Author: PatrickPretty.com

  • Registration Page At TelexMOB Triggers ‘Web Forgery’ Warning In Firefox Browser

    TelexMOBbrowserwarningLate last night the PP Blog visited the registration page of the emerging and bizarrely named “TelexMOB” scheme, which appears to be targeting victims of the alleged TelexFree Ponzi- and pyramid scheme. Our earlier story is here.

    The page now is triggering a “Web Forgery” warning in the Firefox browser. Such warnings may be associated with phishing schemes.

    Here is the lion’s share of text from the warning (italics added):

    Reported Web Forgery!

    This web page at register.telexmob.com has been reported as a web forgery and has been blocked based on your security preferences.

    Web forgeries are designed to trick you into revealing personal or financial information by imitating sources you may trust.

    Entering any information on this web page may result in identity theft or other fraud.

    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission declined this morning to comment on TelexMOB. Like TelexFree before it, the emerging scheme appears to be targeting speakers of Portuguese and English.

    Promos for TelexMOB already are appearing on Twitter, Facebook and YouTube. Precisely who is operating the “program” and from where are unknown.

    BehindMLM.com reported earlier today that TelexMOB “has no retailable products or services, with affiliates only able to market affiliate membership to the company itself ($60-$1250).”

     

  • United States Asks Canada To Extradite Nicholas Smirnow, Alleged Head Of ‘Pathway To Prosperity’ Ponzi Scheme

    Nicholas Smirnow. From INTERPOL wanted notice.
    Nicholas Smirnow. From INTERPOL wanted notice.

    UPDATED 7:41 P.M. EDT U.S.A. If the office of U.S. Attorney Stephen R. Wigginton of the Southern District of Illinois gets its way, Canada will turn over accused international Ponzi schemer Nicholas Smirnow to the United States.

    Smirnow, whom INTERPOL says in a wanted notice is 57, was arrested at Toronto’s Pearson International Airport a little more than three months ago.

    An “extradition request has been submitted to the government of Canada for the extradition of SMIRNOW to the United States,” according to a March 20 update to the Smirnow victims’ site maintained by Wigginton’s office.

    Ontario Provincial Police notified Wigginton’s office of the Smirnow arrest in December, according to the victims’ site. U.S. federal prosecutors and the U.S. Postal Inspection Service accused Smirnow in 2010 of operating “Pathway To Prosperity,” a $70 million Ponzi-board swindle that flowed across six continents into 120 countries and affected tens of thousands of participants.

    P2P, as the scheme was known in shorthand, allegedly created victims in 48 of the 50 U.S. states and in 18 of the 38 counties that comprise the Southern District of Illinois. The concentration in the district may suggest a major P2P promoter was operating in the area.

    Many HYIP schemes offer promoters commissions to round up participants. Prosecutors have described the interest rates offered by P2P as absurd.

    U.S. prosecutors said this in 2010 (italics added):

    According to the complaint, investors were offered their choice of seven, fifteen, thirty, and sixty day “plans.” At the daily interest rates promised by SMIRNOW, a seven day plan supposedly produced an annual return of 546% and a sixty day plan supposedly was returning an annual return of 720%. Fifteen and thirty day plans supposedly returned equally spectacular rates of return. If an investor reinvested both his original investment and the supposed earnings that Pathway to Prosperity promised on a seven day program, for instance, at the daily interest rate quoted by SMIRNOW, the annual return would have been approximately 17,000%.

    Smirnow initially slipped out of Canada to the Philippines, where he ended up in jail, according to court filings. Although the United States sought to extradite him from the Philippines nearly five years ago, the process reportedly was canceled, resulting in Smirnow eventually heading back to Canada.

    U.S. filings from 2010 identified him as a resident of Baysville, Ontario. Precisely why the earlier process was canceled is unclear.

    What is clear is that the United States has now asked Canada to turn him over.

  • Now, ‘TelexMOB’

    TelexMoblogoUPDATED 11:25 A.M. EDT U.S.A. Something calling itself “TelexMOB” has established a web presence this month. A logo resembling that of TelexFree — an alleged Ponzi- and pyramid scheme said to have gathered $1.8 billion across national borders — appears on the site.

    BehindMLM.com was first with the news today.

    The PP Blog has sent requests for comment to three government agencies and to Stephen B. Darr, the court-appointed trustee in the TelexFree bankruptcy case. The Blog will post the responses, if received.

    Update 10:10 a.m. EDT U.S.A. “I have no comment, since I have no knowledge of TelexMOB,” Darr said in an email this morning.

