"The scam is tremendous," said Lt. Manny Hernandez, of the detective 
squad at the Sixth Precinct, in Manhattan. Adam Brown, a lawyer suing 
Ms. Mitchell, called the business "organized psychic crime."
Grand larceny is historically a clear-cut crime, like stealing a purse 
in a bar. Some psychic cases would seem harder to prosecute: The squad 
is also looking for a psychic named Angela from a West 18th Street 
parlor who they say persuaded a client to give her $9,000 for some magic 
coins that the two, in a cleansing ritual, later threw into an upstate 
lake.
