Tag: cell phone trafficking

  • Golden Panda Forum DOA — Again; WebsiteTester.biz Continues To Baffle And May Have MPBToday Link

    The testimonial signed "Mike DeBias" on a website pitching MPB Today purports that "Mike DeBias" sought "Divine Guidance" when using Google to find a sponsor for the purported grocery program, which operates as an MLM. Nevada records lists "Michael A. DeBias" as the operator of Alpha Market Research, the purported parent company of Websitetester.biz, which purports to have gathered 400,000 names and email addresses online in recent months. Websitetester purports to offer "jobs" and an opportunity to become a website "tester." What, precisely, WebsiteTester does is far from clear.

    The Golden Panda Ad Zone forum, also known as the Online Success Zone (OSZ), appears to have died — again. Visitors are greeted with a note that says the forum is “currently unavailable.”

    Like ASAMonitor, MoneyMakerGroup and TalkGold, OSZ was a site that pitched Ponzi schemes, pyramid schemes, cash-gifting programs and other highly questionable business “opportunities” such as a “program” known as WebsiteTester.biz.

    OSZ first died quietly in the spring. It resurrected itself during the summer, and a poster sang the praises of WebsiteTester, a mysterious company that claims to have gathered 400,000 names and email addresses in recent months for a purported “jobs” and website “testing” opportunity.

    WebsiteTester’s business model is far from clear. Although affiliates have said there is no downside for registering because the opportunity is “free,” the company says its legitimacy can be established by watching a video that shows no faces and reading a news release published by an anonymous author.

    The purported opportunity has encountered a failed launch, a failed relaunch, server problems, substantial downtime and other problems — and yet somehow has amassed more than 19,600 Twitter followers, even though registrants don’t know exactly what they’re registering for.

    Records in Nevada show that Michael A. DeBias is the president of Alpha Market Research, WebsiteTester’s purported parent company. A series of websites linked to the firm, however, are registered behind a proxy.

    Separately, a person purported to be “Mike DeBias” of “Las Vegas” is listed as a provider of a testimonial on a website that hawks the purported MPBToday “grocery” program. The testimonial implies that “Mike BeBias” sought guidance from God when searching Google for an appropriate MPB Today sponsor.

    “. . . I thought I would google-search for a sponsor that was more to my liking . . . I asked for Divine Guidance and the Force led me to you,” the testimonial reads in part. “Thank God, and Thank you.” It was signed, “Mike DeBias – Las Vegas, Nevada.”

    It was not immediately clear if the “Mike DeBias” of “Las Vegas” referenced in the testimonial was the same “Michael A. DeBias” listed at the operator of Alpha Market Research, which purports to be based in Las Vagas.

    What is clear is that WebsiteTester — like MPB Today — is being promoted on forums infamous for pitching Ponzi schemes. Promos for MPB Today have been targeted at Food Stamp recipients, senior citizens, the unemployed, people of faith, churches and victims of the alleged AdSurfDaily (ASD) Ponzi scheme.

    The OSZ forum got its start in the aftermath of the August 2008 federal seizure of tens of millions of dollars from bank accounts linked to ASD and Golden Panda Ad Builder, ASD’s purported “Chinese” autosurf. Promos for other surfs — and “opportunities” such as cash-gifting schemes — were launched from the forum, even after one surf after another crashed and burned and ASD president Andy Bowdoin was sued for racketeering.

    Clarence Busby, the alleged operator of Golden Panda, was implicated in three prime-bank schemes by the SEC in the 1990s. ASD’s Bowdoin was arrested in the 1990s for bilking investors in a securities swindle in Alabama, according to court records.

    The ASD scheme has been linked to tax-deniers, “patriots,” people who engage in the credit-repair business, and at least one person who sought to imprison federal judges by having a bogus “Indian” tribe issue bogus arrest warrants. At least one ASD member declared himself “sovereign” in a bizarre court case, suggesting he enjoyed diplomatic immunity and answered only to Jesus Christ.

    Another person linked to ASD filed court papers in Missouri that claimed a mortgage-foreclosure case could be halted in its tracks by posting a bond of $21 in “silver coinage.”

    Appeals to religion frequently were displayed on the now-defunct “Surf’s Up” forum — a forum that had ASD’s official endorsement — and one HYIP program pitched from the forum used an image of Jesus Christ in a sales pitch. The HYIP later collapsed, after collecting an untold sum of money.

    Court records suggest that a person believed to have been involved in ASD and other HYIPs also was engaged in cell-phone trafficking.

    Prior to its series of deaths, the OSZ forum also promoted “programs” such as Narc That Car and Data Network Affiliates, both of which purported to be able to help law enforcement and the AMBER Alert program rescue abducted children. No evidence has surfaced that either Narc that Car or DNA has any capacity to help in the rescue of children. During the spring, DNA also purported to be in the cell-phone business.

    Narc That Car since has changed its name to Crowd Sourcing International (CSI). Like DNA, CSI has an “F” rating from the Better Business Bureau.

    Meanwhile, a separate website that is promoting MPB Today also is promoting DNA and at least 100 “surfing” programs. The programs are promoted MLM-style.

