“Well we have been dealt a setback today…the judge here agreed with the government to transfer us to the District Court in Washington DC… The same judge who railroaded Andy. I will make a motion for her to recuse herself and if she will not (and she will not) I will take an appeal.” — Remark attributed to Dwight Owen Schweitzer that is contained within email by former AdSurfDaily spokeswoman Sara Mattoon that discusses plan to “flood” a federal judge with letters of support for jailed ASD Ponzi schemer Andy Bowdoin, Aug. 13, 2012
Thomas A. "Andy" Bowdoin
Former AdSurfDaily member Dwight Owen Schweitzer — later to join former ASD colleague Todd Disner as a pitchman for the Zeek Rewards 1-percent-a-day-plus MLM scheme — is quoted in an email circulating among ASD members that ASD President Andy Bowdoin was “railroaded” by a federal judge.
The quotation attributed to Schweitzer was contained within an Aug. 13 email forwarded by Disner after being assembled by former ASD spokeswoman Sara Mattoon. Mattoon has a history of packaging communications friendly to ASD, adding her purported insights to the communications and emailing them to members. The Aug. 13 email calls for ASD members to “flood” a federal judge with letters of support for Bowdoin. The ASD patriarch and veteran securities swindler is scheduled to be sentenced Aug. 29 in the District of Columbia by U.S. District Judge Rosemary Collyer.
Previous Mattoon emails have quoted Kenneth Wayne Leaming, a purported “sovereign citizen” now jailed near Seattle after a 2011 investigation by an FBI Terrorism Task Force. Leaming was accused of filing false liens against at least five public officials involved in the ASD Ponzi case, harboring two fugitives wanted in a separate home-business scheme, being a felon in possession of firearms and uttering a bogus “Bonded Promissory Note” for $1 million.
Leaming, who is not an attorney, was said to be performing legal work on behalf of some ASD members.
In May 2012, Bowdoin pleaded guilty to wire fraud in the ASD Ponzi case and acknowledged that ASD was a Ponzi scheme and that his company never operated lawfully from the inception of its 1-percent-a-day (or more) “program” in 2006. Bowdoin, 77, originally remained free on bond after his guilty plea, pending formal sentencing.
But Bowdoin was jailed in June 2012, after prosecutors presented evidence that Bowdoin continued to promote scams after the U.S. Secret Service seized more than $80 million in ASD-related proceeds in 2008 and after Bowdoin was arrested on ASD-related Ponzi charges in 2010. Prosecutors identified those scams as “OneX,” and AdViewGlobal (AVG).
Like ASD, AVG was a 1-percent-a-day “program.” AVG, which launched in February 2009 after the seizure of ASD-related bank accounts in 2008, vanished mysteriously in the summer of 2009 after issuing threats to members and journalists. AVG was referenced in a lawsuit filed by ASD members who accused Bowdoin of racketeering.
Contained within the forwarded email dated Aug. 13 are at least two ads for the Zeek Rewards’ MLM which, like ASD, plants the seed that a return that corresponds to an annualized return in the hundreds of percent is possible. Precisely why the Zeek ads appeared in the email is unclear. They are attributed to a Zeek affiliate known as “Compassion Ministries” and display Zeek videos produced by USHBB Inc., a company that once produced ads for the Narc That Car pyramid scheme that collapsed in 2010 after the Better Business Bureau raised concerns about Narc and investigative reporters began to write about Narc and produce television reports about the “program.”
Even as the Mattoon email solicited support for Bowdoin as his Aug. 29 sentencing date approaches, it cautions ASD members to “be careful” if they write to Bowdoin in jail because “they read his mail.”
Disner and Schweitzer sued the U.S. government in November 2011, claiming the seizure of ASD’s database was unconstitutional. The lawsuit originally was filed in the Southern District of Florida, but a judge there granted a request by the government to transfer the case to the District of Columbia. The case now appears on the docket in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia and has been assigned to Collyer.
The Aug. 13 email from Mattoon quotes Schweitzer as saying, “Well we have been dealt a setback today…the judge here agreed with the government to transfer us to the District Court in Washington DC… The same judge who railroaded Andy. I will make a motion for her to recuse herself and if she will not (and she will not) I will take an appeal.”
When suing the United States in November 2011, Disner and Schweitzer relied in part on a purported expert opinion from Keith Laggos that ASD was not a Ponzi scheme. Like Disner and Schweitzer, Laggos also has been linked to the Zeek Rewards’ scheme.
Laggos reportedly was fired as a Zeek “consultant” last month. Details surrounding the reported firing remain unclear.
Zeek is now the subject of an “examination” by North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper.
Zeek’s news Blog published this baffling message yesterday (italics added):
Hello Fine People:
The team wanted to let you know there won’t be any training, recruitment or leadership calls for the next few days while planning is going on. Standby for some important announcements. Thank you for your patience!
Our assertion: Were he alive today and desperately needed cash, famed daredevil Karl Wallenda would find Zeek’s tightropes too dangerous to walk.
Purported MLM “expert” sent to woodshed: Zeek “consultant” and former SEC defendant Keith Laggos reportedly gets the Zeek boot after using phrases associated with the investment trade and after suggesting that gambling regulations could be used to derail the Zeek train in the near future.
Train wrecks and pom-poms: To his credit, MLMHelpDesk Blogger Troy Dooly reports the Laggos news and dubs an incendiary audio recording featuring Laggos into a Dooly-produced video. But known for his ability to find something “positive” in an MLM train wreck, Dooly goes on to suggest Laggos used Zeek-banned words because he was distracted and wasn’t concentrating. Dooly later declares that an examination into Zeek’s business practices by North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper is “exciting” news.
