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<!-- META_DESCRIPTION: Explore Jordan Belfort's securities fraud conviction and federal prison time. Learn about the real Wolf of Wall Street's scams and redemption. -->
{{MetaDescription|Jordan Belfort served 22 months at FCI Taft for securities fraud. Learn about his prison experience, Tommy Chong bunkmate story, and $110M restitution.}}
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{{Infobox Person
{{Infobox Person
|name = Jordan Ross Belfort
|name = Jordan Ross Belfort
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|facility = Taft Correctional Institution
|facility = Taft Correctional Institution
|status = Released
|status = Released
|conviction_date = 1999
|release_date = 2006
}}
}}
'''Jordan Ross Belfort''' (born July 9, 1962) is an American author, motivational speaker, and former stockbroker who served 22 months in federal prison after pleading guilty to securities fraud and money laundering in connection with stock market manipulation schemes conducted through his brokerage firm Stratton Oakmont during the 1990s.<ref name="biography-belfort">Biography.com, "Jordan Belfort," https://www.biography.com/business-leaders/jordan-belfort.</ref> Belfort's crimes, which defrauded more than 1,500 investors out of approximately $200 million, were chronicled in his 2007 memoir "The Wolf of Wall Street," which was adapted into the 2013 Academy Award-nominated film of the same name directed by Martin Scorsese and starring Leonardo DiCaprio. While Belfort was sentenced to four years in prison, he served only 22 months after cooperating with federal authorities and testifying against his former partners and subordinates.<ref name="bloomberg-belfort">Bloomberg, "Jordan Belfort, the Real Wolf of Wall Street," November 7, 2013, https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2013-11-07/jordan-belfort-the-real-wolf-of-wall-street-ij1n8gho.</ref> Belfort was also ordered to pay $110.4 million in restitution to his victims, a debt that he has paid only a fraction of despite earning substantial income from book sales, movie rights, and a lucrative career as a motivational speaker.<ref name="yahoo-restitution">Yahoo Finance, "Jordan Belfort may be a financial legend — but his criminal record may still be haunting his finances," https://finance.yahoo.com/news/jordan-belfort-may-financial-legend-103300688.html.</ref>
 
'''Jordan Ross Belfort''' (born July 9, 1962) is an American author, motivational speaker, and former stockbroker. He served 22 months in federal prison at '''Taft Correctional Institution''' after pleading guilty to [[Securities_Fraud|securities fraud]] and [[Money_Laundering|money laundering]]. His crimes involved stock market manipulation schemes run through his brokerage firm Stratton Oakmont during the 1990s.<ref name="biography-belfort">Biography.com, "Jordan Belfort," https://www.biography.com/business-leaders/jordan-belfort</ref> He defrauded more than 1,500 investors out of roughly $200 million. His memoir "The Wolf of Wall Street" came out in 2007, and the 2013 film adaptation directed by Martin Scorsese and starring Leonardo DiCaprio earned five Academy Award nominations, including Best Picture.<ref name="crime-museum">Crime Museum, "Jordan Belfort," https://www.crimemuseum.org/crime-library/white-collar-crime/jordan-belfort/</ref>
 
Belfort got a four-year sentence but served only 22 months. Why? He cooperated extensively with federal authorities, wearing a wire and testifying against 29 of his former partners and subordinates.<ref name="bloomberg-belfort">Bloomberg, "Jordan Belfort, the Real Wolf of Wall Street," November 7, 2013, https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2013-11-07/jordan-belfort-the-real-wolf-of-wall-street</ref> A court ordered him to pay $110.4 million in restitution to his victims. But here's the thing: he's barely paid anything. Approximately $97 to $100 million still goes unpaid, despite his substantial post-release earnings from speaking fees, book royalties, and film rights.<ref name="celebrity-networth">Celebrity Net Worth, "Jordan Belfort Still Owes His Victims $97.5 Million," https://www.celebritynetworth.com/articles/entertainment-articles/wolf-of-wall-street-jordan-belfort-still-owes-his-victims-97-5-million-hasnt-made-a-payment-to-them-in-years-12/</ref>
 
== Current Status ==
 
'''As of December 2025''', Jordan Belfort is no longer incarcerated. He was released from federal custody in 2006 after serving 22 months at Taft Correctional Institution. A $110.4 million restitution order still hangs over him, with roughly $97 million outstanding. He continues working as a motivational speaker and sales trainer.<ref name="celebrity-networth" />
 
=== What Is Jordan Belfort Doing Now (2024-2025)? ===
 
Belfort has built a lucrative career as a motivational speaker, author, and sales trainer despite his criminal history. His current activities include:
 
'''Motivational Speaking:''' He runs Global Motivation, Inc., offering corporate training sessions, keynote seminars, and coaching programs. The foundation is his proprietary "Straight Line System" methodology. Speaking engagements cost $30,000 to $75,000. Sales seminars run $80,000 and up. Premium appearances? Those can fetch $200,000 or more. He speaks at corporate events, sales conferences, and private gatherings all over the world.<ref name="finbold">Finbold, "Jordan Belfort Net Worth 2025," https://finbold.com/guide/jordan-belfort-net-worth/</ref>
 
'''Books and Courses:''' Beyond his memoirs "The Wolf of Wall Street" (2007) and "Catching the Wolf of Wall Street" (2009), Belfort has written sales training books including "Way of the Wolf: Straight Line Selling" and "The Wolf of Investing" (2023). His books have been translated into 18 languages and released in roughly 40 countries. He also sells online courses teaching his Straight Line sales methodology.<ref name="coinpaper">Coinpaper, "Jordan Belfort Net Worth: How Rich Is He?," https://coinpaper.com/5539/jordan-belfort-net-worth-how-big-is-the-fortune-of-the-infamous-con-artist</ref>
 
'''Cryptocurrency Involvement:''' In 2022, Belfort held a cryptocurrency workshop at his Miami estate. Each of nine attendees paid roughly $40,000, which was approximately one Bitcoin at the time. He's discussed investment strategies tied to cryptocurrency, decentralized finance (DeFi), and the Metaverse. He's invested in multiple crypto ventures and frequently comments on cryptocurrency markets on social media. Critics find this ironic given his securities fraud history.<ref name="coinpaper" />
 
'''YouTube and Social Media:''' Belfort maintains an active YouTube and social media presence. He discusses sales techniques, investing, and business advice. His notoriety from "The Wolf of Wall Street" film continues to drive interest in his content.
 
=== Jordan Belfort's Net Worth in 2024-2025 ===
 
His actual net worth is subject to wide-ranging estimates due to his complex financial situation:
 
* '''Celebrity Net Worth''' estimates his net worth at '''negative $100 million''' when accounting for his unpaid restitution obligations.<ref name="celebrity-networth" />
* Other analysts estimate his '''gross assets''' between $100 million and $115 million, not accounting for his debts.
* His estimated '''annual income''' is roughly $18 million from speaking engagements, book royalties, courses, and other ventures.<ref name="finbold" />
* Despite technically owing nearly $100 million, Belfort '''lives luxuriously'''. This lifestyle has drawn sharp criticism from victims and prosecutors alike.
 
The contrast between his apparent wealth and his outstanding legal obligations remains one of the most controversial aspects of his post-prison career. Critics argue he's profited enormously from crimes while paying only a fraction to victims.
 
=== Stratton Oakmont: History and Current Status ===
 
'''Stratton Oakmont no longer exists.''' The firm was permanently shut down in December 1996 after being expelled from the NASD (now FINRA). Jordan Belfort doesn't own Stratton Oakmont and has no legal connection to any business operating under that name.
 
Here's the firm's timeline:
* '''Founded:''' 1989 by Jordan Belfort and Danny Porush
* '''Peak:''' Early 1990s, with over 1,000 brokers and $5 million monthly overhead
* '''Expelled:''' December 1996 by NASD
* '''Revenues at peak:''' $50-100 million annually
* '''Total investor losses:''' Roughly $200 million
 
The NASD called Stratton Oakmont "one of the worst actors" in the securities industry and cited "obvious disregard for all rules of fair practice" in its expulsion order. The firm's business model, pump-and-dump penny stock manipulation, was inherently fraudulent and couldn't legally continue.<ref name="stratton-wiki" />
 
Multiple executives faced prosecution after the firm's closure:
* '''Jordan Belfort:''' 22 months federal prison, $110.4 million restitution
* '''Danny Porush:''' 39 months federal prison
* '''Steve Madden:''' 31 months federal prison
* '''29 additional co-conspirators''' convicted based on Belfort's cooperation<ref name="bloomberg-belfort" />


== Summary ==
== Summary ==


Jordan Belfort became one of the most notorious figures in Wall Street history through his operation of Stratton Oakmont, a "boiler room" brokerage firm that used high-pressure sales tactics to manipulate penny stock prices and defraud investors. At its peak in the early 1990s, Stratton Oakmont employed over 1,000 stockbrokers and generated massive profits through "pump and dump" schemes that artificially inflated stock prices before selling them to unsuspecting investors. The firm's culture of excess—featuring drug use, wild parties, and ostentatious displays of wealth—would later become the subject of Belfort's memoirs and the Scorsese film.<ref name="crime-museum">Crime Museum, "Jordan Belfort," https://www.crimemuseum.org/crime-library/white-collar-crime/jordan-belfort/.</ref>
Jordan Belfort became one of Wall Street history's most notorious figures by running Stratton Oakmont, a "boiler room" brokerage that used aggressive sales tactics to manipulate penny stock prices and defraud investors. In the early 1990s at its peak, Stratton Oakmont employed over 1,000 stockbrokers and made massive profits through "pump and dump" schemes. These schemes artificially inflated stock prices before selling them to unsuspecting investors. The firm's culture of excess was legendary: drug use, wild parties, and ostentatious displays of wealth. This culture would later become the subject of Belfort's memoirs and the Scorsese film.<ref name="crime-museum" />