  • ‘Egg’-Themed HYIP Domains Pitched By Surf’s Up Poster Registered In Last Name Of Man Dubbed A ‘Co-Conspirator’ In Scheme To Defraud Prepaid Wireless Company; Government Of Belize Issued Warning About HYIP Site

    UPDATED 2:22 P.M. ET (U.S.A.) A poster using the handle “joe” at the Pro-AdSurfDaily Surf’s Up forum advertised four egg-themed domain names that redirected to four high-yield investment programs yesterday, saying in all-caps, “ALL MY EGGS ARE NOT IN ONE BASKET.

    “I MAKE $2000.00 A WEEK.”

    It is unclear if the poster has a license to sell securities or act as an investment dealer or broker. The domains to which the .info domains redirected were for programs titled “Gold Nugget Invest” (7.5 percent a week); “Genius Funds” (6.5 percent a week); “Cash Tanker” (2 percent a day); and “Saza Investments” (9 percent a week).

    The domains — all of which used .info extensions, the word “egg” and a numeral in their URLs — are registered to a man with the last name of  “Stablein” in Erie, Pa. The spelling of the owner’s first name in domain-registration data was “Jeffrery.”

    An Erie man named “Jeffrey Stablein” — note the slightly different spelling of the first name from the domain-registration data — was sued in U.S. District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania in June and identified by attorneys as a co-conspirator in a scheme to defraud TracFone Wireless Inc., a prepaid cell-phone provider.

    The Erie street address associated with Stablein in the TracFone lawsuit is the same address listed in registration data for the egg-themed .info domains. Stablein was enjoined by a federal judge from a practice TracFone attorneys described as “cell-phone trafficking.”

    Cell-phone trafficking involves the “unauthorized resale and hacking” of prepaid mobile phones, TracFone attorneys said. Future violations by Stablein could result in a $5 million judgment being enforced against Stablein, according to court filings.

    Attorneys described how the scheme works after a buyer acquires prepaid phones in volume.

    “The phones are then passed to middlemen who alter or remove the prepaid software and resell the altered phones as new, often in counterfeit packaging, at a significant profit to unsuspecting customers domestically and abroad in Latin America, Asia and the Middle East,” according to attorneys James B. Baldinger and Steven J. Brodie of the Carlton Fields law firm.

    In September, U.S. District Judge Sean J. McLaughlin handed down a stipulated judgment against Stablein and his Erie-based firm, 1st Premier Communications, banning them “from continuing to engage in the bulk purchase, sale, or unlocking/reflashing of TracFone’s wireless phones,” the attorneys said in a news release.

    TracFone aggressively litigates against cell-phone traffickers, according to the company.

    In 2008, Muhammad Mubashir, 28, of Sugar Land, Tex., was sentenced to 57 months in federal prison for trafficking in cell phones.

    “TracFone will continue to aggressively pursue those who participate in prepaid mobile phone trafficking because it undermines our ability to provide affordable wireless phone service to our customers,” said F.J. Pollak, president and CEO of TracFone Wireless, in a statement.

    The U.S. Customs Service seized a shipment of 1,300 TracFones that Mubashir was exporting to a known trafficker in Hong Kong, the company said. TracFone obtained documents proving Mubashir sold approximately 9,000 TracFones, representing more than $1 million in losses to the company.

    “Schemes like those organized by Mubashir exist across the country and involve groups of ‘runners’ who purchase prepaid mobile phones from major retail outlets,” TracFone said. “The phones are then passed to middlemen who alter or remove the prepaid software and resell the altered phones as ‘new,’ often in counterfeit packaging, at a significant profit to unsuspecting customers domestically and abroad in Latin America, Asia and the Middle East.”

    Some Surf’s Up posters criticized the post by “joe,” saying it was in poor taste given the serious allegations against AdSurfDaily. Tens of millions of dollars were seized from ASD President Andy Bowdoin in August 2008, amid allegations of selling unregistered securities and operating a $100 million Ponzi scheme.

    Despite the allegations, some Surf’s Up posters continued to pitch autosurfs and HYIP programs, often using phrases such as “offshore” or “I got paid” as evidence of legitimacy.

    One Surf’s Up poster agreed with “joe” that the programs he advertised by using the egg-themed URLs that redirected to HYIP sites were excellent.

    “Your intentions are good but you are dead wrong about those particular four programs!” a Surf’s Up member exclaimed in a post directed at a member who had been critical of “joe’s” post advertising the HYIP programs.

    “I also make a lot of money from those four and your remarks tell me you don’t know anything about them…..they are very reputable [companies] who have been around for years….and the money is NOT made from ‘new’ people’s money….google them and look at various forums and see what others have to say about them….I don’t even know Joe, but I can vouch for the programs!”

    The government of Belize issued a warning Nov. 12 about the Gold Nugget Invest HYIP advertised by “joe” on Surf’s Up.

    Surf’s Up eventually deleted “joe’s” egg-themed HYIP thread.

    It is not clear if “joe” is Jeffrey Stablein, but the stipulated judgment entry in the TracFone case includes Stablein’s signature and the same address used in the domain-registration data for the egg-themed HYIP domains.

    Read the lawsuit against Stablein.

    Read a document that shows that a Stablein street address in the lawsuit is the same Erie address used in the domain registration data for the egg-themed HYIP domains.