    Update 11:25 a.m. EDT U.S.A. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission this morning declined to comment on TelexMOB. (Original story continues below . . .)

    It is not unusual for knockoff schemes to emerge in the HYIP sphere in the aftermath of a collapse, a disappearing act or a government action. Examples of this include the infamous JSSTripler 2 scheme, a scam riding on the name of the JSSTripler/JustBeenPaid scheme, which advertised an annual return of 730 percent in 2012.

    Content appears on the TelexMOB website in English and Portuguese. Some of the English is fractured. A 16-page pdf handout on the site is written in Portuguese. The last two words in the pdf, however, are in English.

    “Welcome Back,” it reads, potentially a direct appeal to TelexFree participants.

    The site appears to be using a New Zealand privacy service. The servers may be in the United States.

    JSSTripler 2 was memorable for reasons beyond its knockoff name. In January 2012, for example, it sparked legendary HYIP huckster Faith Sloan to call “Ken Russo,” another legendary huckster, a “crybaby.”

    A claim of Dengue Fever accompanied the JSSTripler2 scheme.

    Sloan published a JSSTripler 2 earnings calculator. She’d later become a defendant in the SEC’s civil case against TelexFree, filed in April 2014.

  • SEC Enforcement Chief References Investor Alert On ‘Pyramid Schemes Posing As Multi-Level Marketing Programs’ In Congressional Testimony Today, Says ‘Coordinated Effort’ To Disrupt Them Under Way

    “The staff also has recently seen what appears to be an increase in pyramid schemes . . . under the guise of ‘multi-level marketing’ and ‘network marketing’ opportunities . . . These schemes often target the most vulnerable investors, and social media has expanded their reach. The Division is deploying resources to disrupt these schemes through a coordinated effort of timely, aggressive enforcement actions along with community outreach and investor education. We are also using new analytic techniques to identify patterns and common threads, thereby permitting earlier detection of potential fraudulent schemes.”Andrew Ceresney, SEC Enforcement Division director, March 19, 2015

    cautionflag3RD UPDATE 6:09 P.M. EDT U.S.A. Bad news for “program” scammers and their willfully blind enablers: Andrew Ceresney, the director of the SEC’s Divison of Enforcement, told lawmakers on Capitol Hill today that scams using an MLM or network-marketing business model are on the radar.

    In fact, according to written testimony Ceresney delivered to the House Capital Markets and Government Sponsored Enterprises subcommittee, they are enforcement “priorities” — right up there with insider trading, microcap fraud and other forms of securities fraud.

    The Division is deploying resources to disrupt these schemes through a coordinated effort of timely, aggressive enforcement actions along with community outreach and investor education,”  Ceresney told the panel.

    New Jersey Republican Rep. Scott Garrett chairs the panel. Rep. Carolyn B. Maloney, a New York Democrat, is ranking member.

    In October, an SEC official attending a symposium sponsored by the Federal Trade Commission on the subject of how fraud affects communities told the audience that the SEC has a “newly established pyramid-scheme task force.”

    Ceresney didn’t reference the task force in his prepared remarks today. However, the agency already has filed two actions against MLM or network-marketing schemes this year. In February, the agency sued the “Achieve Community,” alleging it was a Ponzi- and pyramid scheme that had gathered about $3.8 million and had spread on social media. One or more criminal probes related to the SEC’s Achieve investigation are believed to be under way, amid concerns Achieve was funneling scam proceeds offshore.

    Also in February, the SEC sued a “program” known as Wings Network, alleging it was targeting Latino communities and that its promoters “used Facebook to publicize ‘business meetings’ that took place at hotels and other locations in Connecticut, California, Florida, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Texas, Georgia, and Utah.

    “The promoters also set up storefronts or ‘training centers’ to lure investors into attending Wings Network presentations,” the agency charged. “For example, one promoter used a storefront in downtown Philadelphia to make presentations to prospective investors, and another promoter rented office space in Pompano Beach, Fla., and spread the word in the local Latino community to attract prospective investors to come in and hear presentations.”

    Wings appears to have gathered at least $23.5 million.

    In addition to targeting vulnerable population groups, Wings Network tried to sanitize itself by falsely trading on the name of the Direct Selling Association, the SEC said in court filings. Wings has been tied to two companies that used the name Tropikgadget.

    Both ostensibly operated from Portugal through business entities set up in Madeira, a Portuguese island in the North Atlantic, and through Sharjah, a city in the United Arab Emirates, the SEC alleged.

