Opinion by
Van der Voort, J.,On July 2, 1974, appellant William Gallo was found guilty in a non-jury trial of theft by deception (18 Pa. C. S. §3922)-. On November 21, 1974, appellant was sentenced to pay costs in the amount of $90.56, to pay a fine of $1,000, and to serve a term of 3 to 12 months, sentence suspended on condition of payment of the fine and costs. Appeal was taken to this Court from the j udgment of sentence.
The facts of the case are as follows: In July of 1973, appellant appeared in the office of David Leveto, a contractor in the home building business in and around Meadville, Pennsylvania. Appellant represented himself as an “account executive” for National Builders Publications, and proposed an agreement with Mr. Leveto whereby appellant would furnish, within 90 days and at little or no cost to Mr. Leveto, a brochure advertising *559Leveto’s construction business. Leveto would be required to furnish to appellant the names and addresses of his sub-contractors and suppliers, who would be solicited by appellant to place advertisements in the David Leveto Builders’ Brochure. The sub-contractors and suppliers would either pay cash for their ads or give Mr. Leveto a credit memorandum. Upon receipt of credit memorandums, Mr. Leveto would be required to pay appellant a sum of money equal to the amount of the memorandums. The written agreement was signed on July 26, 1973, and appellant was furnished with a list of Leveto’s subcontractors and suppliers. Letters extolling the virtues of Leveto’s proposed personalized brochure were sent by appellant on Leveto’s stationery to the sub-contractors and suppliers on the list. As a result, appellant collected a total of $1,750 ($815 in the form of direct cash payments by the sub-contractors and suppliers, $935 collected from David Leveto).
By September of 1973, Leveto had heard nothing from appellant and he tried to call him at the telephone number listed on appellant’s letterhead. No one answered the phone. As the days went by, Leveto became concerned and wrote three letters to the address given on appellant’s letterhead. These letters remained unanswered. Along with the letters Leveto made numerous calls, estimated to be 50 in number, in none of which calls was the telephone answered. Being unable to contact appellant by phone, receiving no answer to his letters and hearing nothing from appellant, Leveto went to his local police department which began an investigation. The investigation disclosed that appellant was not an “account executive”, but ran a one-man business. He had no office in Pittsburgh, but used his home in Apollo as his office. His mailing address was a Pittsburgh Post Office Box in the East Liberty area. Armed with all these facts and information, Officer George Kellyman brought criminal charges against appellant. As soon as appellant learned of *560these charges, he sent the advertisements to a printer and forwarded proofs, by mail, to Leveto and to various suppliers ; Leveto refused to accept the proofs.
The statutory charge of Theft by Deception is new in Pennsylvania. The Act of Assembly relating to this offense provides as follows:
Ҥ3922. Theft by Deception
(a) Offense defined. — A person is guilty of theft if he intentionally obtains or withholds property of another by deception. A person deceives if he intentionally :
(1) creates or reinforces a false impression, including false impressions as to law, value, intention or other state of mind; but deception as to a person’s intention to perform a promise shall not be inferred from the fact alone that he did not subsequently perform the promise;
(2) prevents another from acquiring information which would affect his judgment of a transaction; or
(3) fails to correct a false impression which the deceiver previously created or reinforced, or which the deceiver knows to be influencing another to whom he stands in a fiduciary or confidential relationship.
(b) Exception. — The term ‘deceive’ does not, however, include falsity as to matters having no pecuniary significance, or puffing by statements unlikely to deceive ordinary persons in the group addressed.”
Appellant argues that the evidence is insufficient to support his conviction — that his actions did not constitute a criminal offense under this section of the Crimes Code. We disagree. There was abundant evidence to show that appellant by deception obtained and withheld property of others, and that he did this intentionally by creating a false impression in the mind of David Leveto. The evidence and the inferences which it supports was carefully outlined in the opinion of the lower court judge as follows:
*5611. Leveto delivered three checks to Gallo totalling $935.00 (Exhibits 3, 4 and 5) within two weeks of the signing of the contract which were promptly-cashed by Gallo.
2. Leveto and his suppliers heard absolutely nothing from Gallo after payments were made. Leveto wrote at least three letters to Gallo at the address on his letterhead and business card and never received any response.
3. Leveto made over fifty telephone calls to the number Gallo listed on his letterhead and business card and could get no answer.
