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Telling the tale of a silver-tongued liar

Posted: Friday, March 30, 2007 1:40 AM by Dateline Editor
Filed Under: ,

by Shane Bishop, Dateline producer

Mortgage Fraud.

Those words in the lead sentence of a story assignment starts a pit forming in the stomach of any television producer. Visual, shall we say, it ain't. You'll have no dramatic video caught by surveillance cameras to work with; no exciting car chases; no crime scenes littered with fingerprints or revealing clues.

"What pictures are we going to cover this with?" my colleagues and I joked. "This is a great story," one added. "For a newspaper."

But oh, how wrong we were. The tale of accused mortgage fraud mastermind Matthew Cox would surprise us all in many ways.

First, Cox was not some boring banker-type in a gray flannel suit, but a hip, young daredevil who wore expensive clothes, drove flashy cars, and loved to skydive. He was also an accomplished visual artist with a flair for the dramatic. He painted sprawling art deco murals in several of the apartments where he lived. Our camera crews were stunned when they entered Cox's former living spaces still adorned by floor-to-ceiling panoramas painted by the wanted man.

Cox also wrote a 300-page manuscript called "The Associates," in which a character who bore an uncanny resemblance to the author, except for the fact  that in the book every woman wanted him. Cox's manuscript was a veritable 'how to' on fraud. It laid out plans and schemes that Cox would later copy in real life. (And it wouldn't be a bad beach read, either, although Cox desperately needs to learn to use a spellchecker. What publisher is going to take seriously any writer who uses the phrase, "cereal killer?")

In addition, Matthew Cox was a gifted forger and silver-tongued liar who talked his way out of police custody at least once. Authorities say he routinely juggled 30 or 40 false identities, somehow keeping them all straight at a moment's notice.

Cox seems to possess what is politely termed the "artistic temperament." Wikipedia defines this behavior as "..often characterized by being highly passionate about subjects of importance to the possessor of this behavior, extremely dedicated to certain goals, often hyper-aware of the presence of others, and at other times seemingly oblivious to the presence of others."

Ask the women that Matthew Cox lured into his schemes. Ask Rebecca Hauck. One minute she was his other half, his sidekick, the Bonnie to his Clyde; the next, Cox would slip out the door while she soaked in the tub. He was gone forever. And weeks later, another woman's eyes would light up as he told her that she was now his indispensable other half.

In our research, we learned that Cox was a severely dyslexic child, and was often told by teachers that he'd never amount to anything. Many we interviewed told us that all the fraud was simply a game to Matthew Cox. As an adult, Cox was now attacking the mortgage world as he attacked his canvas, his keyboard, and his life: as if he had something to prove.
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Within weeks, Matthew Cox is expected to strike a plea bargain with federal prosecutors and be sentenced to what perhaps will be at least a decade in federal prison. Bureau of Prisons records will reflect that his crime was simply "mortgage fraud." But it's tough to label an artist of Matthew Cox's caliber.

"Thief of Hearts" aired Dateline Sunday, 8 p.m. Read a post on the story from producer Shane Bishop, below. Click here for the transcript and video of the report, as well as links to Cox's art and an excerpt of his unpublished book.

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Comments

If COX is a repeated Fraud Offender,why can't you keep him in prison,instead of letting him out to repeat it again????
Sounds like he's lucky he made it as far as prison. Before skydiving, someone probably should have cut the cords on his chute. Once he's out.....he'll be looking over his shoulder, and I doubt if prison will change him.
its amazing how the federal government will accept a plea bargain from a man that is truly a criminal whatever he gets in prison will not be enough
What was the name of the last woman he was with in Nashville?
A plea agreement? You have to be kidding. The case isn't that hard, but putting him in for a decade is nearly an invitation for others to do the same thing or worse. Let's see - a decade or so in the slammer (probably less with parole) vs. the prospect of getting away with millions and just learning to call it quits earlier.
In the Dateline episode, there was an on-screen message stating that read excerpts of The Associate manuscript were available at this web site. Where is it?
I went to cosmetology school with Rebecca and she does not deserve to get the punnishment that Matthew Cox took her into illegally.
"The Associate" manuscript is currently on the cover of Dateline.MSNBC.com. Here's a direct link: 
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17900903/
for having all that money, he sure was cheap! he didn't even get us a wedding present. he hurt a lot of people.
Pause before you dismiss ten years in prison that lightly. For a free spirit it will be worse than death.
Why wasnt matt cox sentenced  on the 22nd of august? there's been no articvles to this effect.
I understand that the second time the dateline aired that cox was interviewed. why can't i find the link to the interview? does anyone know where to find it. i would love to see the slimeball's responses.
I do not understand why the person responsible for his capture is not interviewed by Dateline.  Why not get the REAL truth?  Jeff Testerman followed this guy all the way through and did not get any credit whatsoever.  Without him, Cox would never have been caught because the FBI/Secret Service had no clue.
Why does everything have to turn into a love story?  Why does Dateline not interview the person responsible for Cox's capture?  Namely, Jeff Testerman.  He followed Cox all the way through and without him, he would NEVER have been captured.  The FBI/Secret Service had no clue where he was or what he was doing.  He was right under their noses.  Dateline made Cox look like a "little boy with his hand caught in the cookie jar".  They need to get the real facts.
When he did some remodel work at my house (next door), I sensed a strangeness back then. And indeed, much of the work had to be redone later after misdeeds were uncovered.


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