Sam the scam, Sam the koala is an impostor!
Media release
– 13 February 2010
Sam
the scam: Sam the Koala is an impostor!
On
12 February a paper was published that for the first time revealed that the
stuffed “Sam the Koala” sitting in the National Museum of Victoria is an
impostor or fake.
Yes,
the original water-drinking Koala is a different animal!
That
was a male Koala, later renamed “Bob”, who had been captive as far back as
2006!
The
paper by zoologist and author Raymond Hoser, went further and showed that the
original video shot showing a water-drinking Koala at Mirboo North in February
2009 was effectively a bootleg, a “set-up” and not a random encounter as
alleged until now.
The
paper published in Australasian Journal of Herpetology (Issue 8
pp.1-64), went further and detailed the fairly simple (and easily copied)
forensics behind exposing one of the most successful frauds in recent
Australian history, including various other activities all successfully
designed to raise large amounts of money, running to the many hundreds of
thousands of dollars.
As
it happens, most of the money raised went to worthwhile causes and a logical
question to be asked is why the author Raymond Hoser chose to expose the fraud
at this late stage.
In
response he said:
“Most
of the money likely to be raised by “Sam the Koala” has already been raised, so
I don’t think I’m upsetting too many people.
More importantly, the public interest is best served by telling the
truth and so it is better that it come out sooner rather than later …the fraud
and the story is just too big to hide”.
As
to how many people were knowingly involved in the fraud, the exact detail
remains unknown, although claims by some involved suggest that many well-known
people were included. Significantly,
the main man involved in the fraud, CFA fireman David Tree has admitted to his
part in the caper and since justified it along the lines that it diverted
people’s attention away from the destruction of the black Saturday fires.
The
paper can be found as hard copy from publication date of 12 February 2010 or
online from 19 February 2010 at:
and
following the links.
Further
inquiries phone: Snakebusters/Raymond Hoser on 9812-332 or 0412-777-211
(Warning: Lines may be busy, so you may be asked for your number for a “callback”)
On
7 February 2008, a series of Victorian bushfires killed 173 people and caused
massive property losses and death of wildlife.
On 10 February a supposedly original video emerged on the internet site
“Youtube” that depicted CFA Fireman David Tree feeding an allegedly injured
koala a bottle of water. At the same
time (as in the next day), newspapers worldwide, promoted the video and four
associated still camera photos taken at the same time, with the Koala gaining
“celebrity status” and being named “Sam the Koala”. The official (Government) version of the story as dutifully
reported in the mainstream media (including the Age and Herald-Sun), from
then until present stated that the same Koala was cared for by a Mrs Colleen
Wood until it’s death on 6 August 2009 and then lodged with the National Museum
of Victoria, whereupon the same stuffed animal remains as of February 2010.
In
summary the video depicted was carefully planned and executed and not an
unexpected and random act of kindness caught on film as alleged by Tree and
agents. It was in fact a bootleg of at least two similar acts both predating
the making of this video and known to all or most people most actively promoting
“Sam the Koala”. The depicted Koala had
been “planted” for the express purpose of making the pre-planned video and
associated photos and was Mr Tree’s second attempt at making a famous “bear”
named “Sam”. The origin of the idea
goes back at least as far as 2003 and probably further. The stuffed Koala at
the Museum, now identified as “Sam the Koala”, is female and is not the same
koala depicted in the original video and photos. It is therefore an impostor or
a fraud.
The
originally depicted Koala is a male, identified by the relevant parties shortly
thereafter as “Bob the Koala”, allegedly captured in Boolarra two days before
the (now female) “Sam”.
For
the first time ever it can reported that the same “Bob” was in fact a long term
captive, having been held by Wood at least as far back as April 2006.
A
secondary “swap” was the attribution of the relevant still images. In the first
instance and for some months thereafter, photos were consistently credited to
“Russell Vickery” of the Herald-Sun. However post-dating a report in the Herald-Sun on 12 August 2009, relating
to a (then) proposed “Sam the Koala” trademark opposition by the Victorian
government through the Department of Sustainability and Environment (DSE), the
media and other sources commenced crediting the photos to DSE employee Mark
Pardew, including “rebranding” this information on the web on earlier news
clips without noting this editing. The
photos credited are the same four identical images raising further questions as
to reasons for the “swap”.
Besides
the fraudulent and deliberate swapping of Koalas identified as “Sam” shortly
after the making of the February video, an act that evidently is known to many
involved with “Sam the Koala” since February 2009, a large number of illegal
and dishonest activities have also been uncovered. The common thread and motivation has been to scam enormous
amounts of money in the form of cash donations from well-meaning members of the
public or to divert attention from culpable acts and negligence that led to the
massive destruction of life and property on 7 February 2009. Because the fraud has remained undetected to
the public at large (or at least undisclosed) and there has been a transfer of
hundreds of thousands of dollars to participants and entities they control, the
“Sam the Koala” campaign has apparently been highly successful.
Keywords: Koala, Sam,
Fraud, Impostor, Money, Wildlife, Conservation, Department of Sustainability
and Environment, DSE, Museum of Victoria, John Brumby, Premier, Corruption, Lies,
Dishonesty, Venomoid snakes,
Phascolarctos cinereus, stuffed, news media, Herald-Sun, swapped, bushfire.
Limited
numbers of printed hard copies (at cost) are available at: