In 1925, a man did the unthinkable: he sold the Eiffel Tower. Not once, but twice. And here’s the kicker—he never owned it. Victor Lustig, a charming con artist with a taste for bold scams, pulled off one of the greatest hustles in history. With a devilish grin and a fake government title, he managed to convince not one but two wealthy businessmen that they could buy France’s most iconic monument. The fact that it was still standing after his con was, well, just a minor detail.

Lustig wasn’t born a criminal mastermind. He came from a poor family, where he watched the rich throw away money while his parents scraped by. And so he crafted a plan—if he couldn’t join them, he’d rob them blind, with a smile. His moment came in 1925, when he stumbled across an article about the Eiffel Tower's deteriorating condition. People whispered that the French government might tear it down. Lustig didn't just see news—he saw his next payday.

Armed with forged documents, a silver tongue, and impeccable charm, Lustig posed as a high-ranking official in charge of the tower’s “demolition.” He invited six of Paris’s top scrap metal dealers to a swanky hotel meeting. In a serious, almost conspiratorial tone, he told them that the government was selling the tower for scrap—secretly, of course. The dealers were hooked. Among them was André Poisson, a desperate businessman looking for a big break. Lustig didn’t even need to ask—Poisson offered a bribe to sweeten the deal. Lustig gladly took it, cashed the check faster than you can say “bonjour,” and disappeared into the Parisian night.

But here’s where it gets funny: Poisson, too embarrassed by his own gullibility, never reported the scam. Lustig’s scheme was so perfect, it flew completely under the radar. Sensing an opportunity for an encore, Lustig returned to Paris and ran the exact same con. Yes, you read that right—he sold the Eiffel Tower again. This time, however, his luck ran out. The second buyer was suspicious, reported him to the police, and the jig was up.

But, as they say, the best villains never get caught—or at least, not easily. By the time the authorities were alerted, Lustig had already fled to the U.S., leaving behind two duped buyers, a trail of forged documents, and one very intact Eiffel Tower.

Victor Lustig’s tale isn’t just one of genius trickery—it’s a reminder that sometimes the most serious cons have a hilarious twist. His boldness, wit, and ability to read human desperation turned him into a legend, even if his “sales” were more fiction than fact. And really, how many people can say they sold the Eiffel Tower twice without ever owning it?