Ponzi’s Apprentice: Building and Breaking the Perfect Scam is a raw, first-person account of how a charismatic financial advisor built a long-running Ponzi scheme-and how it inevitably collapsed. Written from a jail cell, Dom narrates his descent with brutal honesty, exposing not just what he did, but how easily small compromises turned into a full-scale deception. The book follows Dom from his earliest exposure to "too-good-to-be-true" deals through the creation of a trusted persona that attracted friends, family, and referrals. He explains how early payouts created false confidence, how reinvestments and social proof fueled rapid growth, and how lifestyle inflation became an unspoken marketing tool. As pressure mounted, Dom reveals how excuses, paperwork, and smooth talk replaced real substance-and how fear, paranoia, and rationalization took over his life. The turning point comes when one persistent investor refuses to be reassured and files a complaint. Audits follow. Cash flow tightens. Stories fracture. What once felt controlled begins to unravel in real time. Dom describes the shock of exposure, the futility of confidence against hard evidence, and the moment his carefully crafted persona dies with his arrest. The final chapters confront sentencing, shame, and the unseen costs of fraud: damaged lives, broken trust, family fallout, and the permanent weight of accountability. In a closing warning, Dom dismantles the fantasy that smarter execution leads to escape. Every scam, he argues, ends the same way-through attention, records, and time. This book is not a blueprint. It is an autopsy. A cautionary reflection on illusion, momentum, and the lie every con artist tells themselves-that they’ll be the one who gets away with it.