Belfort's relatively brief prison sentence—22 months of a four-year term—resulted from his extensive cooperation with federal authorities. He wore a wire and provided testimony that helped convict numerous other participants in the fraud. While cooperation typically results in reduced sentences, critics have argued that Belfort received exceptionally lenient treatment given the scale of his crimes and the number of victims harmed.<ref name="shortform-belfort">Shortform Books, "What Did Jordan Belfort Do to End Up in Prison?," https://www.shortform.com/blog/what-did-jordan-belfort-do/.</ref>
His relatively brief prison sentence came from extensive cooperation with federal authorities. He wore a wire and provided testimony that helped convict 29 other participants in the fraud. While cooperation typically results in reduced sentences, critics have argued that Belfort received exceptionally lenient treatment given the scale of his crimes and the number of victims harmed.<ref name="shortform-belfort">Shortform Books, "What Did Jordan Belfort Do to End Up in Prison?," https://www.shortform.com/blog/what-did-jordan-belfort-do/</ref>


Perhaps more controversial than his sentence is Belfort's post-release career. Rather than fading into obscurity, Belfort has built a lucrative second act as a motivational speaker and author, earning substantial income while paying only a fraction of the $110.4 million he owes in restitution to his victims. His success as a celebrity fraudster has raised uncomfortable questions about how society rewards notoriety and whether the justice system adequately prioritizes victim compensation.<ref name="justice-journal">The Justice Journal, "The Wolf of Wall Street Who Cried Boy," August 17, 2022, https://gwjusticejournal.com/2022/08/17/the-wolf-of-wall-street-who-cried-boy/.</ref>
Most controversial is his failure to compensate his victims. He's earned millions from book sales, film rights, and speaking fees. Yet he's paid only roughly $12.8 million toward his $110.4 million restitution obligation. And $11 million of that came from assets seized at arrest. At his current minimum payment rate of $10,000 per month, it would take over 70 years to repay his victims in full.<ref name="cnbc-restitution">CNBC, "Jordan Belfort, 'Wolf of Wall Street,' to surrender more profits to victims, judge rules," December 4, 2018, https://www.cnbc.com/2018/12/04/wolf-of-wall-street-belfort-to-surrender-more-profits-to-victims.html</ref>


== Background ==
== Background ==
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=== Early Life ===
=== Early Life ===


Jordan Ross Belfort was born on July 9, 1962, in the Bronx, New York, and raised in Queens. His parents were both accountants. Belfort showed entrepreneurial instincts from an early age, reportedly earning $20,000 selling Italian ices on the beach as a teenager. He attended American University and briefly considered dental school before deciding to pursue a career in sales.<ref name="famous-people-bio">The Famous People, "Jordan Belfort Biography," https://www.thefamouspeople.com/profiles/jordan-belfort-6511.php.</ref>
Jordan Ross Belfort was born on July 9, 1962, in the Bronx, New York. His family moved to Bayside, Queens when he was young. Both his father, Max Belfort, and mother, Leah Belfort, were accountants. This professional background gave Jordan early familiarity with numbers and financial concepts, though not necessarily the ethical framework that should come with them. He grew up in a middle-class Queens household and developed entrepreneurial instincts at a young age. One summer, he reportedly earned $20,000 selling Italian ices with a childhood friend on Long Island beaches. That experience, moving a commodity through sheer salesmanship, would become a template for everything that followed.<ref name="famous-people-bio">The Famous People, "Jordan Belfort Biography," https://www.thefamouspeople.com/profiles/jordan-belfort-6511.php</ref>
 
Belfort attended American University in Washington, D.C., where he studied biology. He briefly enrolled in the University of Maryland School of Dentistry but withdrew on his very first day. The dean told incoming students that dentistry was no longer a path to wealth. Whether that story is precisely accurate or embellished by Belfort's tendency toward self-mythology, it captures something true about his character: he had no interest in professions requiring patience, rigor, and delayed gratification. He wanted money fast. He wanted a stage. Sales offered him both.<ref name="vestpod-crimes">Vestpod, "Unmasking the Wolf of Wall Street: Jordan Belfort's Financial Crimes," https://www.vestpod.com/news/the-wallet-podcast/unmasking-the-wolf-of-wall-street</ref>


=== Entry to Wall Street ===
=== Entry to Wall Street ===


Belfort's Wall Street career began at L.F. Rothschild, a respected brokerage firm. According to his own account, he received his broker's license on "Black Monday" in October 1987, when the stock market crashed and his firm laid him off along with many other employees. This setback was temporary; Belfort would soon find his way into the lucrative but ethically questionable world of penny stock trading.<ref name="vestpod-crimes">Vestpod, "Unmasking the Wolf of Wall Street: Jordan Belfort's Financial Crimes," https://www.vestpod.com/news/the-wallet-podcast/unmasking-the-wolf-of-wall-street.</ref>
His Wall Street career started at L.F. Rothschild, a respected brokerage firm, where he trained as a stockbroker. According to his own account, he received his broker's license on "Black Monday," October 19, 1987. That day, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 22.6% in a single session, its worst single-day percentage loss in history. L.F. Rothschild was already under financial pressure, and it laid off Belfort along with most of its staff. The setback was temporary. Belfort soon found his way into the lucrative but ethically questionable world of penny stock trading. A Long Island firm called Investors Center gave him his first taste of the aggressive cold-call sales culture that would define his career.<ref name="vestpod-crimes" />


=== Stratton Oakmont ===
=== Stratton Oakmont ===


In 1989, Belfort founded Stratton Oakmont (the firm took various names over its history) with partner Danny Porush. The firm specialized in penny stocks—low-priced shares of small companies that traded outside the major stock exchanges. Stratton Oakmont became one of the largest "boiler room" operations in American history, employing aggressive sales tactics to convince investors to buy stocks that the firm was secretly manipulating.<ref name="crime-museum" />
In 1989, Belfort founded Stratton Oakmont with partner Danny Porush. They took over a small existing brokerage called Stratton Securities in Lake Success, New York, on Long Island. The firm specialized in penny stocks: low-priced shares of small companies trading outside the major exchanges on the OTC Bulletin Board. Stratton Oakmont became one of the largest "boiler room" operations in American history, employing aggressive sales tactics to convince investors to buy stocks the firm was secretly manipulating.<ref name="crime-museum" />


The firm's business model was based on "pump and dump" schemes. Stratton Oakmont would acquire large positions in penny stocks, then use its army of brokers to aggressively promote those stocks to retail investors, driving up the price. Once the price had risen sufficiently, Belfort and his associates would sell their holdings at the inflated prices, leaving ordinary investors holding worthless shares when the price inevitably collapsed.<ref name="wklaw-crimes">WKLaw, "Behind Life of Jordan Belfort: Crimes in The Wolf of Wall Street," https://www.wklaw.com/crimes-in-the-wolf-wall-of-street/.</ref>
The business model was straightforward: pump and dump. Stratton Oakmont would acquire large positions in penny stocks, then use its army of brokers to aggressively promote those stocks to retail investors. This drove up the price. Once the price had risen sufficiently, Belfort and his associates would sell their holdings at inflated prices. Ordinary investors were left holding worthless shares when the price inevitably collapsed. Duke Ferdinand Mineral Corp., Faberge Industries, and dozens of other obscure companies became victims of the firm's manipulation. Their names meant nothing to the retail investors being cold-called by Stratton's brokers.<ref name="wklaw-crimes">WKLaw, "Behind Life of Jordan Belfort: Crimes in The Wolf of Wall Street," https://www.wklaw.com/crimes-in-the-wolf-wall-of-street/</ref>


At its peak, Stratton Oakmont employed over 1,000 brokers and had a monthly overhead of approximately $5 million. The firm's culture became legendary for its excess: lavish parties, rampant drug use, and a "work hard, play hard" mentality that Belfort encouraged. This culture would later be dramatized in graphic detail in the Scorsese film.<ref name="allthatsinteresting-stratton">All That's Interesting, "The Unhinged Story Of Stratton Oakmont," https://allthatsinteresting.com/stratton-oakmont.</ref>
The mechanics were straightforward and effective. Brokers working from scripts written by Belfort and senior managers would identify targets. They'd typically focus on retirees, small business owners, and other ordinary individuals with savings to invest. Then came the cold calls with "hot tips" on stocks supposedly about to break out. The firm trained its brokers to overcome every conceivable objection. They were never to accept a refusal as final. Those who excelled were rewarded lavishly. Those who couldn't hit quotas faced public humiliation or termination. This culture of aggressive sales, combined with the fraudulent underlying investments, produced enormous profits for the firm. It systematically destroyed the savings of customers. Stratton Oakmont's pump-and-dump model became one of the most studied examples of securities fraud in the 1990s. For a detailed examination of how similar boiler-room schemes have continued to operate in subsequent decades, see [https://confraud.com/category/ponzi-schemes/2026/01/roger-knox/ Roger Knox's Swiss Web: The $137M Pump-and-Dump Empire].<ref name="allthatsinteresting-stratton">All That's Interesting, "The Unhinged Story Of Stratton Oakmont," https://allthatsinteresting.com/stratton-oakmont</ref>
 