4. Gallo never attempted to correct the impression he created that he was an “account executive” for a “national” publisher. In reality he was sole owner and only employee of a one man operation, operating from his own home in Appollo, Pennsylvania, using his home phone (which was conveniently never answered) and a post office box in Pittsburgh. Gallo told Leveto that National Builders Publications was “a fairly large company” and he was “high up in it.”
5. Gallo reinforced the deception by having Leveto show him homes he had built and photographing them for the brochure.
6. Gallo knew or should have known that a delay in production and distribution of the brochure would have substantially decreased its appeal value and the usefulness to the advertisers.
7. No “proofs” of the ads to be run were received by Leveto or any of the suppliers until March of 1974 — some seven months after the ads had been contracted and paid for; and only then after charges had been filed and Gallo had been arrested on the present charges.
8. Sometime in late August or early September, Gallo went to a supplier, William Stright, and secured an *562order for a $110.00 ad (see Exhibit 12). Shortly thereafter, he came back to Stright and told him that his nonpayment of this invoice was holding up production of the entire brochure. Stright then wrote a check to Gallo on September 28, 1978, for $110.00 and then heard nothing from Gallo until six months later (after Gallo’s arrest and preliminary hearing), when a copy of his prepared ad was received (Exhibit 11). Not having heard from Gallo, Stright wrote him a letter on December 20, 1978, requesting information on the brochure (Exhibit 13). The letter was ignored and Stright got no answer.
9.Supplier Mancuso gave Gallo a check on August 1, 1973, for $110.00 (Exhibit 14), then heard absolutely nothing from him until he received an ad proof the day after the preliminary hearing in March of 1974. Mancuso had been promised the brochure would be “out” a month or two after he had given his check to Gallo on August 1, 1973. Mancuso was a real estate broker who had changed the name of his company and the delay in publication made his ad worthless.
10. No action to complete the contract was taken by Gallo until after charges were filed in February of 1974. He then hurriedly sent the material to a printer and then forwarded some proofs to Leveto and suppliers, some seven months after he had taken their money.
11. Gallo’s explanation that he considered the whole contract cancelled because of some confusion over a Glidden Company credit memo lacks credibility and logic, and is absolutely no excuse for not contacting Leveto and attempting to clarify any problem. Gallo admits receiving a letter from Leveto in January of 1974, inquiring about the *563delay but chose to ignore it on the spurious grounds that Leveto had not complied with the contract.
13. Gallo testified that he talked to Leveto on August 21, 1973, about the aforementioned credit memo from Glidden Company and after that time considered the contract cancelled. Leveto testified no such conversation regarding the Glidden credit memo took place. Even assuming the truth of Gallo’s testimony, we then note that in September of 1973, he was telling supplier Stright (see (8) above) that his nonpayment was holding up production of the whole brochure and then accepted a check for $110.00 on September 28, 1973, after he says he considered the whole contract cancelled. Obviously, Gallo’s defense that he considered the contract cancelled as a reason for his delay lacks credibility.
14. The fact that after arrest Gallo then hurriedly sent the ads to the printer and attempted to forward proofs to various suppliers, smacks of an effort to avoid the criminal charge by pretending compliance.
The offense of theft by deception is an enlargement of the earlier statutory crime of obtaining money by false pretenses. Under former law (which also included the crimes of larceny by trick and fraudulent conversion), it was virtually impossible to successfully impose criminal sanctions upon persons operating as appellant operated in the case.before us.1 The offense of theft by deception *564was created in large part to criminalize the practice of taking people’s money with a facade of good intentions and the actual intent never to perform the promised services. Schemes such as appellant’s have made suckers of thousands, and have seriously marred the image of legitimate businessmen and women. The instant case is an ekample of a type of business operation which the offense of theft by deception was designed to attack — the situation where the actor creates the false impression that he holds an important position with a large organization and that he has a plan for providing valuable services at little or no cost; where the actor and his valuable services become unavailable after the money has been collected; where, upon confrontation with criminal prosecution, the actor makes a belated effort to pretend compliance, or falsely accuses the victim of some infraction of the agreement. The conduct of appellant in this case clearly comes under the offense of theft by deception.
Judgment affirmed.
. The law books are so full of examples of the reasons why-charges of Obtaining Money by False Pretenses, Larceny by Trick and Fraudulent Conversion were ineffective in many instances of actual business fraud, that a discussion of them is undesirable. Suffice it to say, the deficiencies centered around the difficulty in proving the false representation of an existing fact in a false pretense charge, the existence of an intention to steal at the *564time the money or property was handed over in larceny by trick, and the proof that title to money or property had not passed in fraudulent conversion.