The hyperactive TV spokesman (Jerry Carroll) became so identified with the company that many viewers assumed that he was the owner of the company, despite the fact that Crazy Eddie was always referred to in the third person.
In 1989 the chain suffered a major scandal when Eddie Antar and his family were accused (and eventually convicted) of "cooking the books" in order to skim money and inflate inventory. Antar was found to have sold used electronics as new, committed insurance fraud, faked inventory, and skimmed most of the cash payments to avoid taxes. Having taken the company public (the stock was soon worth hundreds of millions), Antar began selling his stock and the stock price began to collapse. The firm was bought in a hostile takeover by another company, but the buyers were quick to find that some $80 million in inventory did not exist. Antar fled to Israel using the name David Cohen, where he lived until 1994 when he was extradited back to the United States. He was subsequently sentenced to eight years in jail, ordered to pay over $150 million in fines and also owes more than a billion dollars from civil suits.
In 1999, the grandchildren of Eddie, Allen and Mitchell Antar revived the Crazy Eddie electronics chain with a store in Wayne, New Jersey, and as an online Internet venue. However, in 2004 Crazy Eddie went out of business again.
In the popular TV Series, Futurama, the character of Malfunctioning Eddie (The over-excited robot which sells cars and explodes if he gets even slightly over-excited) is a parody of Eddie Antar and the Crazy Eddie Empire. Coincidentally, when Eddie Antar fled to Israel, he adopted the false name of David Cohen. David X. Cohen is an executive producer and writer on Futurama.
(pulled from a Wikipedia article)