Belfort did not pass such a note to Porush, but, in his second book, Catching the Wolf of Wall Street, he claims to have done just this for his friend Dave Beall. In the film, Jordan, while wearing a wire, passes a note to Donnie telling him not to incriminate himself. But, for the most part, it’s Belfort’s word against his.Īfter his arrest and indictment, Belfort cooperated with the FBI. Some of these stories are difficult to verify, but, for what it’s worth, the FBI agent who investigated Belfort told the New York Times, “I tracked this guy for ten years, and everything he wrote is true.” (Even the yacht story checks out.) As for the much discussed tossing of little people, shown at the beginning of the movie: Belfort’s second-in-command says “ we never abused the midgets in the office we were friendly to them.” That same former exec says there were never any animals in the office, let alone a chimpanzee, and he says that no one called Belfort “the Wolf.” We know, at least, that the nickname was not coined by a Forbes writer. Much of DiCaprio’s dialogue comes straight from Belfort’s book, as do nearly all of the hard-to-believe misadventures: landing the helicopter on his lawn while stoned, crashing his car while severely high on Quaaludes, insisting that the captain of his massive yacht sail through choppy waters only to have the boat capsize and then get rescued by the Italian navy.
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