When investigators first sat down with James T. Hammes in February 2009, they thought they were just questioning a respected company controller about irregularities in vendor payments. By the end of that day, Hammes had vanished, beginning one of the most unusual white-collar fugitive stories in modern Appalachian history.
Hammes had worked for years at a family-owned beverage bottling company in Cincinnati, Ohio, where he managed vendor accounts and financial controls. What no one realized was that since 1998, he had been quietly siphoning off company funds, eventually stealing more than $8.7 million. His scheme involved creating a fake bank account under the name of a real vendor, routing payments to it, and then transferring the money into his own accounts.
When the company’s banks noticed unusual transactions and unfamiliar canceled checks, the scheme began to unravel. Hammes was questioned by the FBI, denied everything, and then simply disappeared.
For the next six years, Hammes lived under a new identity on the Appalachian Trail, calling himself “Bismarck.” To fellow hikers, he was just another wanderer; friendly, talkative, and seemingly at peace in the woods. Few could have imagined that the man sharing campfire stories was a wanted fugitive accused of stealing millions.
His secret came to light in 2015, when a fellow hiker recognized him on a rerun of American Greed and contacted authorities. FBI agents tracked him down and arrested him in Virginia. That October, Hammes pleaded guilty to wire fraud and was sentenced to eight years in federal prison, ordered to repay nearly $8 million in restitution.
Investigators later learned he had no drug habit or gambling debts. He wasn’t desperate, just driven by greed and the thrill of getting away with it. In the end, the man who once managed money for others spent his best years hiding from his own past, walking through Appalachia as the ghost of a life he’d thrown away.
Posted by: Creepalachia
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