Check this out: https://www.dropbox.com/s/insndpn8sb...02768.pdf?dl=0
In the mid-2000s, John Berry got into a bad car accident with Moshe Elazar, and Berry was badly injured. Berry sued Elazar and won $2.8 million.
Elazar, who was allegedly worth $11 million at the time in a 3-way business partnership with Eli Elezra and another guy, suddenly transferred his entire 33% interest in the business to Elezra and the 2nd partner, thus making himself appear broke and unable to pay the judgment.
These were deemed "fraudulent transfers" by the court. Berry then won a judgment against Elezra and the 2nd business partner.
Shaaaaaaaaaaady.
Abe Mosseri supposedly showed up to 2+2 and posted that Eli owes him almost a million dollars!
Account is not verified so could be a troll. Guess we'll find out soon.
https://forumserver.twoplustwo.com/s...&postcount=464
Druff has great posts on 2 plus 2 mason responds to everyone of his posts like a stuck pig.Private time is a poster who really seemes to know what is going on in high stakes he got banned in that thread lol.
A new statement from Eli today:
LOL at "why would I borrow money?"Hi everybody.
I have been doing a lot of thinking about how to respond to what has happened over this past week and a half, and what the tone of my response should be. Thank you all – especially Mason – for your patience, as I’ve put a lot of time and thought into the following statement:
Poker players – including lots of high stakes players – borrow/lend money from each other all the time. They always have and they always will. The deals and arrangements they make in this regard have always been private and I believe they will always remain private. It’s nobody else’s business anyhow.
Why would I borrow money? When the global financial crisis hit many years ago, it really took a hard toll on my business. I lost a lot of my personal wealth. But I still wanted to play in high stakes games. The “right” thing to do would be to drop down in stakes, but I didn’t want to, so I borrowed to keep playing in the same games. I don’t play for super high stakes anymore. I get plenty of buzz and enjoyment playing for lower stakes.
When a poker player decides to lend another poker player money, they do so with the inherent risk that it might not be paid back. At no time when I borrowed money did I ever make a promise to pay loans back the next day. During the Full Tilt days, money flowed like water and when it came to paying people back it was never an issue.
Almost $2 million is owed to me by poker players to whom I have lent money over the years, but I have never gone public with their names.
I never hide from my debts. To the best of my knowledge, every person to whom I have had an outstanding debt (I can count them on one hand) has been OK with the arrangements I have made with them to pay back. For the record, this includes Shaun Deeb, to whom I still owe some money and with whom I am on great, friendly terms.
For whatever reason, Cole South felt the need to make a public post about a private arrangement, and I already made it clear in my original response that he has a misunderstanding of the facts. He could have contacted me privately or even by private message here on 2+2 if he wanted to. I don’t ignore text messages and haven’t seen him or gotten a message from him in years. I haven’t been hiding anywhere and it’s not hard for anyone who wants to get in touch to find me.
It seems like a lot of the forum posters have tried to make connections between things that are not connected at all. What do public records of court cases (which don’t tell the whole story, by the way) have to do at all with my IDF army days?
Using this platform to try and tear down my reputation affects many people beyond just me. A lot of people worked very hard to make this book happen. If you don’t want to buy my book that’s fine, but leaving 1-star nasty reviews on Amazon based on forum hearsay without actually reading the book is just plain wrong.
I didn’t invest YEARS of my life in this project, first in Hebrew then in English, with a primary goal of making money from the book. Mason chose to share that 2+2 put $20,000 into publishing my book (I didn’t know the amount until I read his post, by the way). He warned me before we signed our contract that this book likely wouldn’t make a lot of money because poker books just don’t sell like they used to “back in the day.” I just wanted my life’s story to be told and I’m glad to have a business partner in Mason who feels the same way. Bashing him is misguided, to say the least.
People make mistakes. I go into great detail in my book about many of the mistakes I have made in my life. I didn’t have to, but I chose to. As a matter of fact, many people who know me and who have bought and read the book have come up to me to express their shock at how open and honest I was, and that I didn’t need to say as much as I did about a lot of episodes in my life. For all of the poker glory I have achieved, I’m human, too. That’s what telling a life story is about; sharing both the ups and the downs.
I apologize to anyone who feels personally offended by the mistakes I have made. I’m not perfect, but that’s no reason to hold my mistakes over my head for the rest of my life. I’m sorry, Mason, that you had to deal with a lot of the fallout from my silence over this past week and a half. Throughout my life I have done my best to learn from the mistakes I’ve made and become a better man.
If anyone out there still wants to believe in baseless allegations against me, or in general be skeptical regarding whether my LIFE’S STORY is true and what my reputation ought to be, that’s up to you. All I can tell you is that anyone who has ever played with me, whether they’re a pro or a recreational player, and whether it has been in a cash game or tournament table, knows how passionately I love the game.
I will continue to participate for another 48 hours here on 2+2 and thereafter it’s time for me to move on. Aside from that, I’m at Aria/Bellagio five days a week and am happy to see any of you and speak with you in person, and of course to sign a copy of the book if you have purchased one.
