Glenn Wesley Turner (1934–2020)[1] was a salesman best known for his Orlando, Florida based multi-level marketing cosmetic company Koscot Interplanetary, Inc. Turner and Koscot became entangled in numerous legal difficulties and Koscot went out of business in the 1970s.[2] In 1987 Turner was convicted on charges of conspiracy, fraud and operating a pyramid scheme, and sentenced to seven years in prison.[3]

Early life

Turner was a son of a sharecropper in a South Carolina tobacco farm[4][5] and an unwed mother. He was born with a cleft palate and a hare lip; surgery to correct them left a scar for which he was bullied until he dropped out of school in the eighth grade. Turner was described as semiliterate.[4] During his adult life, he had a speech impediment.[6] He served briefly in the U.S. Air Force before successfully graduating from a school for those who had dropped out of high school.[7]

Multi-level marketing success

Turner started out selling sewing machines, and also worked briefly for Holiday Magic—a multi-level marketing company that sold home-care products and cosmetics, and through related companies sold self-improvement programs. In the late 1960s he became an entrepreneur, founding Glenn W. Turner Enterprises, Inc. By 1972 he owned an estimated 70 companies,[8][1] including Dare to Be Great, a multi-level marketing company founded in 1969 which sold motivational and self-improvement courses.[9] The combined number of Koscot and Dare To Be Great employees was estimated to be around 500,000.[6]

What reportedly made Turner "really rich", however, was Koscot Interplanetary Inc.[10] (Koscot stood for "Kosmetics for the Communities of Tomorrow"), founded on August 27, 1967. Koscot and Dare to be Great grew rapidly and Turner became famous. At one point 60,000 people in 40 states and Canada worked for his businesses.[3] By the spring of 1969, Turner was living in a large home on Lake Maitland near Orlando Florida, and "had eight Cadillacs and a Rolls-Royce, three Learjets and a closetful of tailor-made suits and alligator shoes".[3] In 1972 he started but didn't finish a "$3.5 million white stone castle with a helicopter landing pad" on Bear Gulley Lake, also near Orlando.[10] He was featured in an 11-page article in Life magazine in 1971,[11] and was reportedly worth $300 million at the time.

The premise of Koscot was that participants could sell mink oil-based cosmetics door-to-door or at parties. However, the focus of the company was more about selling distributorships than cosmetics. A distributorship was sold for $5,000.[4] Participants could also pay $2,000 to be a supervisor or $5,400 to be a director. These levels (as in "multi-level marketing") would in theory make the participants money by recruiting others to work at levels below them as salespeople, supervisors or directors, paying commissions from orders of cosmetics to those at levels above who recruited them. They would then recruit their own participants to earn commissions for themselves.[3] As one news story put it:

Think about it: One person could sell 10 distributorships, and each of the 10 could sell 10 more, and so on. The distributors could make thousands. The guy at the top could make millions. ... Turner had a talent for making people believe in him. His sales rallies became legend. ... At the meeting Turner's proteges would run to the stage in their flashy suits and fancy shoes, with $100 or even $1,000 bills pinned to their lapels. They drove new Cadillacs and wore alligator shoes. "And so can you," they would tell the crowd. "All you have to do is believe it."[3]

Turner's "rags to riches" story[12] was to be an inspiration for others to buy franchises so that "they could all be rich and successful like him".[1]

He warned his would-be millionaires that nefarious elites conspired against their success, and would try to talk them out of joining Koscot, telling a Houston Koscot meeting in January 1970:

"Everybody is trying to frighten the little people because this nation is controlled by 2 percent of the people ... They are jerking the strings and every time we get a little bit out of line, they start working on the leaders. They start trying to chip away at them. They start by lobbying up in Washington.[3]

To form the pyramids of success, however, many directors, larger numbers of supervisors, salespeople and still more customers were needed.

... what would happen when these distributorships reached the saturation point, when there was no one left to buy a distributorship, and so many people selling cosmetics that it was impossible to recover the large investment from the small cosmetics commissions?[3]

When some salespeople found customers in short supply, Turner encouraged them to “'fake it until you make it,' by wearing expensive clothes and waving around $100 bills to lure in others".[1]

Koscot

Pyramid schemes being illegal in most states, Koscot became involved in substantial litigation from government agencies and Koscot's customers.[13] The first major lawsuit was filed in October 1969, by "14 Koscot distributors in Tennessee, Kentucky and Indiana" over Turner's failure "to pay promised dividends."[3]

According to one report, he was the target of prosecutors "in more than 30 states".[3] Disillusioned recruits testified against Turner or his companies, and one judge cited the phrase 'fake it until you make it', as "evidence of malfeasance".[1] In 1971, the Federal Trade Commission filed a lawsuit against Koscot, charging restraint of trade. In August 1972, he was charged with "86 counts of sale of unregistered securities and failing to register as a dealer".[8]

The Securities and Exchange Commission also filed a lawsuit in 1972 charging that Koscot's program should be considered a security and comply with securities laws and regulations.[14] The FTC's decision on Koscot set a precedent for defining if a company is engaging in illegal pyramiding.[15]

In 1973, a federal judge in Pittsburgh combined more than 1,000 lawsuits by unhappy Koscot investors and regulatory officials into "a single class-action lawsuit seeking more than $900 million."[3] Turner, attorney F. Lee Bailey, and eight others were also indicted by a federal grand jury on conspiracy and mail fraud charges.[16] The indictment said that Bailey had appeared in a film made for Turner's organization and had appeared with Turner at several rallies. A nine-month trial ended in a hung jury. Charges were then dropped against Bailey. In 1975, Turner pleaded guilty to a single charge of violating securities laws and was given probation, avoiding prison but financially beaten, "his empire in ruins.[3] After Koscot was sold in bankruptcy, the new owner found that it "had generated $169 million, still had assets of $11 million, but owed $33 million."[3]

