He used some of the money he won to purchase a ship, the
Tycho Brahe, which he renamed the
Palais Royal. He converted this into an unusually large luxury yacht, with sumptuous accommodation which included a ballroom large enough for fifty guests. After his initial wins, he returned to Monte Carlo again in January 1892, but lost about 100,000 francs. No credible evidence can be found to suggest that he ever repeated his earlier wins, though he would later claim to have won a further £2,500 in August 1910. In late 1892, he was arrested at
Le Havre aboard his yacht, the
Palais Royal, and extradited to Britain to be charged for crimes associated with his patent scheme. He was tried at the
Old Bailey in March 1893, found guilty on 23 counts of fraud and sentenced to eight years imprisonment, which he served in
Portland Prison. He was released after six years due to good behaviour, though on one occasion he received two-days solitary confinement for giving a ten-ounce loaf of bread to another prisoner. Shortly before his release he played 'The Man who Broke the Bank at Monte Carlo' and 'Home Sweet Home' on the organ of Portland's Roman Catholic Chapel.
Major fraud in Paris In 1910, using the alias of "Lucien Rivier", he established a private bank in Paris, and promised to pay interest at 365% per annum (1% per day). Some 6,000 investors deposited a total of 2m francs (about £7m presently). Existing customers were paid out of the new investments which "Rivier" received in ever-increasing amounts. (
Charles Ponzi, after whom such schemes came to be known, perpetrated an almost identical fraud in the United States a decade later, offering a return of 100% every 90 days.) When the French authorities began to investigate his affairs, Charles Wells fled to Britain with his clients' money. The scam was remarkable for its scale, both in terms of the number of investors who lost money and the amount of their total losses, and the
Sûreté accordingly mounted a determined operation to find who "Lucien Rivier" was, and bring him to justice. He was finally traced to Britain and was arrested in January 1912. A court in Paris sentenced him in November 1912 to five years in prison. As a direct result of his crime, the French government introduced controls on private banks, with a strict vetting procedure for their owners. ==Death==