At its peak, the firm employed over 1,000 brokers. Its monthly overhead was roughly $5 million. Stratton Oakmont handled the initial public offerings of 35 companies, including Steve Madden, Ltd. The firm's culture became legendary for excess. Lavish parties. Rampant drug use. A "work hard, play hard" mentality that Belfort encouraged. This culture would later be dramatized in graphic detail in the Scorsese film.<ref name="allthatsinteresting-stratton" />


== Indictment, Prosecution, and Sentencing ==
== Indictment, Prosecution, and Sentencing ==


=== Securities Violations ===
=== SEC and NASD Investigations ===
 
Stratton Oakmont attracted regulatory attention almost from the start. The National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD, now FINRA) kept the firm under near-constant scrutiny from 1989 onward. After a lengthy investigation, Stratton Oakmont paid $2.5 million in 1994 in a civil securities fraud settlement with the SEC. The settlement also banned Belfort from running a firm, so he sold his share of Stratton.<ref name="crime-museum" />
 
December 1996 brought the firm's end. The NASD expelled Stratton Oakmont, shutting it down permanently. Officials called Stratton Oakmont "one of the worst actors" in the securities industry, with a history of "obvious disregard for all rules of fair practice."<ref name="stratton-wiki">Wikipedia, "Stratton Oakmont," https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stratton_Oakmont</ref>
 
=== FBI Investigation and Arrest ===


Stratton Oakmont attracted regulatory attention almost from its inception. The National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD, now FINRA) expelled the firm in 1996 after years of violations. By that time, federal investigators were building a criminal case against Belfort and his associates.<ref name="crime-museum" />
The FBI launched a criminal investigation in 1996 after receiving numerous investor complaints. The New York field office led the investigation and coordinated with the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of New York. Agents built their case methodically. They interviewed former Stratton employees. They subpoenaed trading records. They traced the money-laundering network Belfort had established through Swiss and Bahamian bank accounts. The investigation uncovered a vast network of illegal activities: the pump-and-dump schemes, [[Money_Laundering|money laundering]], and bribery of a British banker to facilitate international movement of proceeds.<ref name="vestpod-crimes" />


In total, Stratton Oakmont bilked more than 1,500 individual investors out of approximately $200 million through its fraudulent schemes. The victims were often ordinary people who had been persuaded by Stratton's aggressive brokers to invest their savings in stocks that the firm was secretly manipulating.<ref name="biography-belfort" />
In 1998, Belfort was indicted on charges of [[Securities_Fraud|securities fraud]] and money laundering. He faced a potential sentence of up to 20 years in prison. Facing those charges, Belfort agreed to cooperate with federal authorities.<ref name="shortform-belfort" />


=== Arrest and Cooperation ===
=== Cooperation with Authorities ===


In 1998, Belfort was indicted on charges of securities fraud and money laundering. Facing a potential sentence of up to 20 years in prison, Belfort agreed to cooperate with federal authorities. As part of his cooperation, he wore a wire and helped investigators build cases against other participants in the Stratton Oakmont fraud. He also provided testimony against his former partners and subordinates.<ref name="shortform-belfort" />
His cooperation was extensive and began in earnest in 1998. As part of his agreement with the FBI, he wore a wire at meetings with former colleagues and associates. He recorded conversations that helped investigators build cases against other participants in the Stratton Oakmont fraud. He provided detailed testimony against 29 of his former partners and subordinates, helping to secure their convictions. The cooperation agreement required him to disclose all assets and income, a provision that would later become the basis for ongoing disputes with prosecutors over his restitution payments.<ref name="bloomberg-belfort" />


=== Guilty Plea and Sentence ===
=== Guilty Plea and Sentence ===


In 1999, Belfort pleaded guilty to securities fraud and money laundering. On July 18, 2003, he was sentenced to four years in federal prison. However, because of his extensive cooperation with authorities, Belfort served only 22 months of his sentence at the Taft Correctional Institution, a minimum-security facility in Taft, California.<ref name="crime-museum" />
In 1999, Belfort pleaded guilty to securities fraud and money laundering in the Eastern District of New York. He admitted that for seven years, he operated a scheme in which Stratton Oakmont manipulated the stock of at least 34 companies. This defrauded more than 1,500 investors out of roughly $200 million.<ref name="wikibooks-stratton">Wikibooks, "Professionalism/Jordan Belfort and Stratton Oakmont," https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Professionalism/Jordan_Belfort_and_Stratton_Oakmont</ref>


In addition to his prison term, Belfort was ordered to pay $110.4 million in restitution to the victims of his fraud. This restitution obligation remains largely unfulfilled despite Belfort's substantial post-release earnings.<ref name="bloomberg-belfort" />
On July 18, 2003, U.S. District Judge John Gleeson of the Eastern District of New York sentenced Belfort to four years in federal prison. Because of his extensive cooperation with authorities, he would ultimately serve only 22 months. He was also ordered to pay $110.4 million in restitution to the victims of his fraud.<ref name="crime-museum" />


== Prison Experience ==
== Prison Experience ==


Belfort served his 22-month sentence at the Taft Correctional Institution in Taft, California. The minimum-security facility primarily housed non-violent offenders. According to Belfort's own accounts, it was during his time in prison that he began writing his memoirs, encouraged by a fellow inmate who happened to be comedian Tommy Chong (incarcerated for selling drug paraphernalia).<ref name="biography-wolf-facts">Biography.com, "10 Things You May Not Know About 'The Wolf of Wall Street'," https://www.biography.com/movies-tv/a69385013/the-wolf-of-wall-street-facts.</ref>
=== Arrival at Taft Correctional Institution ===


Belfort was released from prison in approximately 2006 and immediately began building his second career as an author and speaker.<ref name="yahoo-where-now">Yahoo Finance, "Where Is Jordan Belfort Now?," https://finance.yahoo.com/news/where-jordan-belfort-now-look-110000232.html.</ref>
Belfort reported to Taft Correctional Institution, a minimum-security federal facility in Taft, California, near Bakersfield. The facility housed primarily non-violent offenders.
 
His arrival didn't go smoothly. Prison officials lost his paperwork. As a result, Belfort spent his first five days in solitary confinement. He later described this experience as "brutal, absolutely brutal." Once his paperwork was located and processed, he was moved into the general population of the minimum-security facility.<ref name="uproxx-chong">Uproxx, "The Real-Life Wolf Of Wall Street Was Tommy Chong's Cell Mate In Federal Prison," https://uproxx.com/filmdrunk/wolf-of-wall-street-jordan-belfort-tommy-chong-cell-mate-prison/</ref>
 
=== Tommy Chong: Bunkmate and Mentor ===
 
The most remarkable aspect of his prison experience was his bunkmate: '''Tommy Chong''', the comedian famous as half of Cheech & Chong. Chong was serving nine months after the federal government spent $12 million prosecuting him and others for selling bongs and drug paraphernalia. The business was called Nice Dreams Enterprises.<ref name="macleans-chong">Maclean's, "Tommy Chong recalls his months in prison with the Wolf of Wall Street," https://macleans.ca/culture/tommy-chong-recalls-his-months-in-prison-with-the-wolf-of-wall-street/</ref>
 
Chong described Belfort's arrival at Taft as "like Elvis coming to jail." He recalled that the minimum-security facility "would beat many Manhattan hotels for comfort." According to Chong, Belfort immediately adapted to prison life by hiring other inmates to handle his chores. "Right away, Jordan hired someone to make his bed and to sweep his cubicle," Chong recalled. "That's what you did there if you had the money."<ref name="businessinsider-chong">Business Insider, "How Jordan Belfort's Prison Bunkmate Tommy Chong Inspired Him To Write 'Wolf Of Wall Street'," https://www.businessinsider.in/How-Jordan-Belforts-Prison-Bunkmate-Tommy-Chong-Inspired-Him-To-Write-Wolf-Of-Wall-Street/articleshow/31187332.cms</ref>
 
=== Life in the "Supper Club" ===
 
Belfort, Chong, and other inmates including PGA Tour caddie Eric Larson formed what they called an "elite gang." They ate meals "Goodfellas-style" together. The most valuable commodity for bartering in prison was onions. They were used widely in cooking by inmates from various ethnic backgrounds. Larson grew them in the prison garden.<ref name="caddie-network">The Caddie Network, "Caddie Eric Larson and Tommy Chong's prison encounters with The Wolf of Wall Street," https://www.thecaddienetwork.com/caddie-eric-larson-and-tommy-chongs-prison-encounters-with-the-wolf-of-wall-street/</ref>
 
But Belfort's entitled behavior eventually caught up with him. When he joined the supper club, he hired the same inmate who made his bed to wash the group's pots and pans. "That lasted for one day," Chong recalled. "And then Jordan was uninvited after that."<ref name="yahoo-finance-chong">Yahoo Finance, "The Real 'Wolf Of Wall Street' Lived Like A King In Prison With Tommy Chong," https://finance.yahoo.com/news/real-wolf-wall-street-lived-190304316.html</ref>
 
=== Writing "The Wolf of Wall Street" ===
 
The most significant outcome of his time at Taft was beginning work on his memoir. Chong was writing his own book at the time and encouraged Belfort to document his story. He'd heard Belfort's tales during their late-night conversations.
 