Only in Stepfordian MLM: Zeek cheerleading video with Dooly presented as centerpiece and Laggos presented as key answer man remains online, even after Zeek cans Laggos and Dooly questions the ethics of Laggos while at once making excuses for him.
Cluelessness: No guidance from Zeek on whether affiliates should avoid using the video when introducing Zeek.
More cluelessness: No guidance from Zeek on whether affiliates should continue to use marketing props published by Laggos’ Network Marketing Business Journal, a previous subject of gushing from Dooly.
Plan B: Laggos heralds Lyoness.
Stepfordian MLM vomit: Lyoness trades on name of former South Africa President Nelson Mandela, a recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize.
Why lots of people are fed up with Stepfordian MLM: As Lyoness uses an image of Mandela in a marketing campaign, AdSurfDaily’s Andy Bowdoin awaits sentencing in case in which ASD was accused of trading on the name of then-U.S. President George W. Bush to sanitize $110 million Ponzi scheme.
Whatever “works” is OK in Stepfordian MLM: As nascent penny-auction site and upstart Zeek competitor known as Bids That Give prepped for launch and positioned itself as a company that would aid charities for children, early promos traded on the name of the White House and Chelsea Clinton, the daughter of former President Bill Clinton and U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
Oddities: Narc That Car/Data Network Affiliates/Phil Piccolo/Text Cash Network.
More . . .
** ______________________________ **
EDITOR’S NOTE: While performing a high-wire stunt in Puerto Rico in 1978, legendary daredevil Karl Wallenda fell to his death. He was 73, a risk-taker to the end.
UPDATED 11:39 P.M. EDT (AUG. 14, U.S.A.)
This is one of those “only in Stepfordian MLM” stories, a story that features not one, but two tightropes over a treacherously windy gorge Karl Wallenda would judge too dangerous to walk even if the daredevil business were in a sustained slump and he desperately needed cash. These are the tightropes over the Zeekler/Zeek Rewards Gorge, a man-made gulch in Lexington, N.C., potentially MLM’s next Quincy, Fla.
Quincy was the home of AdSurfDaily, a company that did an almost inconceivable amount of damage to MLM’s already-suffering reputation — first by creating an obvious, five-alarm Ponzi scheme and trying to disguise it as a “revenue-sharing” program and, later, by trying to “save” itself by comparing the U.S. Secret Service to “Satan” and the 9/11 terrorists.
Like the ASD story (and far too many MLM tales), the Zeek story is one that mixes the incongruous with the bizarre and only reinforces negative stereotypes about multilevel marketing.
Keith Laggos, a figurative tightrope-walker and purported MLM expert who once opined that AdSurfDaily’s 1-percent-a-day “program” was not a Ponzi scheme and later became a consultant whose image appeared repeatedly in a cheerleading video for the Zeek Rewards 1-percent-a-day-plus “program” after ASD was raided by the U.S. Secret Service in a Ponzi scheme case, is out, the company reportedly told Blogger Troy Dooly. (Link below.)
Laggos, though, appears not to have been fired for his ASD opinion. Indeed, Zeek may find comfort in that musing, which has been used by at least two ASD members (Todd Disner and Dwight Owen Schweitzer) who accused the U.S. government of presenting a “tissue of lies” to a federal judge when bringing the ASD Ponzi forfeiture case. Both of those ASD members also emerged as Zeek promoters. Curiously, the claim that the government had presented a “tissue of lies” was made longafter ASD had lost the case in both U.S. District Court and the U.S. Court of Appeals.
ASD and its apologists never were known for their impeccable timing. Neither was a 1-percent-a-day ASD knockoff known as AdViewGlobal (AVG), which incongruously announced a month after its February 2009 launch that its bank account had been “suspended” and that its CEO had resigned but would remain in the “accounting” department.
Two months later, AVG, which purported to operate from Uruguay while using U.S.-based Gmail to perform customer service, announced its banking problem had been solved by an offshore facilitator. AVG made this announcement on the same day the President of the United States announced a crackdown on offshore fraud. AVG was done weeks later. Before it exited the stage, it apparently thought it prudent to threaten to sue members who shared negative information and perhaps even have their Internet connections shut down.
Zeek is playing in this same bizarre field. Over the past couple of weeks, Dooly has ventured that Zeek might sue Randy Schroeder, an executive with the Mona Vie MLM company, for using words Zeek might find objectionable — “Ponzi” and “pyramid,” for example. And Dooly has suggested that a North Carolina credit union was risking a lawsuit from Zeek. Meanwhile, a Zeek critic known as “K. Chang” was informed by a purported Zeek “consultant” that Zeek might sue if its efforts to bring down “K. Chang’s’ site on HubPages.com failed.
Zeek now bizarrely claims that “all” criticism of Zeek has been unfair.
This claim was made just days after Zeek appears to have fired Laggos for casting his MLM line elsewhere while a Zeek “consultant” and while not sticking to the company line that Zeek does not constitute an investment opportunity. The other “program” is known as Lyoness, which Laggos has described as his “Plan B” and a “Plan B” for current Zeek members.
MLM ‘Mo’
To hear Laggos tell it on tape, the MLM business is the “momentum” business. One of the ways to maintain the momentum is to move certain banking operations offshore, say, to places such as Hong Kong. Laggos helped Zeek do that, according to Laggos. But Zeek might lose the mo and might not be far enough away to neutralize the regulators, he speculated.
No matter, Laggos ventured. There’s always another company with mo.