    Court records suggest Wings had a strong presence in Marlborough, Mass., the town from which the TelexFree MLM scheme was based. In April 2014, the SEC described TelexFree as a massive Ponzi- and pyramid scheme largely targeting immigrant populations. A court-appointed trustee says TelexFree may have gathered $1.8 billion through its pyramid scheme in about two years.

    Participants hailed from dozen of countries. A partial list of U.S. participants shows many names that appear to be Latino. Trustee Stephen B. Darr said in court filings that the full list of worldwide participants “contains 1,894,940” names and spans “35,110 pages.”

    A list of alleged “winners” in the 2012 Zeek Rewards scheme broken up the SEC and the U.S. Secret Service also appears to include a disproportionate share of Latino names or names from other vulnerable population groups. Zeek is estimated to have rounded up $897 million in less than two years and to have affected on the order of 800,000 victims.

    Zeek’s name (through parent Rex Venture Group LLC) was referenced in a footnote and related link in today’s written testimony by Ceresney.

    So was the name of CKB168, a “program” that allegedly targeted members of Asian-American communities in New York and California and was taken down by the SEC in 2013. The alleged haul was pegged at at least $20 million.

    The footnote pointed to an SEC investor alert dated Oct. 1, 2013, and titled, “Beware of Pyramid Schemes Posing as Multi-Level Marketing Programs.” The alert, which has been translated into Chinese, Spanish, Portuguese, Vietnamese and Creole, has been updated to include information on “programs” such as TelexFree and Wings Network.

    Though not referenced specifically in the October 2013 alert, “programs” such as eAdGear, Zhunrize and WCM777 also have encountered SEC actions. All three appear to have affected Asian population groups. WCM777 also clearly affected Latino groups and has emerged as one of the strangest MLM schemes of all time.

    Court filings suggest that $750,000 in WCM777 money was siphoned off and provided to one or more lobbying firms. On March 13, the PP Blog reported that more than $400,000 in proceeds allegedly were directed to a former CIA operative who once worked as a political fundraiser and has two felony convictions.

    Some WCM777 promoters had claimed that $14,000 sent to the California-based “program” returned $500,000 in 52 weeks. WCM777 appears to have gathered more than $80 million in about a year, with the proceeds from the MLM “program” diverted to purchase golf courses, real estate and more. Tens of millions of dollars appear to have been diverted to Hong Kong.

    The alleged haul of eAdGear was $129 million. Two persons have been charged criminally.

    Zhunrize, the SEC said, gathered about $105 million.

    Today’s Congressional testimony took place against the backdrop of continuing clashes between Herbalife and activist investor Bill Ackman, an Herbalife short-seller who has accused the MLM program of being a pyramid scheme that targets Latinos.

    Herbalife, which was not referenced in today’s testimony, denies it is a pyramid scheme and says it is proud of its appeal to Latinos and serves the community honorably. (Ackman also isn’t mentioned in the testimony.)

    Responding on web forums such as Seeking Alpha, fans of Herbalife have accused Ackman of pandering to enforcement agencies, members of Congress and Latino groups as part of a scheme to inspire investigations that would line his pockets by driving down Herbalife’s stock price.

    In media accounts, Ackman has said he won’t keep personal profits if his Herbalife short pays off. At the same time, he asserts he is pursuing profit for his hedge-fund investors through a strategy that also delivers social justice.

    Perhaps the only thing clear right now is that MLM, no stranger to controversy, never before has been under a light this intense.

    The Capital Markets and Government Sponsored Enterprises subcommittee is under the House Financial Services Committee. The committee is chaired by Rep. Jeb Hensarling, a Texas Republican. Rep. Maxine Waters, a California Democrat, is ranking member.

    Read Ceresney’s written, footnoted testimony.

  • March PP Blog Subscription Post

    NOTE: This post originally was published March 4 at 1:07 p.m. It will remain in this slot for several days. New posts will appear below it.

    Dear Readers,

    As was the case with our 2,500th-post commemoration in November, there are four subscription options. In the spirit of that post and the 6th anniversary post in January, I’m returning to the “penny a post” theme. We’re asking readers who believe in what this Blog is doing to take out a one-year subscription for either $25, $50, $75 or $100.

    The $25 fee constitutes a penny a post for our current editorial well of 2,500+ articles. There’s a pull-down menu in case you decide you’d like personally to value the editorial well at 2 cents a post ($50), 3 cents a post ($75) or 4 cents a post ($100).

    It is my hope that newer readers who can afford to subscribe will do so at either the $25 or $50 levels. The higher options may be best suited for readers and researchers who’ve been with us a long time and perhaps have read hundreds or even thousands of stories.