"We used to tell each other stories at night," Chong recalled, "and Belfort had Chong rolling hysterically on the floor." By the third night, Chong told him: "You've got to write a book."<ref name="collider-chong">Collider, "'The Wolf of Wall Street' Left Out One of the Wildest Details in Jordan Belfort's Story," https://collider.com/the-wolf-of-wall-street-jordan-belfort-tommy-chong/</ref>
 
Belfort started writing but initially struggled with the prose. He was about to give up when he went into the prison library. He discovered Tom Wolfe's "The Bonfire of the Vanities." The book's style inspired him to continue. He thought, "That's how I want to write!" The result would eventually become "The Wolf of Wall Street," published in 2007, four years after his release.<ref name="businessinsider-chong" />
 
=== Release ===
 
He was released from Taft Correctional Institution in 2006 after serving 22 months of his four-year sentence. His early release was the direct result of his extensive cooperation with federal authorities in prosecuting other Stratton Oakmont participants.<ref name="usprisonguide">US Prison Guide, "Jordan Belfort Prison Time: 22 Months Served," https://usprisonguide.com/how-long-was-jordan-belfort-in-prison/</ref>
 
== Restitution Controversy ==
 
=== The $110 Million Debt ===
 
At his 2003 sentencing, Belfort was ordered to pay $110.4 million in restitution to roughly 1,513 victims of his fraud. This remains one of the largest individual restitution orders in securities fraud history.<ref name="cnbc-restitution" />
 
=== What Has Been Paid ===
 
The restitution fund has received only about $12.8 million total. Critically, $11 million of that came from assets seized at arrest, primarily real estate. This means his actual voluntary payments amount to less than $2 million over nearly two decades.<ref name="celebrity-networth" />
 
=== Disputed Earnings ===
 
Federal prosecutors have repeatedly challenged Belfort over his restitution payments. A 2018 court filing alleged that between 2013 and 2015 alone, Belfort earned at least $9 million from speaking engagements but "pocketed it all" without making proportional payments to victims.<ref name="advisorhub">AdvisorHub, "'Wolf of Wall Street' Belfort Isn't Paying His Debts, U.S. Says," https://www.advisorhub.com/wolf-of-wall-street-belfort-isnt-paying-his-debts-u-s-says/</ref>
 
In 2013, the government agreed to modify Belfort's payment plan from 50% of all gross earnings to a minimum of $10,000 per month for life. At this rate of $120,000 per year, it would take over 70 years. He'd be 133 years old before repaying the full amount owed.<ref name="cnbc-restitution" />
 
=== Individual Victim Stories ===
 
His victims' stories reveal the human cost:
 
* '''Bob Shearin''' lost more than $100,000 at the hands of Stratton Oakmont.<ref name="cnbc-victims">CNBC, "The Greed Report: 'Wolf of Wall Street'-type scams live on," March 4, 2015, https://www.cnbc.com/2015/03/04/the-greed-report-wolf-of-wall-street-type-scams-live-on.html</ref>
 
* '''Tom Pokorny''' lost $800,000. He believes the scam also cost him his marriage. He's criticized the Hollywood treatment given to Belfort, saying it "sends the wrong message to would-be scammers."<ref name="cnbc-victims" />


== Post-Release Career ==
== Post-Release Career ==
Line 65: Line 180:
=== Author and Film Subject ===
=== Author and Film Subject ===


In 2007, Belfort published "The Wolf of Wall Street," a memoir recounting his years at Stratton Oakmont with unflinching detail about the fraud, drug use, and excess that characterized the firm. A sequel, "Catching the Wolf of Wall Street," followed in 2009. Both books were commercially successful.<ref name="crime-museum" />
In 2007, Belfort published "The Wolf of Wall Street," a memoir recounting his years at Stratton Oakmont. He wrote with unflinching detail about the fraud, drug use, and excess that characterized the firm. A sequel, "Catching the Wolf of Wall Street," followed in 2009. Both books were commercially successful.<ref name="crime-museum" />


The books attracted Hollywood attention, and in 2013, Martin Scorsese directed a film adaptation starring Leonardo DiCaprio as Belfort. "The Wolf of Wall Street" was a critical and commercial success, grossing over $400 million worldwide and earning five Academy Award nominations including Best Picture. DiCaprio's portrayal of Belfort became one of his signature roles.<ref name="imdb-wolf">IMDb, "The Wolf of Wall Street," https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0993846/.</ref>
Hollywood attention came next. In 2013, Martin Scorsese directed a film adaptation starring Leonardo DiCaprio as Belfort. The production ran three hours and refused to moralize. Scorsese presented the Stratton Oakmont world in vivid, seductive detail, leaving audiences to draw their own conclusions. Were they watching a cautionary tale or a celebration? "The Wolf of Wall Street" grossed $392 million worldwide on a $100 million production budget. It earned five Academy Award nominations, including Best Picture, Best Director (Scorsese), and Best Actor (DiCaprio). DiCaprio's portrayal of Belfort became one of his signature performances: manic, charismatic, and utterly amoral. The film significantly renewed public interest in the Belfort story.<ref name="imdb-wolf">IMDb, "The Wolf of Wall Street," https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0993846/</ref>


=== Motivational Speaking ===
The film's release prompted a backlash from victims. Victims' advocates noted that neither Belfort nor any character in the film expressed meaningful remorse toward those who lost their savings. Tom Pokorny, who lost $800,000 to Stratton Oakmont, said the film "glamorizes what happened." He was disturbed that it became a cultural phenomenon rather than a warning. Under his restitution agreement, Belfort was required to surrender a portion of his film rights income to victims. A 2018 court ruling forced him to surrender additional profits after the government challenged his accounting of film-related earnings.<ref name="cnbc-restitution" />


Belfort reinvented himself as a motivational speaker, developing a sales training program called the "Straight Line System" that he has marketed to corporations and individuals around the world. His speaking fees have reportedly reached $100,000 per appearance, and he has built a substantial business around his personal brand.<ref name="vestpod-crimes" />


His success as a speaker has been controversial. Critics argue that Belfort has profited enormously from his notoriety while paying only a fraction of what he owes to his victims. Supporters counter that he has legitimately rebuilt his career and is now teaching ethical sales techniques rather than fraud.<ref name="yahoo-restitution" />
=== Wolf of Wall Street cameo ===


=== Restitution Controversy ===
Belfort makes a brief on-screen appearance in [[Martin Scorsese|Scorsese]]'s ''[[The Wolf of Wall Street (2013 film)|The Wolf of Wall Street]]'', the film adapted from his memoir. He appears in the closing minutes as the emcee at a sales training seminar in Auckland, New Zealand, introducing the fictionalized version of himself ([[Leonardo DiCaprio]]) to the audience. The scene depicts the real-world reinvention Belfort pursued after his release: paid public speaking on sales technique. Cameos by the people a biopic is about are uncommon in the genre, and the choice to give Belfort the introducing-himself role works as a wink to the audience about whose voice the rest of the film has been narrating from.


The most persistent criticism of Belfort's post-release career concerns his failure to pay his $110.4 million restitution obligation. Despite earning substantial income from book sales, movie rights, and speaking fees, Belfort has paid only a small percentage of what he owes to the victims of his fraud.<ref name="yahoo-restitution" />
<html>
<div style="position: relative; width: 100%; max-width: 960px; margin: 1em auto; padding-bottom: 41.67%; height: 0; overflow: hidden;">
<iframe src="https://snip.ninja/embed/1bf4ead61039" style="position: absolute; top: 0; left: 0; width: 100%; height: 100%; border: 0;" allowfullscreen allow="autoplay; encrypted-media; picture-in-picture" loading="lazy" title="Jordan Belfort cameo in The Wolf of Wall Street"></iframe>
</div>
</html>


Federal authorities have taken action to collect restitution payments, but the amounts collected have fallen far short of the total owed. Critics argue that the criminal justice system has failed to adequately prioritize victim compensation and that Belfort's lavish lifestyle while victims remain uncompensated is a continuing injustice.<ref name="justice-journal" />
''Clip provided by [https://snip.ninja/the-wolf-of-wall-street/1bf4ead61039 snip.ninja].''


== Public Statements and Positions ==
== Public Statements and Positions ==


Belfort has been remarkably candid about his past crimes, discussing them in detail in his books, public appearances, and interviews. He has expressed regret for the harm he caused while also, at times, seeming to revel in the notoriety his crimes have brought him.
Belfort has been remarkably candid about his past crimes. He discusses them in detail in his books, public appearances, and interviews. He's expressed regret for the harm he caused while also, at times, seeming to revel in the notoriety his crimes have brought him.


On his fraud, Belfort has acknowledged that he was a "wolf" who preyed on innocent investors. He has described his crimes in moral terms while also providing business-oriented explanations for how he rationalized his conduct at the time.
Regarding his fraud, Belfort has acknowledged that he was a "wolf" who preyed on innocent investors. He describes his crimes in moral terms while also providing business-oriented explanations for how he rationalized his conduct at the time.