“Since last November, Zeekler has had the momentum,’ Laggos intoned in a recording now playing on Dooly’s Blog as part of a YouTube video and report on the sudden sacking of Laggos. “I believe they are going to lose the momentum shortly . . . The company now that’s gaining momentum — and I think it will be the momentum company over the next six months or a year — is Lyoness. And I’m suggesting that a lot of you guys consider Lyoness as your Plan B company now. Stay working with Zeekler. Keep promoting it. Don’t cross-sponsor it, but build a second income. Now, what’s nice about an ideal Plan B company is you would be able to work passively. Lyoness is that kind of company.”
In HYIP-speak, the word “passively” is code that tells participants that they won’t have to do much or anything at all to pile up cash (a/k/a “passive earnings”) by the boatload if they send in enough cash at the beginning of a scheme. Zeek is afraid of that word because it’s the type of word that can cause the SEC to come knocking. Lots of MLM scams that rely on willfully blind promoters to gain a head of steam use it in the early stages. When things get too hot, they try to take it off the table. The reason they try to take it off the table — sometimes by threatening affiliates — is it can lead to civil and criminal charges, seizures of bank accounts and investigations by multiple agencies.
Mixing the language of investments with references to Plan B didn’t do Zeek any favors, to be sure. Another thing that didn’t do Zeek any favors was Laggos’ reference to Zeek becoming the “momentum” company “last November.” In late September of 2011, the U.S. government released about $55 million in remissions payments to victims of the ASD Ponzi scheme.
This leads to questions such as these: How much of Zeek’s “momentum” was fueled by funds originally seized in the ASD Ponzi case and returned to victims in the form of remissions payments? How many ASD members turned around and plowed what effectively was their crime-victim compensation into Zeek, another 1-percent-a-day scheme? Why did Zeek promoters and former ASD members Disner and Schweitzer wait until November 2011 — the same month Laggos now says Zeek became the “momentum” company — to file their ASD-related lawsuit against the government and to present a federal judge an opinion from Laggos that ASD was not a Ponzi scheme?
“Plan B,” also known as “Don’t put all your eggs in one basket,” has a long and sordid history in HYIP Ponzi Land. AVG, for instance, was a de facto Plan B company set up after ASD, the Plan A company, got raided by the U.S. Secret Service on the Tuesday after the previous Friday’s seizure (Aug. 1, 2008) of ASD bank accounts. Lots of ASD members deluded themselves into believing that official company line that God was on ASD’s side. Some of ASD’s earliest post-seizure apologists told the troops that the seizure was a good thing because it would provide the government an opportunity to see how lawful and wholesome ASD truly was, that the government did not understand the business model and had made a monumental mistake.
The MLM vultures, though, had a slightly different take. In case the government didn’t see the ASD light, they speculated, ASD members could join other autosurfs, HYIPs and cash-gifting schemes. These Plan B schemes would enable ASD losses to be made up elsewhere. “Offshore” programs were positioned as the best.
Among the tips Laggos provided to listeners of the Lyoness conference call was this: “Don’t put no more than 70 percent back in [Zeek]. Take out 20 or 30 percent [on] a daily basis. [Unintelligible.] This would be a good place. But, by the same token, if you put $10,000 in Zeekler, if nothing happens over the next year, you’ll probably make $30,000 or $40,000, if that’s all you do without building the front end, the matrix . . . The same amount of money in Lyoness, you’re looking . . . and not doing anything else, without single sponsoring . . . you can probably make a quarter-million dollars.”
The threat to Zeek, according to Laggos, is the FTC and how U.S. gambling regulations could be applied to penny-auctions such as its Zeekler arm. His words on the tape suggest he is confident that Zeek has sufficient cover to ward off a Ponzi/securities investigation. But even as he’s suggesting Zeek has the securities angle covered, he’s using the language of investments.
We wonder: Can MLM really have sunk to these deplorable depths?
But it gets even worse.
Laggos then suggested Lyoness could be used as a hedge in case the FTC acted against Zeek.
“If I’m wrong about what’s gonna happen with the penny auctions — and if you look at my career, I haven’t been wrong often — then the worst-case scenario is we screwed up and we made two incomes . . . We’re making two great incomes with two great companies.”
Dooly, whom to date hasn’t found Zeek’s various claims altogether too much, now has decided that Laggos crossed the altogether-too-much line when he harrumphed for Lyoness and used certain words Zeek finds offensive.
While the featured speaker on the Lyoness call last month with Zeek members listening in, Laggos spoke about Zeek in “several” ways that were “way out of compliance,” Dooly ventured in his video report running on YouTube.
Laggos “talks about putting money into the game,” Dooly reports. “I mean, this is bad right here. You can’t put money in. OK? You either join the company and you’re buying memberships, you’re buying bids. But for Keith to be talking like this was an investment-type deal. This is just . . . and we all fall prey to this. But this is why you shouldn’t be doing public calls when you’re under fire and you’re not paying attention to what you say. And you can hear in Keith’s case — the phone [is] ringing, his assistant [is] coming in to talk to him, his mind is not in the game the way it should be. And that is just . . . it’s sad right now ’cause he’s no longer with [Zeek] . . .”
In short, according to Dooly, Laggos’ big sin was painting Zeek as an investment program in contravention of the Rules Of Zeek.
Not sticking to the script, however, is hardly an original sin within the Zeek sphere. In 2011, while speaking during a conference call to raise money for the Disner/Schweitzer ASD-related lawsuit against the government, Schweitzer, a one-time lawyer whose license was suspended in Connecticut, said he’d invested in ASD. Nevertheless, Disner and Schweitzer later presented a federal judge Laggos’ opinion that ASD was not a Ponzi scheme and that providing money to ASD did not constitute making an investment.
