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The Washington Times Online Edition

Card shark

Darwin Ortiz shuffles, cuts and deals.

From the deck of Bicycle playing cards given to him unopened, he effortlessly lays out four queens. The next place gets four kings.

For him, the fast hands conjure four aces.

Mr. Ortiz is in the middle of an exhibition for a group of wounded veterans, during which for half an hour or so, he will deal pat poker hands and invisibly deal from almost everywhere in the deck except the top.

The crowd is rapt. Although he is presenting this exhibition as an explanation of card cheating, it’s an exhibition of his skill as a card “mechanic,” or manipulator.

This show, at the Army and Navy Club in Washington is entertainment, like any top-drawer magic show.

Mr. Ortiz isn’t just another magician, though, which is clear when he demonstrates the “Greek deal,” dealing the second card from the bottom. This move is particularly useful in crooked blackjack dealing when a card has been “burned,” or openly reversed and placed on the bottom of the deck to prevent bottom dealing.

He is just as familiar with the “claimers” and “turnmen” of the roulette cheating scam known as “past posting” as he is with whether Bee or Bicycle cards are better for second dealing.

“Darwin Ortiz is one of the top card magicians in the world, and he’s dedicated to studying the art of card magic. He’s also one of the foremost gambling experts, at least as far as knowing gambling sleights and techniques that people will use to cheat,” said Barry Taylor, owner of Barry’s Magic Shop in Wheaton.

He’s also a “consummate entertainer,” Mr. Taylor noted.

Mr. Ortiz’s other exhibitions include a six-hour seminar for casinos,featuring sleight of hand and such subjects as marked cards, covert blackjack computers and hidden video cameras for spotting a dealer’s hole card.

It looks easy, but Mr. Ortiz draws on a lifetime of training and an arduous practice schedule.

It started, he said, growing up in the South Bronx section of New York City in the 1950s.

He was playing on a roof with a toy balsa wood glider when he saw another youngster on another roof with a pack of playing cards. The deck was “like a magnet.” He had to have it, and he ended up trading the glider for the cards.

“Because I wanted to learn everything I could about this deck of cards I had, I started learning about gambling, and that was the beginning,” he recalled.

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