On his restitution obligations, Belfort has stated that he is committed to paying back his victims and has pointed to the payments he has made. However, the gap between his apparent earnings and his restitution payments has led to ongoing criticism about his sincerity.<ref name="yahoo-restitution" />
On restitution obligations, Belfort has stated that he's committed to paying back his victims. But the gap between his apparent earnings and his actual payments has led to ongoing criticism and legal battles with federal authorities.<ref name="celebrity-networth" />


== Frequently Asked Questions ==
== Co-Defendants and Associates ==


{{FAQPage|
=== Danny Porush ===
{{FAQ
|question = How long was Jordan Belfort in prison?
|answer = Belfort served 22 months in federal prison at Taft Correctional Institution, a minimum-security facility in California. Although he was originally sentenced to four years, his sentence was significantly reduced due to his extensive cooperation with federal authorities, which included wearing a wire and testifying against his former partners and associates at Stratton Oakmont.<ref name="shortform-belfort" /> His relatively brief incarceration—given that his fraud schemes defrauded over 1,500 investors of approximately $200 million—has been cited by critics as an example of lenient treatment for white-collar criminals who cooperate with prosecutors.<ref name="justice-journal" />
}}


{{FAQ
Danny Porush was Belfort's partner and co-founder of Stratton Oakmont. He was portrayed by Jonah Hill (as "Donnie Azoff") in the Scorsese film. Porush pleaded guilty to securities fraud and money laundering. He served 39 months in federal prison, significantly longer than Belfort.<ref name="stratton-wiki" />
|question = Why did Jordan Belfort go to jail?
|answer = Belfort pleaded guilty to securities fraud and money laundering in 1999 for his role in operating Stratton Oakmont, a "boiler room" brokerage firm that ran "pump and dump" schemes throughout the early 1990s. The firm would acquire large positions in penny stocks, use aggressive sales tactics to artificially inflate prices by selling them to unsuspecting retail investors, then sell their holdings before the inevitable price collapse. Beyond the stock manipulation, Belfort was also involved in money laundering to hide the proceeds of his fraud. The scheme defrauded more than 1,500 individual investors out of approximately $200 million.<ref name="crime-museum" /><ref name="wklaw-crimes" />
}}


{{FAQ
=== Steve Madden ===
|question = How much money did Jordan Belfort make at his peak?
|answer = At Stratton Oakmont's height in the early 1990s, Belfort was reportedly earning approximately $50 million per year, with some estimates suggesting his peak net worth reached around $200 million.<ref name="vestpod-crimes" /> The firm employed over 1,000 brokers and had monthly operating costs of approximately $5 million. However, these earnings were derived almost entirely from fraudulent activities. Following his conviction and the $110.4 million restitution order, Belfort's wealth was largely stripped, though he has since rebuilt substantial income through his post-release career as an author and motivational speaker.<ref name="bloomberg-belfort" />
}}


{{FAQ
Shoe designer Steve Madden was involved with Stratton Oakmont's IPO of his company. He served 31 months in federal prison for securities fraud and money laundering related to manipulating his company's stock price.<ref name="allthatsinteresting-stratton" />
|question = Did Jordan Belfort actually sink a yacht?
|answer = Yes. In June 1996, Belfort's 167-foot yacht, originally named ''Coquine'' and previously owned by fashion designer Coco Chanel, sank off the coast of Sardinia during a Mediterranean storm. According to accounts from those aboard—and dramatized in the 2013 film—Belfort insisted on sailing through dangerous weather despite warnings from the captain. The Italian Navy rescued all passengers and crew. The yacht, which Belfort had renamed ''Nadine'' after his second wife Nadine Caridi, was valued at several million dollars. The incident became one of the most memorable symbols of Belfort's reckless lifestyle during his Stratton Oakmont years.<ref name="biography-wolf-facts" />
}}


{{FAQ
== Frequently Asked Questions ==
|question = Is Jordan Belfort still rich?
|answer = Belfort has rebuilt considerable wealth since his release from prison, though exact figures are disputed. Estimates of his current net worth range from $-100 million (accounting for his largely unpaid restitution obligations) to approximately $100 million. He earns substantial income through motivational speaking engagements (reportedly commanding up to $100,000 per appearance), book royalties, film rights, and his "Straight Line" sales training programs.<ref name="vestpod-crimes" /> However, critics note that he has paid only a small fraction of the $110.4 million he owes in restitution to his victims—meaning that by the government's accounting, he remains deeply in debt to those he defrauded.<ref name="yahoo-restitution" />
}}


{{FAQ
{{FAQSection/Start}}
|question = Has Jordan Belfort paid back his victims?
|answer = Not fully, and this remains the most controversial aspect of Belfort's post-prison life. He was ordered to pay $110.4 million in restitution to the more than 1,500 investors defrauded by Stratton Oakmont. Despite earning substantial income from book sales, movie rights (he reportedly received over $1 million for the film rights alone), and a lucrative speaking career, Belfort has paid only a fraction of this amount. Federal prosecutors have periodically taken action to collect payments, but the vast majority of the restitution remains outstanding. Belfort has claimed he is committed to paying his victims, but the gap between his apparent earnings and his restitution payments continues to draw criticism from victim advocates and criminal justice reformers who argue that the system fails to adequately prioritize compensation for fraud victims.<ref name="yahoo-restitution" /><ref name="justice-journal" />
}}


{{FAQ
{{FAQ
|question = What does Jordan Belfort do now?
|question = How long was Jordan Belfort in prison?
|answer = Belfort has reinvented himself as a motivational speaker, author, and sales trainer. His primary business is teaching his "Straight Line System," a sales methodology he markets to corporations and individuals through seminars, online courses, and coaching programs. He commands speaking fees reportedly as high as $100,000 per engagement and has appeared at corporate events and conferences worldwide. He also maintains a significant social media presence and has ventured into cryptocurrency commentary, though his involvement in promoting certain crypto projects has attracted scrutiny given his history of securities fraud. Belfort continues to leverage his notoriety from "The Wolf of Wall Street" book and film as central to his personal brand.<ref name="vestpod-crimes" /><ref name="yahoo-where-now" />
|answer = Jordan Belfort served 22 months in federal prison at [[Taft_Correctional_Institution|Taft Correctional Institution]] in California. His original sentence was four years, but it was significantly reduced because he cooperated with federal authorities. He wore a wire and testified against 29 co-conspirators from Stratton Oakmont.<ref name="bloomberg-belfort" />
}}
}}


{{FAQ
{{FAQ
|question = Are Jordan Belfort and Danny Porush still friends?
|question = What did Jordan Belfort do?
|answer = No. Danny Porush, who co-founded Stratton Oakmont with Belfort and was portrayed as "Donnie Azoff" (played by Jonah Hill) in the film, has been publicly critical of Belfort since the movie's release. Porush, who served 39 months in federal prison for his role in the fraud, has disputed various details in Belfort's account and expressed frustration that he was not consulted about or compensated for his portrayal in the film. The two have not reconciled, and Porush has given interviews contradicting some of Belfort's more colorful claims about their time at Stratton Oakmont. Porush himself was convicted again in 2022 on federal fraud charges related to a $13 million scheme involving addiction treatment centers.<ref name="allthatsinteresting-stratton" />
|answer = Jordan Belfort ran Stratton Oakmont, a boiler room brokerage firm that operated pump-and-dump penny stock schemes from 1989 to 1996. He and his brokers manipulated stock prices through aggressive sales tactics, defrauding over 1,500 investors out of roughly $200 million. He pleaded guilty to [[Securities_Fraud|securities fraud]] and [[Money_Laundering|money laundering]] in 1999.<ref name="crime-museum" />
}}
}}


{{FAQ
{{FAQ
|question = How did Jordan Belfort get such a short prison sentence?
|question = Where did Jordan Belfort serve his prison sentence?
|answer = Belfort's 22-month sentence—far less than the 20 years he potentially faced—resulted primarily from his decision to cooperate extensively with federal prosecutors. After his 1998 indictment, Belfort agreed to wear a wire and help investigators build cases against other participants in the Stratton Oakmont fraud. He also provided testimony against his former partners and subordinates, which led to additional convictions. Under federal sentencing guidelines, such "substantial assistance" to prosecutors typically results in significant sentence reductions. While cooperation agreements are a standard tool in federal prosecutions, critics argue that wealthy white-collar defendants like Belfort benefit disproportionately from this system compared to street-level offenders who may have less valuable information to trade.<ref name="shortform-belfort" /><ref name="crime-museum" />
|answer = Belfort served his sentence at Taft Correctional Institution, a minimum-security federal prison in Taft, California, near Bakersfield. His cellmate was comedian Tommy Chong, who encouraged him to write the memoir that became "The Wolf of Wall Street."<ref name="uproxx-chong" />
}}
}}


{{FAQ
{{FAQ
|question = Is Jordan Belfort still alive?
|question = Who was Jordan Belfort's prison cellmate?
|answer = Yes. Jordan Belfort is alive and continues to be active as a public figure. Born on July 9, 1962, he is currently 63 years old. The confusion may arise from search queries about "how did Jordan Belfort die," which spike periodically—likely from people who have only seen the movie and wonder about the real person's fate, or from confusion with other figures. Belfort maintains an active social media presence, continues his speaking career, and regularly appears in media interviews discussing sales techniques, cryptocurrency, and occasionally his criminal past.
|answer = Jordan Belfort's prison bunkmate at FCI Taft was Tommy Chong of Cheech & Chong fame. Chong was serving 9 months for selling drug paraphernalia. Chong described Belfort's arrival as "like Elvis coming to jail" and encouraged him to write his memoir based on their late-night storytelling sessions.<ref name="businessinsider-chong" />
}}
}}