Nobel Peace Prize Used As MLM Stage Prop
Lyoness is an MLM company eager to let its participants and prospects know that it is building a school in the hometown of Nelson Mandela and that a Lyoness team recently was invited to the 1993 Nobel Peace Prize-winner’s home. It even publishes a picture to prove it and notes that a Mandela grandson is a Lyoness rep.
Back in the United States, meanwhile, former ASD President Andy Bowdoin will find out Aug. 29 how long he’ll spend in federal prison. Zeek’s business model and disclaimer language strongly resemble that of ASD, which the U.S. Secret Service described as a “criminal enterprise” that relied on linguistic sleight-of-hand to draft tens of thousands of people into an electronic Ponzi scheme. ASD traded on the name of then-U.S. President George W. Bush, in effect using the White House to sanitize a massive international fraud caper.
Welcome to the Highwire Wing of MLM.
While all of this is going on, a nascent penny-auction “program” and upstart Zeek competitor that claims it exists to elevate children out of poverty is getting ready to unleash itself on the consuming public.
That “program” is known as Bids That Give. One prelaunch promo claimed that a founding affiliate was an SEO expert once hired by a candidate for the U.S. Presidency. The first three minutes of the promo did not even reference Bids That Give. Instead, it dropped names linked to the White House, including the name of former First Daughter Chelsea Clinton and Doug Read, an adviser to two U.S. Presidents. For good measure, the promo dropped the name of NBC News anchor Lester Holt.
The most vomitous MLM “programs” are infamous for dropping names. It is typically the case that the individuals whose names are dropped have no affiliation whatsoever with the “program.” But name-dropping and brand leeching have proven to work time after time in MLM scheme after MLM scheme. (See screenshot.)
Did Mark Zuckerberg REALLY endorse JSS Tripler/JustBeenPaid. According to this Blog, the answer is yes. Facebook did not respond to a request for comment from the PP Blog last year on claims that Zuckerberg had endorsed JSS/JPB, which purports to provide a return of 60 percent a month.
MLM And Wordplay
In 2009, ASD’s Bowdoin was sued by some members of his own company under the federal racketeteering (RICO) statute. Looking at it another way, the ASD members came to believe that ASD was a criminal enterprise with a plan to expand while coming up with new and better ways to steal.
Because veteran MLM huckster Bowdoin also was a veteran securities swindler who’d been charged at the state level with fraud in at least three Alabama counties before launching Florida-based ASD in 2006, federal prosecutors said, Bowdoin tried to avoid the use of the language of investments as a means of keeping the 1-percent-a-day ASD scheme under the radar.
The linguistic cover Bowdoin chose — a cover the Feds stripped bare — was that ASD was an “advertising” company with a “revenue sharing” program, not an investment company selling “securities.”
Bowdoin tried to create additional cover by saying payouts were not guaranteed, according to federal court filings.
Now, four years after the ASD raid, Zeek is using the same type of disclaimer language and members are getting the same sort of instructions on what words to avoid.
Federal investigators became wise to this type of linguistic charade long ago. The charade was outlined in the 2010 criminal indictment against Bowdoin. The indictment quoted Bowdoin himself laying out the linguistic plot to hide the true nature of the 1-percent-a-day ASD program and keep the government at bay (italics added):
“[L]et’s don’t (sic) use the words investment and returns. Instead, lets (sic) use ad sales and surfing commissions. The Attorney Generals in the U.S. don’t like for us to use these words in our program.”
Wordplay to mask an investment scheme also was referenced repeatedly in the forfeiture complaints against more than $80 million in ASD-related bank accounts (italics added):
“The [undercover agent] asked her about investing with ASD. She immediately said, ‘Don’t call it investing, you know what I mean, we can get in trouble if we say that, we have to be careful.” — Source: Federal forfeiture complaint, Aug. 5, 2008.
Only In MLM La-La Land
To be sure, the departure from Zeek of Laggos is a big story. But it’s not the biggest story. The biggest story is that the Paul Burks-led company already was walking a tightrope when it hired the tightrope-walking Laggos and now has cut his rope, casting him into the gorge without informing the membership at large and without pulling the tightrope-walking promotional material that references Laggos or was produced by his publishing company.
Some of that promo material features tightrope-walking Dooly, who’s now questioning the ethics of tightrope-walking Laggos.
How strange is the latest PR disaster to rock Zeekland? So strange it almost defies description.
As noted above, news of the Laggos departure was delivered by Zeek-friendly Blogger Dooly. And the news was delivered even as images of Dooly appeared online as a centerpiece in the same cheerleading video that features images of Laggos as centerpieces. The video largely consists of still photos taken at a Zeek “Red Carpet Day” event in Clemmons, N.C., on June 13. Incredibly, the video continues to appear online, despite the sudden and unexpected departure of Laggos last month.
On Aug. 4, Zeek used its Blog to accuse unspecified “North Carolina Credit Unions” of slander for expressing concerns to customers about Zeek. The post implied Zeek members who didn’t toe the company line would be penalized. Such members were “violators” of company policy, the firm said.
But Zeek has not addresed the Laggos issue on its Blog. Nor has it provided any guidance on whether members should stop using the Zeek cheerleading video that features both Laggos and Dooly, along with Zeek staffers, executives and members who showed up at the June 13 event in Clemmons. The Laggos-produced written materials also are out there, with no guidance from Zeek about whether members should continue to use them or to rely on them in any way.
Like ASD, Zeek plants the seed that participants will earn a return that corresponds to an annual return in the hundreds of percent but insists it is not offering an investment. The office of North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper said last week that it had asked Zeek to produce “documents” as part of an “examination” of its business practices. Dooly described that development as “exciting.”