    Because the Blog’s well is so deep, we’re able to provide readers additional context. You’ll often find this reflected in “quick notes” in the Comments threads below stories. The notes point readers to stories on the same topic or to stories that have a similar theme.

    The Blog, of course, also points readers to other sources of information.

    There is no paywall at the PP Blog. By purchasing a subscription that automatically renews in one year, you’ll be helping me personally. And, as I noted in November, you’ll be helping a Blog that publishes hundreds of stories a year and keeps matters important to readers a bookmark away remain free for other readers.

    This “penny-a-post” idea has helped me scotch the very real concern about affecting readership by offering subscriptions. The readers who subscribe will be helping keep the Blog free for those who cannot afford to subscribe and for those who simply choose not to.

    Our readers of goodwill recognize the PP Blog as a persistent effort to contain harm and to educate the public about matters that destroy pocketbooks and families and, in some cases, affect national security.

    My sincere thank you for your continued interest in the PP Blog.

    Patrick


    PP Blog 2,500thPost Subscriptions



  • Zeek Receiver Posts ‘Notice Of Certification Of Defendant Class Action’; Document Pertains To Thousands Of Alleged ‘Winners’

    recommendedreading1What once was only theoretical in the context of MLM HYIP schemes — that a receiver appointed by a court could simultaneously sue thousands of “winners” from disparate locations for return of funds received from an alleged Ponzi or pyramid scheme — is now a reality.

    This reality was cemented today by the posting of a “Notice of Certification of Defendant Class Action” by Zeek Rewards receiver Kenneth D. Bell. The four-page document is posted on the receivership website.

    Bell is suing more than 9,000 individuals in the United States alleged to have received more than $1,000 from the “program.”

    Senior U.S. District Judge Graham C. Mullen of the Western District of North Carolina certified the defendant class of alleged winners last month. On March 11, Mullen approved Bell’s plan to notify the defendants on the receivership website and through the email addresses they used for Zeek or the receivership.

    Here is the notice. (Because the PP Blog could not precisely duplicate the formatting, some of the formatting below is approximate.)


     

    NOTICE OF CERTIFICATION OF DEFENDANT CLASS ACTION

    On February 10, 2015, Judge Graham C. Mullen, United States Judge for the Western District of North Carolina issued an ORDER granting the motion of Kenneth D. Bell, the court-appointed Receiver for Rex Venture Group, LLC (“RVG”), to certify a Defendant Class (the “Net Winner Class”) in this action comprised of all persons and entities who were Net Winners of more than $1000 in ZeekRewards. A copy of this ORDER is attached. This notice is being provided to notify you that according to RVG’s records you are a member of the Net Winner Class and inform you about certain important information related to the Net Winner Class and the legal process going forward.

    1. In this lawsuit against the named Defendants and the Net Winner Class, the Receiver alleges that because ZeekRewards’ Net Winners “won” (the victims) money in an unlawful Ponzi and/or pyramid scheme, the Net Winners are not permitted to keep their winnings and must return the fraudulently transferred winnings to the Receiver for distribution to the ZeekRewards’ victims. Specifically, the Receiver has asserted claims for relief for: (1) Fraudulent Transfer of RVG Funds in violation of the North Carolina Fraudulent Transfer Act; (2) Common Law Fraudulent Transfer; and (3) Constructive Trust.

    2. Net Winners are defined in the Complaint as those who received more money from ZeekRewards than they paid in. Therefore, the Net Winner Class includes all persons and entities who participated in ZeekRewards and received at least $1000 more in money from ZeekRewards than they put into the program. RVG’s records show that you are a member of the Net Winner Class. Your membership in the Net Winner Class depends solely on the amount of your net winnings. It does not depend on whether or not you believed ZeekRewards was lawful, your level of knowledge concerning the program or whether you still have the money you received.

    3. The Court has not yet ruled on the merits of the claims in this lawsuit; however, when it does so, its orders will be legally binding upon you and all other members of the Net Winner Class. The Court has noted that the common questions related to the Net Winner Class are “whether ZeekRewards operated as a Ponzi and/or pyramid scheme and whether net winnings received by the Defendants should be returned to the Receiver.” The Court has further held that the details of each class member’s participation in ZeekRewards do not need to be addressed in answering these common and controlling questions. The ongoing legal proceedings in the case will answer these common questions.