Turner ran in the Democratic primary for the United States Senate election in Florida, 1974, but lost. He also lost running for state senate in 1978.[3]

Challenge

In 1979, his fortune gone, he attempted a comeback with another motivational company called Challenge, Inc.,[10] which led to more legal difficulties. According to one report he was convicted of running a pyramid scheme in Arizona in 1985 and released after five years in prison.[7] Another reported him sentenced to seven years in prison in 1987, after being convicted along with Edward Rector, on charges of conspiracy, fraud and operating a pyramid scheme.[3] He told reporters as he was led away to jail: “The good that I have done outweighs the bad. A technicality of the law is what got me.”[1]

Legacy

Turner died in his home in Lake Mary, Florida, in 2020.[17][12] Columnist Helaine Olen noted that despite having been "all but omnipresent in American life", at the peak of his success, his death met with almost no media or public attention.[1] Roger Roy writes that of the "untold number" of former Koscot and Dare to be Great believers, "most seem anxious to forget the Koscot heydays, and some seem embarrassed by their association with Turner".[3]

Also commenting on his conspicuously quiet passing, Jim Ridolphi tells of friends who spent their weekends "traveling the backroads of the Carolinas in a high energy house party" selling Turner's Challenge product.

"And, then as suddenly as it had started, it all ended and there was never another mention of the Challenge or Glenn Turner. ... To this day I’ve never heard one of them mention the Challenge or Glenn Turner. I can only assume it didn’t end well for them."[12]

But while Turner's name is not well remembered, his technique, Olen argues, has had great influence on American culture. His slogan “fake it until you make it”, came to express "the scrappy, optimistic mind-set of American hustle culture". But Turner and the 21st century figures like Elizabeth Holmes, Sam Bankman-Fried, and George Santos demonstrate that it can be easy to fake it, but much more difficult to make it.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Helaine Olen (2023-02-27). "Meet the con man who sold America on 'fake it till you make it'". Washington Post. Retrieved 2023-02-27.
  2. "Still a Salesman, And Motivated", New York Times, July 4, 2004.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 "Glenn Turner -- Out Of Luck; Fraud Sentencing May Be His Day Of Reckoning". Orlando Sentinel. August 17, 1987. Retrieved 28 February 2023.
  4. 1 2 3 Packer, George (2013). The Unwinding: An Inner History of the New America. New York, NY: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. p. 12. ISBN 978-1-4668-3695-2.
  5. House, Commerce Clearing. Trade Cases. Riverwoods, Illinois: Commerce Clearing House. pp. 92–672.
  6. 1 2 Kennedy, Dan (2010). No B.S. Sales Success In The New Economy. Irvine, CA: Entrepreneur Press. p. 45. ISBN 978-1-61308-001-6.
  7. 1 2 Herring, Troy (12 January 2018). "Glenn Turner's castle". Orange Observer. Retrieved 1 March 2023.
  8. 1 2 "Florida Arrests Glenn Turner". New York Times. Associate Press. 31 August 1972. Retrieved 28 February 2023.
  9. "Dare to be Great, Inc!: A Case Study of Pyramid Sales Plan Regulation". Cochran, Harry M., Jr., Ohio State Law Journal: Volume 33, Issue 3 (1972).
  10. 1 2 3 "Glenn Turner, Empire Toppled, Trying Again to Sell Motivation". New York Times. UPI. 27 May 1979. Retrieved 1 March 2023.
  11. Thomas Thompson (1971-05-28). "Dare to be Great". Life. pp. 68–78. Retrieved 2023-02-27.
  12. 1 2 3 Ridolphi, Jim (7 February 2021). "Looking back: Daring to be great". Richmond Times Dispatch. Retrieved 28 February 2023.
  13. "Koscot Cosmetics Accused Of Illegal Business Actions", New York Times, March 18, 1972.
  14. "Koscot and Turner Cited in Complaint Filed by the S.E.C.", New York Times September 14, 1972.
  15. FTC - pyramid schemes - International Monetary Funds Seminar on Current Legal Issues Affecting Central Banks - Washington, D.C. -Date: May 13, 1998
  16. Turner, Bailey Face Conspiracy Charges The Dispatch May 19, 1973
  17. "Glenn Wesley Turner". Legacy.com. Retrieved 1 March 2023.
  • SEC v. Koscot Interplanetary, 497 F.2d 473 (1974)
  • In Re Koscot Interplanetary Inc., 86 F.T.C. 11106 (1975)

Further reading

  • Robinson, Kenneth Michael. The Great American Mail-Fraud Trial. Nash Publications. 1976. ISBN 9780840213679 (Kenneth Michael Robinson was the defense attorney for Koscot)
  • Maxa, Rudy. Dare to Be Great: The Unauthorized Story of Glenn Turner. Morrow. 1977 ISBN 9780688031015 (Rudy Maxa was an investigative journalist for the Washington Post)
  • Frasca, John. Con Man or Saint?. Droke House. 1969.
  • Frasca, John. The Unstoppable Glenn Turner. Pyramid Publications. 1972.
  • Frasca, John. GWT Changed the World for Me: The Story of Glenn W. Turner - Motivational Genius. Pyramid Publications. 1972 (John Frasca was a Pulitzer Prize-winning former investigative journalist at the Tampa Tribune, who became Glenn Turner's publicist)
  • Olen, Helaine (27 February 2023). "Opinion This all-but-forgotten con man sold America on 'fake it till you make it'". Washington Post. Retrieved 28 February 2023.</ref>
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