Zeek is making MLM look ridiculous. Troy Dooly is making it look sillier yet. He should not be “covering” a company that is trading off his credibility as an MLM advocate to sell itself. Dooly now is questioning the ethics of Laggos even as Dooly permits Zeek to use his image in marketing promos that also feature images of Laggos.
Prior to opining that ASD was not a Ponzi scheme — only to be one-upped later by Bowdoin, who said that it was when entering a guilty plea to wire fraud in May 2012 — Laggos agreed to settle a 2004 case with the SEC that alleged he issued laudatory press releases and a laudatory article for a company that later become the subject of a securities investigation without disclosing he was being compensated for touting the purported opportunity.
Laggos neither admitted nor denied the SEC’s allegations, which involved a company known as Converge Global Inc. and a subsidiary known as TeleWrx Inc. The future Zeek consultant settled the SEC case by disgorging nearly $12,000, paying interest of nearly $2,000, paying a civil fine of $19,500 and agreeing to a five-year penny-stock ban.
In April, Network Marketing Business Journal, which lists Laggos as its president, published a laudatory article on Zeek. Dooly memorialized the article’s publication by publishing a special Sunday story about it on Dooly’s MLMHelpDesk. He memorialized it further by producing a gushing video in which he described Laggos as “my good friend and mentor.”
“He is breaking a story here that I thought was amazing,” Dooly said of the NMBJ Zeek article, which gushed that Zeek has a 25 to 1 customer to rep ratio. The claim is important because, if true, it could take Ponzi and pyramid concerns out of play. Some Zeek critics doubt that it’s true.
In April, Dooly noted that NMBJ was one of his favorite publications and that he picked it up on that particular Sunday while relaxing near his pool over a cup of tea.
But now — less than four months after Dooly’s April 15 gushing story and video on NMBJ’s gushing story about Zeek and less than two months after images of both Dooly and Laggos appeared in the Zeek video in which Zeek gushed about itself — Laggos is out at Zeek.
“Breaking MLM News: Zeek Rewards Officially Parts Ways With Dr Keith Laggos After Recorded Call Goes Public,” Dooly advised readers in a headline.
The precise reasons for the departure of Laggos remain unclear. Also unclear is whether Laggos will retain a reported Zeek downline of about 4,500 members that he apparently was managing while at once being a paid Zeek consultant.
Produced by USHBB Inc., which once produced videos for the bizarre (and failed) Narc That Car license-plate recording scheme that claimed some affiliates were out-earning the President of the United States, the Zeek video heralding Laggos, Dooly and others shows Dooly mugging with Zeek executive Dawn Wright-Olivares and Laggos posing with Peter Mingils. The last names of both Laggos and Mingils are misspelled in the USHBB video.
Like Dooly, Mingils is a board member of the Association of Network Marketing Professionals. He’s also Zeek’s Training & Incentives Coordinator and is “rockin’ the Certified Trainers course curriculum,” according to Zeek.
Zeek, which at one time listed USHBB executive OH Brown as a Zeek employee, now says Brown is “banging out video after video.”
Some of the backstory surrounding the failed Narc That Car scheme is remarkably similar to the Zeek scheme. In addition to the presence of USHBB, Narc and Rex Venture LLC, Zeek’s purported parent company, both have scored the Better Business Bureau’s lowest rating: “F.”
Affiliates of both Narc and Zeek, meanwhile, have sought to turn attention away from the core issues surrounding both Narc and Zeek by suggesting that the BBB is a fraud.
But perhaps most compellingly, the now-failed Narc scheme once did at least part of its banking at NewBridge Bank, one of the banks that Zeek used before mysteriously announcing on Memorial Day that it was ending its relationship with NewBridge. Narc was based in Texas. How it ended up banking at NewBridge is unclear.
What is clear is that Narc was a pyramid scheme that planted the seed it existed to help the U.S. AMBER Alert system for locating abducted children and traded on imagery of the White House. Both the U.S. Department of Justice and the National Center For Missing and Exploited Children, which administers part of the AMBER Alert program, confirmed to the PP Blog more than two years ago that they had no affiliation with Narc.
A Narc Knockoff With Phil Piccolo As Background Player
Narc appears to have inspired a knockoff MLM scheme known as Data Network Affiliates, which was linked to longtime MLM huckster Phil Piccolo. In late 2011, DNA’s website — and the website of another a Piccolo-linked “program” known as OWOW — were used to drive traffic to an emerging MLM scheme known as TextCashNetwork (TCN).
In December 2011, the PP Blog reported that TCN had used the name of Rex Venture Group on its website in the context of a purported “ASSIGNMENT” clause. The Rex Venture reference later mysteriously went missing from the TCN site, a circumstance that could cause investigators to question Rex Venture about whether it was aware that its name appeared on the TCN site and whether it had any business relationship with TCN.
If this is modern MLM, MLM is in a lot of trouble. Karl Wallenda, who built a magical name in the daredevil business and made a career out of taking risks, wouldn’t do Zeek.
UPDATED 6:36 P.M. EDT (U.S.A.) To hear some folks in HYIP Ponzi Land tell it, “opportunities” can avoid the long arm of the law by preemptively prohibiting affiliates from using certain words — “investment” and “security,” for two examples. Regardless, court records show that hucksters who played linguistic games to mask their fraud schemes confronted investigators who neatly exposed their wink-nod wordplay.