    4. You are not required to and there should be no need for you to participate in the legal proceedings related to answering the common questions for the Net Winner Class. The Court has determined that the named Defendants, who the Court noted collectively won more than $11 million in profits from ZeekRewards, “inevitably share the same defenses against liability for repayment of the alleged fraudulent transfers made to the class, which does not depend on the personal circumstances of particular affiliates” and that those Defendants and their counsel “are able to fairly and adequately represent the interests of the defendant class.” Also, all pleadings and other papers filed in this action are available for your inspection in the office of the Clerk of Court for the Federal Court in the Western District of North Carolina in Charlotte, North Carolina, and on the Federal Court PACER electronic public access service that allows users to obtain case and docket information online at https://www.pacer.gov/.

    5. You will, however, have an opportunity to participate in the process if the Net Winner Class is found to be required to repay their net winnings. If liability is found, the Receiver intends to seek a court Judgment against each class member in the amount of their individualized net winnings plus interest at least from August 17, 2012, when ZeekRewards was shut down and the Receiver appointed. The final amount of each Net Winner Class member’s net winnings and any Judgment against them will be set later in the proceedings after the liability of the class has been established. While the specifics of the process for determining those amounts has not yet been decided, the Receiver intends to seek a process that will notify you of the amount of your net winnings according to the RVG records, allow you a reasonable opportunity to provide a response (supported by relevant documentation if you disagree with the calculation) and then either reach an agreement on the amount or have the amount determined by a judicial process. It is likely to be several months or longer before this process begins so you do not need to take any action at this time either with the Receiver or counsel for the named Defendants related to determining the amount of your net winnings. This is true even if you believe that you are not a member of the Net Winner Class because you did not receive more than $1000 more from ZeekRewards than you put in (you will have an opportunity to make that argument at the appropriate time). However, if you have not already done so, you are advised to gather and preserve any documents or information (including electronic files) related to the amount you paid into and received from ZeekRewards so those documents and that information can be used in the later process to determine the amount of your net winnings.

    6. CONTACT INFORMATION REQUIRED – This notice has been sent to the last known electronic address for each member of the Net Winner Class and published on the Receivership website, the Court’s docket and other forums. For purposes of future communications to the Net Winner Class it is important that the Court have updated contact information for all class members. Therefore, please provide your Name, Residential Street Address (or Business address for an entity), Email Address and Phone Number to:

    Kenneth D. Bell
    McGuireWoods LLP
    ATTN: ZeekRewards Class Action
    201 North Tryon Street, Suite 3000
    Charlotte, North Carolina 28202
    Or
    zeekrewardsclassaction@mcguirewoods.com

    Please be advised that the failure to provide current contact information will not allow you to avoid any liability or obligation related to this matter.

    7. Since early in the Receivership, the Receiver has expressed a willingness to consider voluntary settlements on the Receiver’s claims with ZeekRewards’ net winners and others against whom the Receiver has claims. To date, there have been numerous settlements approved by the Court in which net winners and the Receiver agreed on an amount to be repaid, often with payment terms that allowed the net winner to repay the agreed amount over a number of months. Net Winners are still permitted to discuss a potential settlement of the Receiver’s claims against them even though they have become members of the Net Winner Class. If you desire to discuss a settlement of the Receiver’s claims against you, please communicate with the Receiver at zeeksettlement@mcguirewoods.com.

    8. This notice is intended to inform you about the Net Winner Class and answer basic questions regarding the Receiver’s claims and the legal process.

    PLEASE CONSIDER THIS NOTICE CAREFULLY BECAUSE YOU WILL BE LEGALLY BOUND BY FUTURE ORDERS OF THE COURT IN THIS ACTION. IF YOU ARE UNSURE OF WHAT COURSE TO FOLLOW OR IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS ABOUT YOUR SPECIFIC CIRCUMSTANCES, YOU MAY WISH TO CONTACT YOUR OWN ATTORNEY. PLEASE DO NOT CONTACT THE RECEIVER, THE COURT OR COUNSEL FOR THE NAMED DEFENDANTS WITH GENERAL QUESTIONS ABOUT THE NET WINNER CLASS OR YOUR PARTICULAR SITUATION OTHER THAN IF YOU WANT TO DISCUSS A POTENTIAL SETTLEMENT WITH THE RECEIVER AS DESCRIBED ABOVE.


    Read the notice on the receivership website.

    Visit the receivership website.

    NOTE: Our thanks to the ASD Updates Blog.