{{FAQ
{{FAQ
|question = What happened to Jordan Belfort's money when he went to prison?
|question = Has Jordan Belfort paid back his victims?
|answer = Much of Belfort's wealth was forfeited or seized as part of his criminal case. As a condition of his guilty plea, Belfort was required to forfeit illegal gains and was ordered to pay $110.4 million in restitution. Federal authorities seized assets including real estate, vehicles, and other property. However, the full extent of his wealth and the disposition of all assets has been subject to dispute. Belfort filed for bankruptcy, and his first marriage to Denise Lombardo ended in divorce during his Stratton Oakmont years. His second marriage to Nadine Caridi also ended in divorce in 2005, around the time of his incarceration. Some assets may have been transferred or shielded through various means before or during the legal proceedings—a common concern in major fraud cases.<ref name="bloomberg-belfort" /><ref name="yahoo-restitution" />
|answer = No, Jordan Belfort has paid only a small fraction of the $110.4 million he owes in restitution. As of recent reports, he still owes roughly $97 to $100 million. Of the $12.8 million collected for victims, $11 million came from assets seized at arrest. At his minimum payment rate of $10,000 per month, it would take over 70 years to repay the full amount.<ref name="celebrity-networth" />
}}
}}
}}
== Terminology ==


* '''Boiler Room''': A high-pressure sales operation that uses aggressive tactics to sell securities, often involving fraud.
{{FAQSection/End}}
 
* '''Pump and Dump''': A scheme to inflate a stock's price through promotion, then sell holdings before the price collapses.
 
* '''Penny Stock''': Low-priced shares of small companies, often traded outside major exchanges, that are vulnerable to manipulation.
 
* '''Restitution''': Court-ordered payment from the offender to victims to compensate for financial losses caused by the crime.
 
== See also ==
 
* [[Bernie_Madoff|Bernie Madoff]]
* [[Prison_Consultants|Prison Consultants]]
* [[White_Collar_Crime|White Collar Crime]]


== References ==
== References ==
<references />
<references />
[[Category:High-Profile_Federal_Offenders]]
[[Category:White_Collar_Crime]]

Latest revision as of 04:49, 12 May 2026


Jordan Ross Belfort
Born: July 9, 1962
The Bronx, New York
Charges: Securities fraud, Money laundering
Sentence: 4 years (served 22 months)
Facility: Taft Correctional Institution
Status: Released


Jordan Ross Belfort (born July 9, 1962) is an American author, motivational speaker, and former stockbroker. He served 22 months in federal prison at Taft Correctional Institution after pleading guilty to securities fraud and money laundering. His crimes involved stock market manipulation schemes run through his brokerage firm Stratton Oakmont during the 1990s.[1] He defrauded more than 1,500 investors out of roughly $200 million. His memoir "The Wolf of Wall Street" came out in 2007, and the 2013 film adaptation directed by Martin Scorsese and starring Leonardo DiCaprio earned five Academy Award nominations, including Best Picture.[2]

Belfort got a four-year sentence but served only 22 months. Why? He cooperated extensively with federal authorities, wearing a wire and testifying against 29 of his former partners and subordinates.[3] A court ordered him to pay $110.4 million in restitution to his victims. But here's the thing: he's barely paid anything. Approximately $97 to $100 million still goes unpaid, despite his substantial post-release earnings from speaking fees, book royalties, and film rights.[4]

Current Status

As of December 2025, Jordan Belfort is no longer incarcerated. He was released from federal custody in 2006 after serving 22 months at Taft Correctional Institution. A $110.4 million restitution order still hangs over him, with roughly $97 million outstanding. He continues working as a motivational speaker and sales trainer.[4]

What Is Jordan Belfort Doing Now (2024-2025)?

Belfort has built a lucrative career as a motivational speaker, author, and sales trainer despite his criminal history. His current activities include:

Motivational Speaking: He runs Global Motivation, Inc., offering corporate training sessions, keynote seminars, and coaching programs. The foundation is his proprietary "Straight Line System" methodology. Speaking engagements cost $30,000 to $75,000. Sales seminars run $80,000 and up. Premium appearances? Those can fetch $200,000 or more. He speaks at corporate events, sales conferences, and private gatherings all over the world.[5]

Books and Courses: Beyond his memoirs "The Wolf of Wall Street" (2007) and "Catching the Wolf of Wall Street" (2009), Belfort has written sales training books including "Way of the Wolf: Straight Line Selling" and "The Wolf of Investing" (2023). His books have been translated into 18 languages and released in roughly 40 countries. He also sells online courses teaching his Straight Line sales methodology.[6]

Cryptocurrency Involvement: In 2022, Belfort held a cryptocurrency workshop at his Miami estate. Each of nine attendees paid roughly $40,000, which was approximately one Bitcoin at the time. He's discussed investment strategies tied to cryptocurrency, decentralized finance (DeFi), and the Metaverse. He's invested in multiple crypto ventures and frequently comments on cryptocurrency markets on social media. Critics find this ironic given his securities fraud history.[6]

YouTube and Social Media: Belfort maintains an active YouTube and social media presence. He discusses sales techniques, investing, and business advice. His notoriety from "The Wolf of Wall Street" film continues to drive interest in his content.

Jordan Belfort's Net Worth in 2024-2025

His actual net worth is subject to wide-ranging estimates due to his complex financial situation:

  • Celebrity Net Worth estimates his net worth at negative $100 million when accounting for his unpaid restitution obligations.[4]
  • Other analysts estimate his gross assets between $100 million and $115 million, not accounting for his debts.
  • His estimated annual income is roughly $18 million from speaking engagements, book royalties, courses, and other ventures.[5]
  • Despite technically owing nearly $100 million, Belfort lives luxuriously. This lifestyle has drawn sharp criticism from victims and prosecutors alike.

The contrast between his apparent wealth and his outstanding legal obligations remains one of the most controversial aspects of his post-prison career. Critics argue he's profited enormously from crimes while paying only a fraction to victims.

Stratton Oakmont: History and Current Status

Stratton Oakmont no longer exists. The firm was permanently shut down in December 1996 after being expelled from the NASD (now FINRA). Jordan Belfort doesn't own Stratton Oakmont and has no legal connection to any business operating under that name.

Here's the firm's timeline:

  • Founded: 1989 by Jordan Belfort and Danny Porush
  • Peak: Early 1990s, with over 1,000 brokers and $5 million monthly overhead
  • Expelled: December 1996 by NASD
  • Revenues at peak: $50-100 million annually
  • Total investor losses: Roughly $200 million

The NASD called Stratton Oakmont "one of the worst actors" in the securities industry and cited "obvious disregard for all rules of fair practice" in its expulsion order. The firm's business model, pump-and-dump penny stock manipulation, was inherently fraudulent and couldn't legally continue.[7]

Multiple executives faced prosecution after the firm's closure:

  • Jordan Belfort: 22 months federal prison, $110.4 million restitution
  • Danny Porush: 39 months federal prison
  • Steve Madden: 31 months federal prison
  • 29 additional co-conspirators convicted based on Belfort's cooperation[3]

Summary

Jordan Belfort became one of Wall Street history's most notorious figures by running Stratton Oakmont, a "boiler room" brokerage that used aggressive sales tactics to manipulate penny stock prices and defraud investors. In the early 1990s at its peak, Stratton Oakmont employed over 1,000 stockbrokers and made massive profits through "pump and dump" schemes. These schemes artificially inflated stock prices before selling them to unsuspecting investors. The firm's culture of excess was legendary: drug use, wild parties, and ostentatious displays of wealth. This culture would later become the subject of Belfort's memoirs and the Scorsese film.[2]

His relatively brief prison sentence came from extensive cooperation with federal authorities. He wore a wire and provided testimony that helped convict 29 other participants in the fraud. While cooperation typically results in reduced sentences, critics have argued that Belfort received exceptionally lenient treatment given the scale of his crimes and the number of victims harmed.[8]

Most controversial is his failure to compensate his victims. He's earned millions from book sales, film rights, and speaking fees. Yet he's paid only roughly $12.8 million toward his $110.4 million restitution obligation. And $11 million of that came from assets seized at arrest. At his current minimum payment rate of $10,000 per month, it would take over 70 years to repay his victims in full.[9]

Background

Early Life

Jordan Ross Belfort was born on July 9, 1962, in the Bronx, New York. His family moved to Bayside, Queens when he was young. Both his father, Max Belfort, and mother, Leah Belfort, were accountants. This professional background gave Jordan early familiarity with numbers and financial concepts, though not necessarily the ethical framework that should come with them. He grew up in a middle-class Queens household and developed entrepreneurial instincts at a young age. One summer, he reportedly earned $20,000 selling Italian ices with a childhood friend on Long Island beaches. That experience, moving a commodity through sheer salesmanship, would become a template for everything that followed.[10]

Belfort attended American University in Washington, D.C., where he studied biology. He briefly enrolled in the University of Maryland School of Dentistry but withdrew on his very first day. The dean told incoming students that dentistry was no longer a path to wealth. Whether that story is precisely accurate or embellished by Belfort's tendency toward self-mythology, it captures something true about his character: he had no interest in professions requiring patience, rigor, and delayed gratification. He wanted money fast. He wanted a stage. Sales offered him both.[11]

