Tag: Automatic Mobile Cash

  • URGENT >> BULLETIN >> MOVING: Achieve Community’s Kristi Johnson Charged Criminally

    breakingnews72URGENT >> BULLETIN >> MOVING: (13th Update 1:43 p.m. EDT U.S.A.) After an investigation by the U.S. Secret Service, Kristi Johnson (Kristine Louise Johnson) of the “Achieve Community” has been charged criminally with wire-fraud conspiracy and has agreed to plead guilty, federal prosecutors said.

    “By the time the scheme collapsed in February 2015, the conspirators owed victim-investors at least $51 million in purported investment returns, yet Johnson, her conspirators and TAC had available only 4% or approximately $2.6 million,” the office of Acting U.S. Attorney Jill Westmoreland Rose of the Western District of North Carolina said.

    The SEC charged Johnson, 60, civilly in February 2015 with operating a combined Ponzi- and pyramid scheme that allegedly had gathered at least $3.8 million. She resided in Aurora, Colo., the agency said. The securities regulator also charged Troy A. Barnes, 52, of Riverview, Mich.

    Barnes disclosed in February that he was a target of a federal criminal investigation. A charge sheet (known as an “information”)  filed by prosecutors yesterday against Johnson described an alleged co-conspirator as “CC#1.” The information also suggested there were other co-conspirators “known and unknown to the United States Attorney.”

    These individuals were not named.

    The conspiracy prosecution brought by the Secret Service and federal prosecutors appears to have upped the Ponzi dollar sum to $6.8 million. Prosecutors said Achieve “defrauded more than 10,000 investor victims” worldwide.

    Prosecutors called Achieve a “sham internet company.” The case against Johnson was brought in the venue — the Western District of North Carolina — that is the center of action in the 2012 Zeek Rewards’ Ponzi- and pyramid scheme.

    Achieve and Zeek are known to have had promoters in common. Both schemes instructed prospects and recruits not to call the respective programs “investment” programs in bids to skirt securities laws. Such disingenuousness dates back to at least 2008 and the AdSurfDaily Ponzi scheme, also broken up by the Secret Service.

    Here’s how prosecutors described the alleged verbal gymnastics of Achieve and its bids to dupe investors, payment processors and law enforcement (italics/bolding added):

    According to court filings, as the scheme grew in size and scope, Johnson and her conspirators concealed the true nature of the scheme through multiple misrepresentations.  According to court records, when the conspirators became concerned that the use of the term “investment” would draw scrutiny from regulators, they instructed victim-investors that “We ARE NOT an INVESTMENT program, please don’t use that term when you speak or post about our re-purchase strategy.”

    According to court records, Johnson and her conspirators also lied about the company’s “business model” to the third-party payment processors which processed TAC’s money transactions.   When one payment processor concluded that TAC was operating a Ponzi scheme and terminated TAC as a client, court records show that Johnson and her conspirators falsely told victim investors that it was because the payment processor was unable to handle the large amount of money TAC paid to its investors.

    As indicated in court documents, the investment scheme began to crumble when payment processors stopped processing the Ponzi payments to victim-investors.  By the time the scheme collapsed in February 2015, the conspirators owed victim-investors at least $51 million in purported investment returns, yet Johnson, her conspirators and TAC had available only 4% or approximately $2.6 million.

    Prosecutors said “a signed plea agreement was also filed [Thursday], and Johnson is expected to appear before a U.S. Magistrate judge in the coming days to formally accept the plea. The wire fraud charge carries a maximum of 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine. As part of her plea agreement, Johnson has agreed to pay restitution, the amount of which will be determined by the Court.”

    In January 2015, Achieve promoter Rodney Blackburn produced an ad that featured nearly six minutes of continuous footage from the website of the SEC. The ad suggested the SEC did not have jurisdiction over “programs” such as Achieve and “Unison Wealth.” At the time, the SEC declined to comment on the Blackburn promo.

    Blackburn promoted several recent Ponzi-board scams that tanked. Included among them were “Daily-Earnings,” plus “Moore Fund” and “Trinity Lines” and “Rockfeller Asset Management Limited” and “Bring The Bacon Home” and “Automatic Mobile Cash.”

    Zeek receiver Kenneth D. Bell has raised the issue of MLMers proceeding from one fraud scheme to another.

    In December 2014, the PP Blog reported that Achieve boosters were parroting each other and circulating a promo that read, “We are not investing in a stock or buying shares in a company. We are using our God given universal right to spend our money the way we want. We choose not to sell out to the banking system for their tiny little 1% annual return.”