  • PARTINGS: Ronald C. Machen Jr., Whose Office Led AdSurfDaily Criminal Prosecution, Is Leaving Post As U.S. Attorney For District Of Columbia

    “Serving as the U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia has been the highest honor of my professional career. I am tremendously grateful to the President, Attorney General Holder, and Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton for placing their trust in me. The men and women of this office are among the most dedicated and talented public servants in the country. I am proud of the work we have done together to achieve justice in the courthouse and to build bonds of trust with the community that we serve. I leave this position confident that my extraordinary colleagues will continue to pursue justice and protect the residents of the District and this great nation.”U.S. Attorney Ronald C. Machen Jr., District of Columbia, March 16, 2015

    Ronald C. Machen Jr. is leaving his post as U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia after five years.
    Ronald C. Machen Jr. is leaving his post as U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia after five years.

    Ronald C. Machen Jr. led many important prosecutions during his five-year tenure as U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia. The one PP Blog readers are most apt to remember is the criminal prosecution of AdSurfDaily Ponzi-scheme figure Andy Bowdoin.

    Machen, 45, is leaving his post and intends to reenter private practice, the Justice Department said today.

    “During more than five years as United States Attorney for the District of Columbia, Ron Machen has distinguished himself as a skilled leader, a devoted public servant, and a forceful champion of justice on behalf of the American people,” said Attorney General Eric Holder.

    Upon the sentencing of Bowdoin in August 2012, Machen called the huckster “a master of fraud and deception” who cheated “victims out of their hard-earned money and savings with his get-rich scheme.”

    AdSurfDaily gathered $119 million through its Internet-based fraud, a 1-percent-a-day “program” that purported to be in the “advertising” business, not the business of selling securities.

    Machen will leave his post on April 1.  Principal Assistant U.S. Attorney Vincent H. Cohen Jr., 44, will become Acting U.S. Attorney on that date.

    Two assistant U.S. Attorneys and a special agent of the U.S. Secret Service involved in the ASD case were targeted with false liens by Kenneth Wayne Leaming, a purported “sovereign citizen” from Washington state. Leaming was arrested by an FBI Terrorism Task Force and was successfully prosecuted by the office of then-U.S. Attorney Jenny A. Durkan of the Western District of Washington.

    We wish Ronald Machen the best, and we thank him for his service to his country.

  • BULLETIN: Zeek Figure Robert Craddock Indicted In Separate Scheme

    breakingnews72BULLETIN: Florida resident Robert Craddock, a figure in the Zeek Rewards Ponzi-scheme story, has been indicted in a separate scheme involving the alleged theft of more than $135,000 from a compensation fund set up to assist businesses affected by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in 2010.

    The office of U.S. Attorney A. Lee Bentley III of the Middle District of Florida announced Friday that Craddock, 54, of Port Orange, had been charged with wire fraud. The U.S. Secret Service conducted the probe.

    BehindMLM.com reported the news in a story dated March 16.

    Prosecutors said in a statement that Craddock “crafted fictitious invoices to support the amount of lost earnings that he claimed.”

    From the statement by prosecutors (italics added):

    According to the indictment, following the April 2010 explosion of the Deepwater Horizon oil rig (which was being leased by BP, formerly known as British Petroleum), Craddock submitted a claim to BP and the Gulf Coast Claims Facility (“GCCF”), an independent facility established by BP to compensate qualified claimants, for lost earnings purportedly related to the impact of the oil spill on his businesses.

    Though uncharged in the Zeek case, Craddock has been described by the SEC as an obstructionist who encouraged victims of the $897 million Zeek scheme not to cooperate with Kenneth D. Bell, the court-appointed receiver.

    Separately, the Daytona Beach News-Journal is reporting that local property records showed that Craddock, a pilot, recently “bought a home complete with aircraft hangar that backs up to a runway in Spruce Creek Fly-In.”

    In 2012, Craddock was involved in a fundraising venture purportedly to assist Zeek participants to mount a challenge against the SEC for bringing the Zeek Ponzi case. This occurred through a Craddock venture known as Fun Club USA, later described by litigants suing Craddock for alleged trademark infringement as a shell company engaged in a “shake-down” bid against affiliates of at least three MLM networks: Zeek, OfferHubb and BTG180.

    Precisely how much Craddock collected in the Zeek-related fundraising effort is unclear. Also unclear is precisely how the money was used.

    Zeek figures Todd Disner and T. LeMont Silver — alleged winners of millions of dollars from Zeek — helped champion the fundraising venture. Disner also was a figure in the AdSurfDaily Ponzi-scheme story, something Zeek receiver Kenneth D. Bell pointed out to a federal judge.

    Bell has raised concerns that MLMers or network marketers are moving from fraud scheme to fraud scheme to fraud scheme.