The following is from a transcript of a May 2007 U.S. Secret Service recording in which undercover agents posing as prospects were talking to Gregory McKnight of Legisi inside Legisi’s office in Michigan. McKnight and Legisi later were implicated in a $72 million Ponzi scheme that in part was promoted on the MoneyMakerGroup forum:
McKnight: ” . . . it is not an investment.”
Agent 1: “Okay.”
McKnight: “I hope you have any idea — if you have any inkling of an idea that it is an investment, then you should really . . .”
Agent 1: “I’m sorry.”
McKnight: “This is a loan to my corporation.”
Agent 1: “Okay.”
“Agent 2: “What’s the difference?”
McKnight: “The difference is — if I am selling investments and I am not registered with the SEC, I am going to prison.”
Agent 2: “Oh.”
Outcome: McKnight, adjudicated liable civilly in a case brought by the SEC and ordered to pay millions of dollars in restitution and penalties, is scheduled to be sentenced on a criminal charge of wire fraud on Sept. 11. The U.S. Secret Service brought the criminal case.
The following is from Paragraph 43 of the August 2008 complaint for forfeiture that targeted tens of millions of dollars in bank accounts tied to the AdSurfDaily Ponzi scheme, which gathered at least $110 million. ASD also was promoted on the Ponzi boards (italics added):
“The [undercover agent] asked her about investing with ASD. She immediately said, ‘Don’t call it investing, you know what I mean, we can get in trouble if we say that, we have to be careful.”
Outcome: A federal judge ordered the civil forfeiture of more than $80 million, including the forfeiture of more than $65.8 million in ASD President Andy Bowdoin’s personal bank accounts and more than $14 million in bank accounts linked to Golden Panda Ad Builder, another autosurf. The U.S. Secret Service brought the civil case.
The following is from the November 2010 criminal indictment against Bowdoin. The prosecution quoted from an email from Bowdoin in which the ASD patriarch himself laid out the wink-nod nature of the 1-percent-a-day ASD program and explained his bid to skirt securities laws by coming up with naming conventions to keep the government at bay (italics added):
“[L]et’s don’t (sic) use the words investment and returns. Instead, lets (sic) use ad sales and surfing commissions. The Attorney Generals in the U.S. don’t like for us to use these words in our program.”
Outcome: Bowdoin, currently jailed amid allegations he pushed other fraud schemes after the seizure and after his arrest and posting of bond, is scheduled to be sentenced on a criminal charge of wire fraud on Aug. 29. The criminal charge was brought after an investigation by the U.S. Secret Service.
And what about AdViewGlobal (AVG), the alleged 1-percent-a-day knockoff of ASD that prosecutors now say they’ve linked to Bowdoin? From the PP Blog’s April 27, 2009, report about the AVG forum warning members not to call AVG an investment program (italics added):
A Mod at an AdViewGlobal forum set up by Mods and members of AdSurfDaily has warned AVG members not to refer to their purchases as “investments.”
Rather, the Mod said, AVG members purchase “advertising” and are not “investing” or “investors.”
Posts that used the terminology of investments would be deleted, the Mod warned.
AVG members currently are stressing a so-called “80-20? strategy as a means of keeping the program viable for the long-term.
Analysts, however, point out that the “80-20? plans — taking out 20 percent in cash and letting 80 percent ride with the companies — are just another way to keep cash within ready reach of autosurf Ponzi schemes to sustain the deception.
There is not a single, documented case in the history of autosurf prosecutions in which the use of the word “advertising” to describe what the government views as an “investment” program involving the sale of unregistered securities has succeeded as a means of fending off a prosecution.
In other words, the government has made it plain that you can’t avoid prosecution by using other terminology to describe an investment program.
Regardless, many surf companies continue to insist that the use of the word “advertising” as a replacment for “investing” somehow insulates surfs from prosecution.
Outcome: Unknown. The AVG forum mysteriously disappeared, as did AVG itself. In April 2012, federal prosecutors announced in court filings that they’d linked Bowdoin to AVG.
Virtually all of the material quoted above has been a matter of record for at least three years. In the case of Legisi, it has been a matter of record for more than four years.
Wordplay, though, still is in play among “programs” that purport to pay members outsized percentages that correspond to annualized returns in the hundreds of percent per year. In the past 24 hours on the MoneyMakerGroup forum, for example, these posts (below) appeared in the context of the Zeek Rewards “program.” The first post used the word “investment.” Perhaps ignorant of history (or maybe not), the poster quickly followed up in the second post by saying the use of “investment” was a mistake and that what really was meant was that he or she had purchased “Bids.”
It was hard not to hear the echoes of ASD and AVG members doing largely the same thing summers ago, sometimes after being scolded by the purported forum masters.
“It’s gonna blow up; it’s gonna be an ugly blow-up. It’ll probably happen sooner, not later. And it will leave a trail of devastation behind it. And I urge you to not even consider them.” — Comment on Zeek Rewards by Randy Schroeder, president of North America and Europe for Mona Vie, July 16, 2012
Randy Schroeder
UPDATED 7:10 P.M. EDT (U.S.A.) Randy Schroeder, the president of Mona Vie for North America and Europe, has done what few major figures in multilevel marketing have been willing to do: comment about the menace posed by the Zeek Rewards MLM program.
It was a most unexpected and welcome development, something that speaks well of both Schroeder and Mona Vie. But some Zeek apologists immediately (and predictably) accused Schroeder of meddling in North Carolina-based Zeek’s affairs and defaming the company, which suddenly announced on Memorial Day evening (May 28) that it was closing accounts at two U.S. banks and mysteriously claimed that affiliates had to cash or deposit checks drawn on the banks before June 1 or they would bounce.