    Prosecutors described Achieve’s purported 700 percent return as “bogus.” The SEC described Achieve as a  “pure Ponzi and pyramid scheme” whose revenue “has consisted entirely of investor-contributed funds.”

    Claims of that a “triple algorithm” made such outsized returns possible also were bogus, authorities said.

    From an Achieve promo playing on YouTube. Masking by PP Blog.
    From an Achieve promo playing on YouTube. Masking by PP Blog.

    Achieve offered a 700 percent ROI, according to the SEC and federal prosecutors.

    NOTE: Our thanks to the ASD Updates Blog.

  • UPDATE: ‘Automatic Mobile Cash’ Tanks

    automaticmobilecashlarge

    “Automatic Mobile Cash,” pushed on YouTube by “Achieve Community” hucksters Rodney Blackburn and Mike Chitty, has tanked, according to chatter on the MoneyMakerGroup Ponzi forum.

    MMG poster “im the man,” citing information from SolidTrustPay, claimed yesterday that SolidTrustPay had blocked AMC’s ability “to accept deposits or make withdraws.” Other information in the 16-page, 226-post MMG thread suggests AMC was making selective payouts through SolidTrustPay and Payza at the beginning of March.

    Blackburn and Chitty were representatives of something called the “Legendary Income Solutions Team” or LIST, often mixing promos for Achieve Community with appeals for viewers to get on board the LIST train and enroll in various HYIP schemes. YouTube appears to have banned Chitty. Blackburn deleted a number of his pitches for HYIP fraud schemes, and now is suggesting he’s returned to his roots in traditional MLM.

    The PP Blog reported last week that Blackburn was touting a “tea” known as “laso,” amid claims it “mitigates” HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.

    On Feb. 18, the SEC described Achieve Community as a pyramid- and Ponzi scheme that had gathered more than $3.8 million. A federal judge granted an asset freeze. Criminal investigations into Achieve Community reportedly also are under way.

    Chitty claimed AMC paid a “dividend.” Blackburn claimed his good friend Chitty was making “3,000 a month” from AMC.

    “That’s some ridiculous money,” he said.

    In addition, Blackburn published various “earnings” extrapolations for AMC. One claimed that the purchase of 100 “packages” for $2,500 from AMC turned into $73,000 in a year.

    In January, Blackburn dared the SEC to investigate Achieve Community and other programs he was pushing. Whether he’ll dare the Federal Trade Commission or the Food and Drug Administration to investigate the laso health claims was not immediately clear.

    The laso tea is one of the offerings of an MLM “program” known as “Total Life Changes.”

    After Blackburn’s SEC dare, a “program” known as “TrinityLines” that traded on the name of God and allusions to Scripture went missing.

    Blackburn also was promoting “MooreFund,” an obvious fraud purportedly operating from the United Kingdom. He also threw in with “Rockfeller,” an obvious fraud trading on the name of the famous Rockefeller family.

    “BRING THE BACON HOME” and “Unison Wealth” also were in the stable. The “bacon” program now has carded at least its second failed launch, and reportedly has a plan to launch again tomorrow.  Unison Wealth, meanwhile, appears to have developed problems.

  • In Wake Of Asset-Seizure Claim, Videos By ‘Achieve Community’ Huckster Rodney Blackburn Go Missing From You Tube

    With “Achieve Community” members posting on Facebook over the long President’s Day weekend claims attributed to co-founder Troy Barnes that he was under criminal investigation and assets had been seized, something seemed a bit odd on YouTube: Search results appeared to demote Rodney Blackburn in listings when the term “Achieve Community” was entered into the form.

    Mass deletions by Blackburn (see below) of Achieve-related content almost certainly explain the apparent SEO erosion. Blackburn, though, hasn’t completely run away from Achieve. A couple of the huckster’s productions remain, including one dated Saturday in which he throws Achieve’s Kristi Johnson under the bus.

    It is titled, “Achieve Is Done But We are Not!” The length is 6:24. In the video, Blackburn claims to be “really in shock right now on how everything has played out.”

    He further claims he had a falling out with Johnson in the recent past. “I didn’t want to bring that information out because I wanted Achieve to work just as much as each and every one of you,” he said.

    This falling out, Blackburn suggests, happened within four days of a Dec. 10 conference call Blackburn co-hosted with Mike Chitty. Johnson, the purported business partner of Barnes in Achieve, was a guest on the call. (Someone who goes by “washable jones” and appears not to be keen on HYIP hucksters posted a recording of the call on YouTube.)

    Blackburn and Chitty are Achieve members associated with a sponsor’s group known as the Legendary Income Solutions Team (LIST). On the Dec. 10 call, Blackburn claimed LIST had “over 2,000 people within our marketing team that is supporting Achieve. So, that’s just our little part of the 13,000 people who are in Achieve.”