    Craddock has been a lightning rod for MLM controversy. In November 2012, for example, he bizarrely planted the seed that MLM attorney Kevin Thompson was practicing law without a license. Thompson described Craddock as a liar.

    But if there is a signature Craddock moment, it occurred in July 2012, when Craddock sought to disable a HubPage critical of Zeek by alleging author K. Chang had engaged in libel, trademark infringement and copyright infringement. It was all a fantastic crock, and K. Chang eventually prevailed.

    Less than a month after Craddock moved against K. Chang, the SEC and the U.S. Secret Service moved against Zeek.

    Court records from the ASD Ponzi case show that ASD also tried to chill reporters with threats about lawsuits in the weeks prior to a government raid on ASD headquarters in August 2008.

    In 2014, Craddock was listed as a copyright enforcer on the website of an entity known as Changes Worldwide LLC. The SEC has accused TelexFree figure Faith Sloan of violating the asset freeze in the TelexFree case by sending thousands of dollars to Changes Worldwide. Sloan also was a Zeek affiliate.

    Craddock later reportedly authored a book whose sales copy included a claim that the U.S. government should have modeled a “stimulus program” after Zeek, which prosecutors have described as a Ponzi- and pyramid scheme that had gathered $897 million and affected hundreds of thousands of people globally.

    The SEC declined to comment on the book, which was offered on Amazon.com.

  • EgoPay Site Inaccessible

    This screen shot from Google cache appears to show that thr website of EgoPay.com was active at least part of the day on March 9.
    This screen shot from Google cache appears to show that the website of EgoPay.com was active at least part of the day on March 9.

    Poster “Markus” stopped at the PP Blog at 2:19 p.m. ET today, raising a question about why the site of the EgoPay payment processor won’t load.

    When the PP Blog later sought to visit the site, it encountered this error message: “www.egopay.com – Connection failed.”

    Precisely when the site started generating that message is unclear. A March 9 Facebook post included a screen shot of the same error message the PP Blog observed today.

    It is unclear if the EgoPay site has been offline continuously since the 9th. Google cache appears to show the site was online at least part of the day on the 9th.

    HYIP enthusiasts apparently haven’t lost faith. On March 11, someone posted this on Twitter: “Huge Income For Your Egopay Account,investing money.”

    On March 10, someone posted this on Twitter: “Egopay Payment Received,investing tips.” The post included a link to something called “Qatar Investment,” a site that promises “3400% profit in 24 Hour [sic] (Principal Return).”

    The Qatar Investment site also says this: “Fund your Perfecy [sic] Money, Bitcoin or EgoPay account. You can fund your account by Credit Card, Bank Wire Transfer, Cash Deposits, Western Union, Money Gram and other payment methods.”

    Despite the apparent Twitter claim on March 10 that Qatar Investment had paid someone through EgoPay on that date, whether anyone actually got paid is unclear.

    Could it be the end for EgoPay, a Ponzi-board darling? And if it is the end, what caused it?

    Also see Jan. 26 PP Blog post.

  • BULLETIN: CLAIM: Former CIA Operative Was Paid More Than $400,000 By Companies Linked To WCM Ponzi Scheme

    breakingnews72UPDATED 9:44 P.M. EDT MARCH 14 U.S.A. How strange were things in the universe of WCM777, an MLM “program” accused by the SEC last year of pulling off an $80 million, cross-border Ponzi swindle?

    Would you believe that a former CIA operative with two felony convictions ended up on the payroll?

    Robert Sensi, the former operative, received $403,000 from companies linked to WCM777, according to an amended lawsuit filed against Sensi in U.S. District Court for the Central District of California.

    WCM777 was operated by Ming Xu of Temple City, Calif. A forensic accounting has determined that the WCM777 entities used 77 domestic bank accounts and 23 foreign ones, according to filings by court-appointed receiver Krista L. Freitag.

    Sensi was paid six times through ToPacific Inc. and one time through World Capital Market Inc. between Jan 30 and March 25, 2014, according to court filings.

    Alleged paymnets to Robert Sensi from WCM777-related firms. Source: Screen shot from federal court filing.
    Alleged payments to Robert Sensi from WCM777-related firms. Source: Screen shot from federal court filing.

    Freitag is suing Sensi for return of the money.  She initially sued him for the return of $385,000 (excluding interest and costs) in November 2014, alleging that he claimed he “used to work” for the CIA and was hired by WCM777-related companies to address complaints about the program by authorities in Peru, Taiwan and Dubai.  She further alleged that Sensi was “well aware” that various WCM777-related business were engaged in a Ponzi scheme.