Just 22 days earlier — on May 6 — Ponzi-forum huckster “DRdave,” also known as “Ken Russo,” claimed on the TalkGold Ponzi forum that he’d received $34,735 from Zeek since Nov. 14, 2011. The Zeek money, according to the post, was delivered largely if not wholly by AlertPay and SolidTrustPay. Both companies are offshore payment-processing firms linked to fraud scheme after fraud scheme promoted online.
Hucksters such as “Ken Russo” and myriad others use “I Got Paid” posts on the Ponzi forums as a means of creating the appearance a scheme is legitimate. Included in “Ken Russo’s” signature at TalkGold today is a link to a “program” known as “NewGNI,” which purports to pay “up to 6% weekly.”
"Ken Russo," as "DRdave," brags on the TalkGold Ponzi forum about a purported Zeek payout of $2,164.80 from Rex Venture Group LLC while pitching an emerging HYIP known as "NewGNI."
GNI may be a knockoff scam to the collapsed Gold Nugget Invest HYIP Ponzi, which also used the acronym GNI while purporting to pay a Zeek-like 7.5 percent a week. The government of Belize issued a warning about GNI in November 2009. In December 2009 — after the GNI warning by Belize — the “program” nevertheless was pitched (with three others HYIPs) by a member of the “Surf’s Up” forum, which existed to shill for accused AdSurfDaily Ponzi schemer Andy Bowdoin.
Any number of Zeek affiliates, including individuals Zeek has described as “empoyees,” hail from the ranks of ASD’s $110 million Ponzi scheme and various other interconnected fraud schemes. Some Zeek affiliates, for example, also are promoting JSSTripler/JustBeenPaid, which purports to pay 2 percent a day and may have ties to the “sovereign citizens” movement.
Zeek promoters also have been associated with a “program” known as OneX, which U.S. federal prosecutors described in April as a “fraudulent scheme” and pyramid cycling money in ASD-like fashion.
In addition to pushing Zeek, ASD, the NewGNI knockoff and a JSS/JBP knockoff known as JSS Tripler 2 that hatched a companion fraud scheme known as Compound150, “Ken Russo” pushed Club Asteria, which purported to provide a Zeek-like payout of between 3 percent and 8 percent a week before promoters came under the lens of CONSOB, the Italian securities regulator.
Amid these ruinous circumstances that are creating monumentally bizarre PR and legal disasters for the MLM trade, what did certain purported MLM experts do?
Why, boo Mona Vie’s Schroeder, of course — for the apparent high crime of trying to protect his own company and affiliates from these interconnected, international cancers.
Here is hoping that other influential MLM executives and trade groups follow Schroeder’s lead, including the Association of Network Marketing Professionals. Its name is being used to sanitize the Zeek scheme — and if it continues to permit that to happen, it risks a future in the dust bin of irrelevance.
While we’re speaking of hope, here’s hoping that Mona Vie will not shy away from Schroeder’s Zeek comments and actually will join him in the remarks, which he says were made as a concerned individual, not as a Mona Vie executive. Mona Vie should back Schroeder to the hilt.
A ‘Messy Fact’
It’s a “messy fact that periodically a company comes along and sweeps people along into a trail that turns into a trail of devastation,” Schroeder said about Zeek Rewards during a July 16 conference call with Mona Vie distributors.
Schroeder, of course, was alluding to Zeek’s AdSurfDaily-like business model that solicits participants to shell out sums up to $10,000, offers a dubious “product” (or a “product” that is just lipstick on a pig), plants the seed that spectacular returns on the order of 500 percent a year are possible and insists participants who buy into the scheme are neither making an investment nor purchasing a security.
“My own opinion is that that company will come to grief, that it will come to grief in the relatively near future, not farther future,” Schroeder said of Zeek.
If history is any guide — and Schroeder, with considerable justification, suggests that it is — Zeek will encounter a regulatory action that will cause it to crater.
But those words and others — including the use by Schroeder of “pyramid” and “Ponzi” in the context of Zeek — did not sit well with MLM Blogger Troy Dooly. (See PP Blog June 10 editorial.)
Dooly Takes Schroeder To The Woodshed
Dooly wrote Thursday that he “started getting the links and downloads of Randy Schroeder’s call” on July 18, took some time to digest the call and to shoot off a text message to MonaVie founder Dallin Larsen about Dooly’s “concerns” about Schroeder’s remarks.
And then Dooly ventured that Rex Venture Group LLC, the purported parent company of Zeek, just might sue Schroeder and perhaps MonaVie itself. Dooly wrote (italics added):
As the leader of a billion dollar multi-national health and nutrition company in the network marketing community, Schroeder should be very careful what he has to say about any other company. Although he made it clear he was not speaking on behalf of MonaVie, as an officer of the company, he places the company and their distributors in jeopardy if Rex Venture Group LLC were to file some form of civil action.
Good grief. The world is facing the greatest white-collar fraud epidemic in history, much of the money is routed through murky businesses and shell companies with accounts at offshore payment processors such as AlertPay and SolidTrustPay and banks that are asleep at the switch because staying awake is bad for fee revenues, many of the corrupt “programs” use MLM or an MLM-like component — and Troy Dooly, apparently with a straight face, is telling Randy Schroeder that he’d better tread lightly on Paul Burks because Zeek just might sue.
In the same column in which he bizarrely took Schroeder to the woodshed for holding a view about Zeek that is wholly responsible and serves the best interest of the MLM community moving forward, Dooly equally bizarrely extended an olive branch to the subject of his fresh scorn. Indeed, Dooly suggested a bunch of legal messiness could be avoided if Schroeder and Dallin Larsen saddled up Mona Vie’s corporate jet and deposited themselves in North Carolina at Zeek’s next Red Carpet event.
