Skip to content
Link copied to clipboard

Convicted swindler on the lam plaguing victims in a new way

Patrick Giblin had a habit of disappearing on his "girlfriends."

Patrick Giblin had a habit of disappearing on his "girlfriends."

But he's been a recurring nightmare since the federal Bureau of Prisons began to notify Giblin's victims that the convicted swindler recently escaped from custody in Northeast Philadelphia.

The former Atlantic City resident targeted divorcees, widows, and single mothers, court records show.

The first call she received from the agency came at about 3:30 a.m. Saturday, said Marilyn Tanner, who lives near Albany, N.Y.

A recorded message advised her that Giblin, 48, had escaped on Friday.

The recordings kept coming at all hours and sometimes minutes apart. A call came today at 5:27 a.m. and again 10 minutes later. Tanner estimated she had received about 100 calls in less than four days.

"I can't stop them," Tanner said, after trying several times to contact authorities. She lost $1,000 to Giblin when he asked to borrow money for a computer while romancing her.

Lamine N'Diayne, spokesman for the agency's northeast regional office, said Giblin is considered dangerous.

He is in a residential program at the Luzerne Treatment Center, located in the city's Juniata section, which treats addictions and helps inmates prepare to re-enter the community.

Giblin was allowed to leave without supervision Friday to apply for work, but he never returned, N'Diayne said. It was the fifth time he had been given a pass.

Giblin has more than 30 criminal convictions, including one for a 1990 sexual assault in Essex County, according to prison officials and court records. Between 2000 and 2005, he had at least 130 paramours whom he met on chatlines and scammed out of about a total of $330,000.

In 2007, he was given a 15-year sentence by U.S. District Court Judge Robert B. Kugler who concluded, "You're a crook, a scam artist."

Giblin sometimes visited his marks and promised to relocate. He asked for hundreds or thousands of dollars to pay for the moves. If a woman refused, he threatened to hurt her children or other relatives.

When Giblin got the funds, he gambled in Atlantic City and Las Vegas. At his sentencing, he apologized and said he needed help.

Another victim, a single mother in North Carolina, said today that she was notified by the prison bureau last summer that Giblin had been transferred to Luzerne. About 2:30 a.m. Saturday, she started to receive a barrage of messages informing her that Giblin was on the loose.

Phone alerts go out automatically to victims who have requested information about an inmate's change in status. In 2007, Giblin's victims were given a code to confirm receipt of the messages, which would halt them. Prison officials could not confirm how many people had received the calls about Giblin, which N'Diayne said were programmed to go out at all hours.

"It's a safety thing," he said. Those, like Tanner, who have lost the code to turn off the recordings should call the prison bureau at 215-521-7300.

Anyone who comes in contact with Giblin should call local police immediately, authorities said.