Friday 1 July 2022 04:18 AM Inside glamorous lifestyle of western Sydney's most 'prolific' conman trends now
The glamorous lifestyle of one of Sydney's most prolific and manipulative conmen has been revealed as the fraudster is thrown behind bars.
For six months, Sunny Sunny lived his fantasy life driving a luxury Range Rover, spending thousands on 'pornstar experiences' and convincing people to part with gold bars worth $10,000.
The 32-year-old - described as the most prolific and talented conman' in western Sydney - used a variety of tactics to defraud innocent people for over two years.
The student on Tuesday faced court for his crimes and was hit with 15 charges, including falsifying documents and stealing a car, the Daily Telegraph reports.
Detectives believe his fraud dates back to September 2020, when Sunny began flashing dodgy cheques to satisfy his expensive taste.
For years Sunny Sunny (pictured) lived his fantasy life driving a luxury Range Rover, spending thousands on 'pornstar experiences' and purchasing gold bars worth $10,000 with fake cheques
The India-born fraudster signed the cheques under a plethora of aliases that were paid with chequebooks linked to two of his bankrupt or closed-down businesses.
Other times, Sunny would transfer the money and then reverse it with his victims unable to reach him after numbers were cancelled and addresses changed.
He was even able to con car dealers out of a luxury Range Rover Evoque.
Court documents state a scammer using a fake name had changed a decimal point to a comma on a forged cheque for $46,888.
That meant he paid just $46.88 for the vehicle.
Pickles Auction House realised the check was fake and reported the car as stolen - but not before it had been towed by Sunny's friend to Warwick Farms.
He hitched a ride to the lockup, and when officers left, Sunny simply unlocked the roller door and drove off.
When officers discovered the vehicle one month later outside a brothel, they had been entirely unaware Sunny was still inside - asleep or in hiding.
The fraudster then claimed he had been kidnapped in the Range Rover following a disagreement with a sex worker.
Police inspected the vehicle and handed it back to him - unaware Sunny had altered the unique VIN serial number to conceal his tracks.
According to court documents, Sunny defrauded one sex worker for $1900 worth of pleasure
Australia's own 'Catch Me If You Can' fraudster glamorous lifestyle came to a crashing halt after he