thumb. So then he will just cut the cards a specific number of cards in front of the Ace, depending on his position at the blackjack table. Believe it or not, most casinos are still not hip to this relatively rank blackjack scam, and when the cheat gets it down, he makes money by betting heavily knowing the bright white ace is coming his way!
 

aslan

Well-Known Member
#4
Richard Munchkin said:
But I guess if you were to wander around the casino scouting for tables where people spill a drink it would not be cheating.
You could, but you'd be like the man who rode the MTA in the MTA Song by the Kingston Trio. No shortcuts- has to be an ace. :laugh:

He may scout forever through the tables of Vegas,
He's the man who never returned.
 

Sucker

Well-Known Member
#7
BTW, it takes WAY more than 2 shoes for this to work. Even after several HOURS, the cards STILL don't always discolor. :laugh:
 

aslan

Well-Known Member
#9
Sucker said:
BTW, it takes WAY more than 2 shoes for this to work. Even after several HOURS, the cards STILL don't always discolor. :laugh:
And if they did discolor after two shoes, you'd only have two shots at it, and you'd have to get the cut card both times, too.
 
#10
I don't think it would be considered cheating, because the casino is supplying both the old cards and the new cards, and it was their decision to change one card instead of the whole shoe.

But you are intentionally damaging their property by spilling the drink, and if they figure out it was intentional they could get you for that.
 

aslan

Well-Known Member
#11
Automatic Monkey said:
I don't think it would be considered cheating, because the casino is supplying both the old cards and the new cards, and it was their decision to change one card instead of the whole shoe.

But you are intentionally damaging their property by spilling the drink, and if they figure out it was intentional they could get you for that.
Morally, it's cheating. You are deceiving the house into helping you mark the cards. Whether you trick an innocent party, even a house employee, who is doing so unbeknownst to himself, or you do so yourself, marking cards is cheating.
 

Machinist

Well-Known Member
#12
Hmmmmm,
That is running really close to what I would call the darkside, I don't mind running in the gray area, sometimes a very dark gray area. But the dark area is kinda scarey. But then in my mind after all these years seeing the dark side of casinos themselves, ehh if the opportunity presents it self under the right conditions, I say Hammer them!!!!!

Machinist
 

aslan

Well-Known Member
#13
Machinist said:
Hmmmmm,
That is running really close to what I would call the darkside, I don't mind running in the gray area, sometimes a very dark gray area. But the dark area is kinda scarey. But then in my mind after all these years seeing the dark side of casinos themselves, ehh if the opportunity presents it self under the right conditions, I say Hammer them!!!!!

Machinist
As in, it's not so bad to cheat a cheater? :laugh:
 

Machinist

Well-Known Member
#15
aslan said:
As in, it's not so bad to cheat a cheater? :laugh:
Maybe even more than that Aslan. I mean they don't really cheat, but they do put up a nice facade, hell even their buildings are fake, fake rocks, fake pillars, fake marble, the list goes on. Also that idiot from CET telling us that they are "concerned" about problem gambling..........yea right!!!!
I look at casinos as an illusion, all is not as it seems. So yea, if I can create my own illusion and fool them into thinking I'm just another patsy in the joint..............$$$$
Shadroch is right though, how many times can ya spill a drink? But on the other hand, if you have half a dozen joints with dirty cards, and are able to hit this scam perfectly with a very large bet, you certainly could make a decent car payment, very decent!!!
But still there are plenty of other ways of skinning a casino, without making a mess.:)

Machinist
 
#16
aslan said:
Morally, it's cheating. You are deceiving the house into helping you mark the cards. Whether you trick an innocent party, even a house employee, who is doing so unbeknownst to himself, or you do so yourself, marking cards is cheating.
"Morally?" I'm sorry, you have used a word I do not recognize in the context of dealings with casinos. At the table I'm as deceitful and sleazy as I can profitably be, limited by what I can get away with. This is not church, this is not civil society; these are people who hate us and want to do us harm by taking our money, and I will respond in kind.

In a practical sense, I don't think this is a very worthwhile move, because it involves an awkward physical act, it is time-consuming, and you are only marking one ace out of a shoe. But if I was going to do it, I would wait until I have two aces and can't resplit.

Also if you are going to do any moves involving altered cards, this is best done as a team. The guy who physically does the marking or bending bets a minimum and plays normally, leaves when he is done, and is literally out of town before his partner is there playing the marks. Until they can establish a connection between the two people it is bulletproof.
 

Gamblor

Well-Known Member
#17
shadroch said:
How often do you think you could spill your drink before you are either banned or refused another drink?
There's other less obvious ways to mark up a card. Most casinos will of course take out cards for any even relatively subtle marks.
 

aslan

Well-Known Member
#18
Automatic Monkey said:
"Morally?" I'm sorry, you have used a word I do not recognize in the context of dealings with casinos. At the table I'm as deceitful and sleazy as I can profitably be, limited by what I can get away with. This is not church, this is not civil society; these are people who hate us and want to do us harm by taking our money, and I will respond in kind.

In a practical sense, I don't think this is a very worthwhile move, because it involves an awkward physical act, it is time-consuming, and you are only marking one ace out of a shoe. But if I was going to do it, I would wait until I have two aces and can't resplit.

Also if you are going to do any moves involving altered cards, this is best done as a team. The guy who physically does the marking or bending bets a minimum and plays normally, leaves when he is done, and is literally out of town before his partner is there playing the marks. Until they can establish a connection between the two people it is bulletproof.
It's not bulletproof. The link can be made through tape replays. It's like robbing a jewelry store with a camera recording you without a mask over your face.

I'm not a choir boy. I do know the difference between cheating and not cheating, and I have done things in the past I am not proud of today. If it were morally permissible to do whatever I could to take the casino's money, I would get a job with a casino because some of the biggest and easiest scams have been inside jobs.
 

Jack_Black

Well-Known Member
#19
Macho: Darkside?! No way is this the darkside. is it in the DMZ between the dark and grey area? I believe after all the responses on here, I've made that conclusion. will I be walking along the DMZ, poking at it, taunting it, stepping in, stepping out? well........

Shad: I expect once per shift. twice and I'm sure I'd be kicked out for being belligerent. assuming that most places change shoe cards once per shift, then that's all I need. This is a steering play, not a sequencing or ST play.

Aslan: is this a joke too or not?

AM: I'm with you. Morals?!?! the entire casino business model is based upon duping the sucker with a so called "fair" game. hell, why is 3 card monty illegal, yet casino games aren't? they both dupe you. better yet, why does cheating in a poker room get you 86ed, but cheating in a casino gets you a felony?

I've made the conclusion that this move is absolutely, and most definitely is........in the gray area. something that could land you in detention temporarily, but with a decent lawyer could get you off and even sue for wrongful imprisonment. It was the casino's choice not to change out the whole shoe. The info of the new Ace in the shoe is available to everyone at the table.(seems to be a legal standard for determining cheating everywhere)

I put this into the Tommy Hyland AC warp play category. he found a fault in casino procedure. they should've changed cards earlier to prevent him from winning an exorbitant sum. anyway, do it at your own risk. YMMV.
 

QFIT

Well-Known Member
#20
aslan said:
You could, but you'd be like the man who rode the MTA in the MTA Song by the Kingston Trio. No shortcuts- has to be an ace. :laugh:

He may scout forever through the tables of Vegas,
He's the man who never returned.
Fun song, but you're dating yourself.

This is clear cheating as you are purposely causing a card to be marked. The new card, not the old card.
 
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