    Sensi responded to the November complaint on Feb. 9. He did not expressly deny Freitag’s claim that he had claimed to have worked for the CIA, but he did deny the allegations he’d been hired by the Xu entities to address the concerns about WCM777 in Peru, Taiwan and Dubai. He further denied he had knowledge of a Ponzi scheme.

    In his answer, Sensi admitted “services were rendered pertaining to Peru, Taiwan, and Dubai.”  But he did not describe the services. On March 12, Freitag filed an amended complaint, asserting in the filing that Sensi had received $403,000 from the WCM777 entities, not the $385,000 specified in the original complaint.

    Court records or published reports from the past two decades show that Sensi has been sentenced to prison twice — once for stealing millions of dollars from Kuwait Airways, a second time for a “Nigerian letters” scam in which a German businessman was swindled.

    Larry J. Kolb, an author and former CIA agent, has written extensively about Sensi, his ties to the CIA and further ties to Republican politicians and Republican political causes, including fundraising.

    Chapter 1 of “America at Night,” a 2007 book by Kolb, is available for free on Kolb’s website. The chapter references a meeting Kolb had in California with attorney “Vince Messina”  in May 2004.

    A snippet (italics added):

    Vince was late for lunch, and I wish he’d never shown up. But, then again, all indications are if Vince hadn’t sucked me back into the secret world, somebody else would’ve. So I don’t hold it against him. Vince Messina. Washington tax and immigration attorney, international dealmaker, bon vivant. Based on what I know of his background, he has to be as old as the hills. But somehow he doesn’t seem it. Bald on top, short dark hair on the sides, olive skin, smiles a lot, constantly on the move. Vince is on the up and up, but spends much of his time in strange lands working for mysterious clients.

    During the lunch meeting, Messina asked Kolb if he knew Sensi, a somewhat startling question, Kolb wrote.

    After Kolb answered yes, Messina called his nephew, Gary Messina, a U.S. Department of Homeland Security official, to enable Gary to listen in, Kolb wrote.

    Ten years later, in May 2014, Vincent Messina would become a relief defendant in the WCM777 Ponzi case. The SEC alleged that Messina was WCM’s asserted “general counsel” and had come into possession of $5 million from the fraud scheme.

    More than $941,000 of the $5 million went to International Market Ventures (IMV), a company operated by Gary Messina, according to court filings.

    U.S. District Judge John F. Walter declared the $5 million that flowed to Vincent Messina “ill gotten” and ordered it disgorged. IMV was held jointly liable with Vincent Messina for disgorgement of $941,505 of the $5 million sum.

     

     

  • ‘MyAdvertisingPays’ And A Bromide Thrice Vomited

    mapsbromidelargeIt turns out that a hackneyed expression currently in play within MyAdvertisingPays (MAPS) is a lightly remixed version of one used in the collapsed Zeek Rewards and Achieve Community schemes.

    Will this thrice-vomited bromide become a kiss of death for MAPS?

    Back before the SEC shut down Zeek in 2012, the $897 million scheme traded in part on  “If you want things in your life to change, you have to change things in your life.”

    With Achieve prior to its shutdown by the SEC last month, it was “If you do not GO after what you want, you’ll never have it.”

    On Twitter, a promoter of the emerging MAPS scheme is prospecting for recruits with a similar line. “If you want something you’ve never had, then you’ve got to do something you’ve never done!”

    The PP Blog reported on March 9 that the name of MAPS appears in a TelexFree-related class-action lawsuit originally filed in federal court in New York and later transferred to Massachusetts. Even though MAPS isn’t named a defendant, it is clear that both private lawyers and government lawyers are aware of MAPS.

    With an alleged haul of more than $1.8 billion, TelexFree likely is the largest MLM HYIP fraud of all time. Zeek, the previous title-holder in terms of its alleged haul, probably now is second. Both schemes may have created hundreds of thousands of victims.

    Zeek’s receiver currently is involved in an international paper chase to round up assets for victims. Some of the money allegedly was routed to the Cook Islands (South Pacific) through a California company and then used to buy property in the Turks and Caicos (North Atlantic).

    MAPS, which appears to have a paper presence on the Caribbean island of Anguilla but likely operates from the United States, recently claimed to have “110676+ Users.” Given its business model and the presence of serial promoters of fraud schemes in its membership ranks, MAPS very well could be a litigation target-in-the-making.

    Regardless, many MLM HYIP Ponzi promoters will pretend that the membership should not be concerned — as they did with Zeek and Achieve Community.