Entry to Wall Street

His Wall Street career started at L.F. Rothschild, a respected brokerage firm, where he trained as a stockbroker. According to his own account, he received his broker's license on "Black Monday," October 19, 1987. That day, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 22.6% in a single session, its worst single-day percentage loss in history. L.F. Rothschild was already under financial pressure, and it laid off Belfort along with most of its staff. The setback was temporary. Belfort soon found his way into the lucrative but ethically questionable world of penny stock trading. A Long Island firm called Investors Center gave him his first taste of the aggressive cold-call sales culture that would define his career.[11]

Stratton Oakmont

In 1989, Belfort founded Stratton Oakmont with partner Danny Porush. They took over a small existing brokerage called Stratton Securities in Lake Success, New York, on Long Island. The firm specialized in penny stocks: low-priced shares of small companies trading outside the major exchanges on the OTC Bulletin Board. Stratton Oakmont became one of the largest "boiler room" operations in American history, employing aggressive sales tactics to convince investors to buy stocks the firm was secretly manipulating.[2]

The business model was straightforward: pump and dump. Stratton Oakmont would acquire large positions in penny stocks, then use its army of brokers to aggressively promote those stocks to retail investors. This drove up the price. Once the price had risen sufficiently, Belfort and his associates would sell their holdings at inflated prices. Ordinary investors were left holding worthless shares when the price inevitably collapsed. Duke Ferdinand Mineral Corp., Faberge Industries, and dozens of other obscure companies became victims of the firm's manipulation. Their names meant nothing to the retail investors being cold-called by Stratton's brokers.[12]

The mechanics were straightforward and effective. Brokers working from scripts written by Belfort and senior managers would identify targets. They'd typically focus on retirees, small business owners, and other ordinary individuals with savings to invest. Then came the cold calls with "hot tips" on stocks supposedly about to break out. The firm trained its brokers to overcome every conceivable objection. They were never to accept a refusal as final. Those who excelled were rewarded lavishly. Those who couldn't hit quotas faced public humiliation or termination. This culture of aggressive sales, combined with the fraudulent underlying investments, produced enormous profits for the firm. It systematically destroyed the savings of customers. Stratton Oakmont's pump-and-dump model became one of the most studied examples of securities fraud in the 1990s. For a detailed examination of how similar boiler-room schemes have continued to operate in subsequent decades, see Roger Knox's Swiss Web: The $137M Pump-and-Dump Empire.[13]

At its peak, the firm employed over 1,000 brokers. Its monthly overhead was roughly $5 million. Stratton Oakmont handled the initial public offerings of 35 companies, including Steve Madden, Ltd. The firm's culture became legendary for excess. Lavish parties. Rampant drug use. A "work hard, play hard" mentality that Belfort encouraged. This culture would later be dramatized in graphic detail in the Scorsese film.[13]

Indictment, Prosecution, and Sentencing

SEC and NASD Investigations

Stratton Oakmont attracted regulatory attention almost from the start. The National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD, now FINRA) kept the firm under near-constant scrutiny from 1989 onward. After a lengthy investigation, Stratton Oakmont paid $2.5 million in 1994 in a civil securities fraud settlement with the SEC. The settlement also banned Belfort from running a firm, so he sold his share of Stratton.[2]

December 1996 brought the firm's end. The NASD expelled Stratton Oakmont, shutting it down permanently. Officials called Stratton Oakmont "one of the worst actors" in the securities industry, with a history of "obvious disregard for all rules of fair practice."[7]

FBI Investigation and Arrest

The FBI launched a criminal investigation in 1996 after receiving numerous investor complaints. The New York field office led the investigation and coordinated with the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of New York. Agents built their case methodically. They interviewed former Stratton employees. They subpoenaed trading records. They traced the money-laundering network Belfort had established through Swiss and Bahamian bank accounts. The investigation uncovered a vast network of illegal activities: the pump-and-dump schemes, money laundering, and bribery of a British banker to facilitate international movement of proceeds.[11]

In 1998, Belfort was indicted on charges of securities fraud and money laundering. He faced a potential sentence of up to 20 years in prison. Facing those charges, Belfort agreed to cooperate with federal authorities.[8]

Cooperation with Authorities

His cooperation was extensive and began in earnest in 1998. As part of his agreement with the FBI, he wore a wire at meetings with former colleagues and associates. He recorded conversations that helped investigators build cases against other participants in the Stratton Oakmont fraud. He provided detailed testimony against 29 of his former partners and subordinates, helping to secure their convictions. The cooperation agreement required him to disclose all assets and income, a provision that would later become the basis for ongoing disputes with prosecutors over his restitution payments.[3]

Guilty Plea and Sentence

In 1999, Belfort pleaded guilty to securities fraud and money laundering in the Eastern District of New York. He admitted that for seven years, he operated a scheme in which Stratton Oakmont manipulated the stock of at least 34 companies. This defrauded more than 1,500 investors out of roughly $200 million.[14]

On July 18, 2003, U.S. District Judge John Gleeson of the Eastern District of New York sentenced Belfort to four years in federal prison. Because of his extensive cooperation with authorities, he would ultimately serve only 22 months. He was also ordered to pay $110.4 million in restitution to the victims of his fraud.[2]

Prison Experience

Arrival at Taft Correctional Institution

Belfort reported to Taft Correctional Institution, a minimum-security federal facility in Taft, California, near Bakersfield. The facility housed primarily non-violent offenders.

His arrival didn't go smoothly. Prison officials lost his paperwork. As a result, Belfort spent his first five days in solitary confinement. He later described this experience as "brutal, absolutely brutal." Once his paperwork was located and processed, he was moved into the general population of the minimum-security facility.[15]

Tommy Chong: Bunkmate and Mentor

The most remarkable aspect of his prison experience was his bunkmate: Tommy Chong, the comedian famous as half of Cheech & Chong. Chong was serving nine months after the federal government spent $12 million prosecuting him and others for selling bongs and drug paraphernalia. The business was called Nice Dreams Enterprises.[16]

Chong described Belfort's arrival at Taft as "like Elvis coming to jail." He recalled that the minimum-security facility "would beat many Manhattan hotels for comfort." According to Chong, Belfort immediately adapted to prison life by hiring other inmates to handle his chores. "Right away, Jordan hired someone to make his bed and to sweep his cubicle," Chong recalled. "That's what you did there if you had the money."[17]

Life in the "Supper Club"

Belfort, Chong, and other inmates including PGA Tour caddie Eric Larson formed what they called an "elite gang." They ate meals "Goodfellas-style" together. The most valuable commodity for bartering in prison was onions. They were used widely in cooking by inmates from various ethnic backgrounds. Larson grew them in the prison garden.[18]

But Belfort's entitled behavior eventually caught up with him. When he joined the supper club, he hired the same inmate who made his bed to wash the group's pots and pans. "That lasted for one day," Chong recalled. "And then Jordan was uninvited after that."[19]

Writing "The Wolf of Wall Street"

The most significant outcome of his time at Taft was beginning work on his memoir. Chong was writing his own book at the time and encouraged Belfort to document his story. He'd heard Belfort's tales during their late-night conversations.

"We used to tell each other stories at night," Chong recalled, "and Belfort had Chong rolling hysterically on the floor." By the third night, Chong told him: "You've got to write a book."[20]

Belfort started writing but initially struggled with the prose. He was about to give up when he went into the prison library. He discovered Tom Wolfe's "The Bonfire of the Vanities." The book's style inspired him to continue. He thought, "That's how I want to write!" The result would eventually become "The Wolf of Wall Street," published in 2007, four years after his release.[17]

Release

He was released from Taft Correctional Institution in 2006 after serving 22 months of his four-year sentence. His early release was the direct result of his extensive cooperation with federal authorities in prosecuting other Stratton Oakmont participants.[21]

Restitution Controversy

The $110 Million Debt

At his 2003 sentencing, Belfort was ordered to pay $110.4 million in restitution to roughly 1,513 victims of his fraud. This remains one of the largest individual restitution orders in securities fraud history.[9]

What Has Been Paid

The restitution fund has received only about $12.8 million total. Critically, $11 million of that came from assets seized at arrest, primarily real estate. This means his actual voluntary payments amount to less than $2 million over nearly two decades.[4]

Disputed Earnings

Federal prosecutors have repeatedly challenged Belfort over his restitution payments. A 2018 court filing alleged that between 2013 and 2015 alone, Belfort earned at least $9 million from speaking engagements but "pocketed it all" without making proportional payments to victims.[22]

In 2013, the government agreed to modify Belfort's payment plan from 50% of all gross earnings to a minimum of $10,000 per month for life. At this rate of $120,000 per year, it would take over 70 years. He'd be 133 years old before repaying the full amount owed.[9]

Individual Victim Stories

His victims' stories reveal the human cost:

  • Bob Shearin lost more than $100,000 at the hands of Stratton Oakmont.[23]
  • Tom Pokorny lost $800,000. He believes the scam also cost him his marriage. He's criticized the Hollywood treatment given to Belfort, saying it "sends the wrong message to would-be scammers."[23]

Post-Release Career

Author and Film Subject

In 2007, Belfort published "The Wolf of Wall Street," a memoir recounting his years at Stratton Oakmont. He wrote with unflinching detail about the fraud, drug use, and excess that characterized the firm. A sequel, "Catching the Wolf of Wall Street," followed in 2009. Both books were commercially successful.[2]