To address the obvious, yes I had help writing this statement. I’m not a computer whiz and of course I am not a native English speaker.
Finally, and most importantly…. my favorite color is purple.
BTW I have no idea what this guy's "business" ever was. Minus the business of getting loans and never paying them back
http://www.miraclecovers.com
"Donk down, that’s what you say to someone after they have lost 28K straight?" - Phil Hellmuth, online
Statement just makes him look worse. It's pretty sad, actually. Hope he finds a way to pay back his debtors.
Cole just posted that Eli talked to him on the phone, had a good conversation, and promised to start paying him.
Of course he did.
Here's what I posted to Cole:
Good luck, Cole, and I hope you get paid.
Unfortunately, there is a very similar situation playing out in the NYPokerKing thread.
The scammer reaches out to the victim on a private phone call, acts very nice and agreeable, and promises payments in pieces.
The first small payment comes, and then the rest never do.
I've seen this occur countless times. It's directly from the Scammer/Deadbeat 101 Playbook. Claim you're going to make good when the heat turns up, make one small good faith payment, perhaps make a second payment, and then vanish.
My guess is that he's trying to scrounge up money to pay you for appearance sake, but if it was that easy, he would have done it weeks ago.
Pretty sure you're going to get one payment soon, and maybe a second one, and then the excuses/ghosting will start again.
On a side note, I had a dream last night about calling and talking to Eli about this situation, so perhaps I should start spending less time in this thread.
And since Eli offered to answer questions, here's what I asked him:
1) When you borrowed money in the past, did you already have debts to other poker players which hadn't been paid back for over a year? If so, did you disclose this to the people you borrowed from?
2) When people like Cole loaned you money, do you think they believed they would be paid back, or were they "fully aware they may never be paid back"?
3) Did you admit to people you borrowed from that you were struggling financially and needed the loans for that reason? If not, do you think those people had the mistaken impression that you were still a successful businessman?
that thread is about to get goooood
Yup, after a fake Abe Mosseri showed up a few days ago and was banned, now the real one is there (Mat Sklansky confirmed), and he's going to make a statement shortly "about the sensational substantial amount of money he owes me and possibly about many others".
https://forumserver.twoplustwo.com/s...&postcount=106
Is there anyone from the 'Big Game' glory days who isn't broke by now?
Negreanu? Ivey?
PokerFraudAlert...will never censor your claims, even if they're against one of our sponsors. In addition to providing you an open forum report fraud within the poker community, we will also analyze your claims with a clear head an unbiased point of view. And, of course, the accused will always have the floor to defend themselves.-Dan Druff
853k lol
Abe Mosseri's statement:
https://forumserver.twoplustwo.com/s...&postcount=155No person has ever staked me in my lifetime and I did not out Eli in 9 years. I have no social media and had no idea Eli had a book or Ame until days ago when I was called by a high ranking casino side of the business. I was shocked and suprised my name was used . He asked me to speak with DS and I have many times in the past few days. I got to tell you I was on the fence about it and not slept well. I decided today to speak out after Eli sent me texts of threats about my family most likely scared I was going to out him. If he had not had made such a stupid and actually a illegal decision to do that you would of never heard from me. Im not sure yet what I can say at this point. I can say this disappointed that Eli pushed me to this point when it could have been really simple. I really do not think Eli is so insane yet to come on here and call me a liar but so be it. Figure is 853k. A loan not a gambling debt.
Wow.
Sending threatening texts? Jesus Eli who told you that was a good idea...
Apparently the threatening texts were of the legal variety, where Eli allegedly told Abe that the FBI is investigating him for threatening Eli's family, which Abe denies ever doing.
Details: https://forumserver.twoplustwo.com/s...&postcount=186
Lol, such a laugh. Poor Mason fell off his high horse a little. Full tilt was full of degens who it turns out where not as wealthy as people thought. I thought they had money all were getting 200k a month it seemed.Eric Lundgren was the worst of the worst. Lol at eli claiming people should have known they weren't most likely getting paid or some such bs.
Last edited by FRANKRIZZO; 01-30-2019 at 09:40 AM.
that without poker welfare from the online websites, those games were kinda fake news (except for the legit billionaire businessmen types...who got rolled by guys like Eli on FTP)
Even Negreanu (who I think is adequately rolled for the game) has advantages because if he ever hits a bad patch, he can just get unlimited stakes from Stars
They were.....in FTP money. FTP money is like an IOU, especially if the site ever went insolvent (which it did).I thought they had money all were getting 200k a month it seemed.Eric Lundgren was the worst of the worst. Lol at eli claiming people should have known they weren't most likely getting paid or some such bs.
IOUs....just as good as money!
Honestly I would love to start a pool on how much money Eli owes.....it's gotta be in the high single millions considering the stakes he played
http://www.miraclecovers.com
"Donk down, that’s what you say to someone after they have lost 28K straight?" - Phil Hellmuth, online
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