    If “supporting” means “joining,” this means that LIST members alone had plowed at least $100,000 into Achieve and that they constituted 15 percent of Achieve’s membership, something that would have provided Blackburn and Chitty plenty of incentive to keep insisting prosperity for the masses was right around the corner if members would simply not abandon ship when payouts stopped in early November.

    It’s not that they stood to gain commissions through Achieve, which claims everybody was on the same team for the common good and promoted a common affiliate link. In Blackburn’s case, what he stood to gain was a payout on the claimed 221 Achieve positions he held. These positions weren’t going to pay if new people did not register and if both existing and new members didn’t keep reinvesting “earnings.”

    Blackburn’s expected payout, according to one of his videos, was ballparked at $90,000. And he’d already cashed out $16,000, he said. Registrations for LIST were a second benefit. From there, the LIST “leaders” could plow the marks into other Ponzi-board scams, some of which do pay commissions on top of preposterous interest payments.

    The minimum buy-in at Achieve was $50. Much higher buy-ins were possible, with some Achieve members likely spending hundreds or even thousands of dollars and expecting a minimum return of 800 percent, more through the Achieve-endorsed  process of plowing “earnings” back into the scheme.

    Johnson was a guest on the Dec. 10 call co-hosted by Achieve/LIST members Blackburn and Chitty.

    Johnson ostensibly went on the show to lead cheers for Achieve in the aftermath of the payout suspension in November. In that strange network-marketing way, Johnson’s guest spot also gave Blackburn a chance to shine. Rodney, unlike other Achievers, could summon the master and, in some ways, use her to dial down the pressure he might have felt if LIST was responsible for bringing 2,000 people into the “program.”

    Most disturbing about the call was the revelation that an elderly woman with an 86-year-old husband who was ill had joined Achieve. She was described by Chitty as “exactly the type of person that the Achieve Community is built around and for . . .”

    Blackburn also implied during the call that he was an Achieve insider, telling listeners that Johnson told him things they didn’t get to hear. He also suggested that LIST sponsorship group could do a better job performing customer service than Achieve itself.

    These things could not have been music to the ears of Johnson.

    It’s now clear that several Achieve promos by Blackburn have gone missing from YouTube, including one in which he recorded six minutes of footage from the website of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission while planting the seed the agency had no jurisdiction over “programs” such as Achieve

    On this President’s Day it is unclear if the SEC is investigating Achieve. The agency last month declined to comment on Blackburn’s video. Achieve is reported to be under investigation by state authorities in Colorado and Michigan.

    Blackburn’s now-missing SEC challenge was titled, “Network Marketing & MLM Programs Are Getting Better!!!” It returns the message shown below.

    blackburnachievecommunity

    Also missing is a video posted in mid-December in which Blackburn appeared to apologize to Achieve Community members for not being supportive enough of Johnson and Achieve “admins” on a Facebook site who were clashing with or deleting individuals who raised concerns about Achieve. It was titled, “Rodney Apology Achieve Community.”

    All of these Achieve-themed videos by Blackburn appear to have been removed.

    • Achieve Community Update 1 10 2015 By The LIST Marketing Team
    • Network Marketing & MLM Programs Are Getting Better!!!
    • Achieve Community Update 1/ 4 /2015
    • LIST – Achieve Community Update and More!!!
    • Rodney Apology Achieve Community
    • Achieve Community Update 12-5-14 2014
    • Achieve Community Update 12-2-14 Part 2
    • Achieve Community Update 12-2-2014 Relaunch is Here! No be patient…
    • Achieve Community Update 12 1 14 2014
    • Achieve Community Update 11 21 2014
    • Achieve Community Relaunch is Coming
    • Achieve Update 11-12-2014
    • Achieve Community – Believe…
    • Achieve Community Are You Ready?
    • Achieve Community Update 10 22 2014
    • Achieve Community What’s Possible? Paid out $138,000 this week!
    • Achieve Community Update- $102,000 Paid Out This Week!!!
    • Achieve Community~ Chuck made Money! $8,000!!!
    • Achieve Community Come Experience Achieve
    • Achieve Community- How to Repurchase Positions and Why…
    • The Achieve Community- How Does It Work?

    Meanwhile, there have been deletions of certain LIST content and content from other “programs” pushed by Blackburn, including Unison Wealth. Blackburn pitches for Ponzi-board programs such as “Rockfeller,” “Automatic Mobile Cash,” “Bring The Bacon Home” and “Trinity Lines” remain.