Hollywood attention came next. In 2013, Martin Scorsese directed a film adaptation starring Leonardo DiCaprio as Belfort. The production ran three hours and refused to moralize. Scorsese presented the Stratton Oakmont world in vivid, seductive detail, leaving audiences to draw their own conclusions. Were they watching a cautionary tale or a celebration? "The Wolf of Wall Street" grossed $392 million worldwide on a $100 million production budget. It earned five Academy Award nominations, including Best Picture, Best Director (Scorsese), and Best Actor (DiCaprio). DiCaprio's portrayal of Belfort became one of his signature performances: manic, charismatic, and utterly amoral. The film significantly renewed public interest in the Belfort story.[24]

The film's release prompted a backlash from victims. Victims' advocates noted that neither Belfort nor any character in the film expressed meaningful remorse toward those who lost their savings. Tom Pokorny, who lost $800,000 to Stratton Oakmont, said the film "glamorizes what happened." He was disturbed that it became a cultural phenomenon rather than a warning. Under his restitution agreement, Belfort was required to surrender a portion of his film rights income to victims. A 2018 court ruling forced him to surrender additional profits after the government challenged his accounting of film-related earnings.[9]


Wolf of Wall Street cameo

Belfort makes a brief on-screen appearance in Scorsese's The Wolf of Wall Street, the film adapted from his memoir. He appears in the closing minutes as the emcee at a sales training seminar in Auckland, New Zealand, introducing the fictionalized version of himself (Leonardo DiCaprio) to the audience. The scene depicts the real-world reinvention Belfort pursued after his release: paid public speaking on sales technique. Cameos by the people a biopic is about are uncommon in the genre, and the choice to give Belfort the introducing-himself role works as a wink to the audience about whose voice the rest of the film has been narrating from.

Clip provided by snip.ninja.

Public Statements and Positions

Belfort has been remarkably candid about his past crimes. He discusses them in detail in his books, public appearances, and interviews. He's expressed regret for the harm he caused while also, at times, seeming to revel in the notoriety his crimes have brought him.

Regarding his fraud, Belfort has acknowledged that he was a "wolf" who preyed on innocent investors. He describes his crimes in moral terms while also providing business-oriented explanations for how he rationalized his conduct at the time.

On restitution obligations, Belfort has stated that he's committed to paying back his victims. But the gap between his apparent earnings and his actual payments has led to ongoing criticism and legal battles with federal authorities.[4]

Co-Defendants and Associates

Danny Porush

Danny Porush was Belfort's partner and co-founder of Stratton Oakmont. He was portrayed by Jonah Hill (as "Donnie Azoff") in the Scorsese film. Porush pleaded guilty to securities fraud and money laundering. He served 39 months in federal prison, significantly longer than Belfort.[7]

Steve Madden

Shoe designer Steve Madden was involved with Stratton Oakmont's IPO of his company. He served 31 months in federal prison for securities fraud and money laundering related to manipulating his company's stock price.[13]

Frequently Asked Questions


Q: How long was Jordan Belfort in prison?

Jordan Belfort served 22 months in federal prison at Taft Correctional Institution in California. His original sentence was four years, but it was significantly reduced because he cooperated with federal authorities. He wore a wire and testified against 29 co-conspirators from Stratton Oakmont.[3]



Q: What did Jordan Belfort do?

Jordan Belfort ran Stratton Oakmont, a boiler room brokerage firm that operated pump-and-dump penny stock schemes from 1989 to 1996. He and his brokers manipulated stock prices through aggressive sales tactics, defrauding over 1,500 investors out of roughly $200 million. He pleaded guilty to securities fraud and money laundering in 1999.[2]



Q: Where did Jordan Belfort serve his prison sentence?

Belfort served his sentence at Taft Correctional Institution, a minimum-security federal prison in Taft, California, near Bakersfield. His cellmate was comedian Tommy Chong, who encouraged him to write the memoir that became "The Wolf of Wall Street."[15]



Q: Who was Jordan Belfort's prison cellmate?

Jordan Belfort's prison bunkmate at FCI Taft was Tommy Chong of Cheech & Chong fame. Chong was serving 9 months for selling drug paraphernalia. Chong described Belfort's arrival as "like Elvis coming to jail" and encouraged him to write his memoir based on their late-night storytelling sessions.[17]



Q: Has Jordan Belfort paid back his victims?

No, Jordan Belfort has paid only a small fraction of the $110.4 million he owes in restitution. As of recent reports, he still owes roughly $97 to $100 million. Of the $12.8 million collected for victims, $11 million came from assets seized at arrest. At his minimum payment rate of $10,000 per month, it would take over 70 years to repay the full amount.[4]


References

  1. Biography.com, "Jordan Belfort," https://www.biography.com/business-leaders/jordan-belfort
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 Crime Museum, "Jordan Belfort," https://www.crimemuseum.org/crime-library/white-collar-crime/jordan-belfort/
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Bloomberg, "Jordan Belfort, the Real Wolf of Wall Street," November 7, 2013, https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2013-11-07/jordan-belfort-the-real-wolf-of-wall-street
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 Celebrity Net Worth, "Jordan Belfort Still Owes His Victims $97.5 Million," https://www.celebritynetworth.com/articles/entertainment-articles/wolf-of-wall-street-jordan-belfort-still-owes-his-victims-97-5-million-hasnt-made-a-payment-to-them-in-years-12/
  5. 5.0 5.1 Finbold, "Jordan Belfort Net Worth 2025," https://finbold.com/guide/jordan-belfort-net-worth/
  6. 6.0 6.1 Coinpaper, "Jordan Belfort Net Worth: How Rich Is He?," https://coinpaper.com/5539/jordan-belfort-net-worth-how-big-is-the-fortune-of-the-infamous-con-artist
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 Wikipedia, "Stratton Oakmont," https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stratton_Oakmont
  8. 8.0 8.1 Shortform Books, "What Did Jordan Belfort Do to End Up in Prison?," https://www.shortform.com/blog/what-did-jordan-belfort-do/
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 CNBC, "Jordan Belfort, 'Wolf of Wall Street,' to surrender more profits to victims, judge rules," December 4, 2018, https://www.cnbc.com/2018/12/04/wolf-of-wall-street-belfort-to-surrender-more-profits-to-victims.html
  10. The Famous People, "Jordan Belfort Biography," https://www.thefamouspeople.com/profiles/jordan-belfort-6511.php
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 Vestpod, "Unmasking the Wolf of Wall Street: Jordan Belfort's Financial Crimes," https://www.vestpod.com/news/the-wallet-podcast/unmasking-the-wolf-of-wall-street
  12. WKLaw, "Behind Life of Jordan Belfort: Crimes in The Wolf of Wall Street," https://www.wklaw.com/crimes-in-the-wolf-wall-of-street/
  13. 13.0 13.1 13.2 All That's Interesting, "The Unhinged Story Of Stratton Oakmont," https://allthatsinteresting.com/stratton-oakmont
  14. Wikibooks, "Professionalism/Jordan Belfort and Stratton Oakmont," https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Professionalism/Jordan_Belfort_and_Stratton_Oakmont
  15. 15.0 15.1 Uproxx, "The Real-Life Wolf Of Wall Street Was Tommy Chong's Cell Mate In Federal Prison," https://uproxx.com/filmdrunk/wolf-of-wall-street-jordan-belfort-tommy-chong-cell-mate-prison/
  16. Maclean's, "Tommy Chong recalls his months in prison with the Wolf of Wall Street," https://macleans.ca/culture/tommy-chong-recalls-his-months-in-prison-with-the-wolf-of-wall-street/
  17. 17.0 17.1 17.2 Business Insider, "How Jordan Belfort's Prison Bunkmate Tommy Chong Inspired Him To Write 'Wolf Of Wall Street'," https://www.businessinsider.in/How-Jordan-Belforts-Prison-Bunkmate-Tommy-Chong-Inspired-Him-To-Write-Wolf-Of-Wall-Street/articleshow/31187332.cms
  18. The Caddie Network, "Caddie Eric Larson and Tommy Chong's prison encounters with The Wolf of Wall Street," https://www.thecaddienetwork.com/caddie-eric-larson-and-tommy-chongs-prison-encounters-with-the-wolf-of-wall-street/
  19. Yahoo Finance, "The Real 'Wolf Of Wall Street' Lived Like A King In Prison With Tommy Chong," https://finance.yahoo.com/news/real-wolf-wall-street-lived-190304316.html
  20. Collider, "'The Wolf of Wall Street' Left Out One of the Wildest Details in Jordan Belfort's Story," https://collider.com/the-wolf-of-wall-street-jordan-belfort-tommy-chong/
  21. US Prison Guide, "Jordan Belfort Prison Time: 22 Months Served," https://usprisonguide.com/how-long-was-jordan-belfort-in-prison/
  22. AdvisorHub, "'Wolf of Wall Street' Belfort Isn't Paying His Debts, U.S. Says," https://www.advisorhub.com/wolf-of-wall-street-belfort-isnt-paying-his-debts-u-s-says/
  23. 23.0 23.1 CNBC, "The Greed Report: 'Wolf of Wall Street'-type scams live on," March 4, 2015, https://www.cnbc.com/2015/03/04/the-greed-report-wolf-of-wall-street-type-scams-live-on.html
  24. IMDb, "The Wolf of Wall Street," https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0993846/