While ensconced in North Carolina as Dooly’s guest, they could hear Zeek boss Paul Burks deliver the good word about the company and could get some extra education from the Zeek “team.”
Dooly wrote (italics added):
I challenge Randy and Dallin to take the corporate jet and travel to N.C. next week as my guests to the Red Carpet Day event. I will introduce you to Paul Burks, and his team and let you better understand their drive and mission for the company.
Dooly did not say whether Burks and Zeek would make their Ponzi-board team available to educate the Mona Vie executives on Zeek’s drive and mission. Nor did he say whether Zeek would make “Ken Russo” available to explain the differences between Zeek and, say, NewGNI or Club Asteria or JSS Tripler 2.
We sincerely hope Schroeder and Larsen decline Dooly’s offer to parachute into North Carolina to break bread with the Zeek pope and the “team.”
Dooly is engaging in pandering of the worst sort. It’s also caustically amateur PR because it raises the specter that an aggrieved Zeek might use legal muscle to silence Schroeder, who, like Larsen, is a prominent figure in MLM circles. Zeek’s Stepfordian cheerleaders will love it, of course, because it gives them a new supply of red meat and raises the prospect that, if Schroeder speaks his mind against Zeek and gets sued, the Bloggers and critics may be next.
History An Appropriate Guide
Intimidation campaigns did not work for AdSurfDaily; they will not work for Zeek, either directly or through proxies. Beyond that, Schroeder has the weight of history on his side: the notoriousness of the ASD Ponzi case, Andy Bowdoin’s guilty plea in that case and the guilty plea of Gregory McKnight in the Legisi HYIP Ponzi case. Of course, Schroeder also could point that accused Pathway To Prosperity HYIP operator Nicholas Smirnow is listed as an international fugitive wanted by INTERPOL. And Schroeder also could point out that Robert Hodgins, an accused international money-launderer for narcotics-traffickers, also has been linked to the HYIP “industry” and also is wanted by INTERPOL.
Just days ago, a federal grand jury returned a 49-count indictment against alleged HYIP purveyor Terrance Osberger, 48, of Genoa, Ohio. In March, a top U.S. Department of Justice official speaking in Mexico City commented on some of the challenges law enforcement is facing in the Internet Age, including bogus libel lawsuits filed to silence critics and protect ventures that engage in organized crime. In May, a top INTERPOL official speaking in Israel said the cost of cybercrime was approaching $1 trillion a year in Europe and that U.S. banks lost $12 billion to cybercrime last year.
Regardless, we have to concede that Zeek/Rex Venture might be stupid enough to try to score points by suing Schroeder and MonaVie. Back in 2008, then-closeted Ponzi schemer Andy Bowdoin of ASD planted the seed that he might just sue “MLM Watchdog” Rod Cook for $40 million. Bowdoin even announced that he’d filled a pot with $750,000 and was going to use it to start suing critics of his 1-percent-a-day “program” back to the Stone Age.
Cook, who is a board member of ANMP and holds the title of chairman emeritus, didn’t blink.
When the Feds noticed the lawsuit threats, they thought them important enough to bring to the attention of a federal judge. They simply called it “GOVERNMENT EXHIBIT 5.”
On Aug. 5, 2008, the U.S. Secret Service raided ASD. What occurred after that from the ASD side left an indelible stain on MLM. Bowdoin compared federal prosecutors and the Secret Service, the agency that guards the life of the President of the United States and has the companion duty of protecting the U.S. financial system from attack, to “Satan.” He further compared the raid to the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
Over time, the ASD case turned into a symphony of the bizarre. “Sovereign citizens” entered the fray. One of them accused a federal judge of “TREASON.” Another allegedly filed bogus liens against five public officials involved in the ASD case, including a federal judge, three federal prosecutors and a special agent of the U.S. Secret Service who led the Ponzi investigation.
These episodes were to the utter humiliation of MLMers who value the reputation of the trade. The ruinous PR fallout continues even to this day.
What did Zeek do? Why, it wrapped what effectively is ASD’s 1-percent-a-day compensation model into its payout plan, thus raising the stench of ASD all over again and adding to the stench by effectively paying out an affiliate-reported average of about 1.4 percent a day. Zeek promptly found favor on the Ponzi boards and benefited from promoters of fraud schemes such as ASD and JSS Tripler/JustBeenPaid (730 percent a year). It also picked up some hucksters from OneX, a “program” in part responsible for the fact ASD’s Bowdoin is now jailed in the District of Columbia.
There can be no doubt that Zeek also attracted promoters of AdViewGlobal (AVG) into its fold. The Feds now have linked Bowdoin to AVG, a 1-percent-a-day “program” that collapsed in 2009 under circumstances both mysterious and bizarre. Before AVG went missing, its braintrust tried to plant the extortive seed that lawyers were going after the critics and that “program” members themselves were at risk of getting sued for sharing negative information. For good measure, AdViewGlobal tried to plant the extortive seed that it would report its own members to their Internet Service Providers if they continued to question the “program” in public.
‘MoneyMakingBrain’ Reemerges In Bid To Chill Critics
Today on the RealScam.com antiscam forum, a notorious cyberstalker and JSSTripler/JustBeenPaid apologist known as “MoneyMakingBrain” is planting the seed that JSS/JBP is going to use its lawyers to come after critics. “MoneyMakingBrain” previously claimed he’d defend Frederick Mann, JSS/JBP’s purported operator, “so help me God.” And then “MoneyMakingBrain” started attacking Lynn Edgington, the chairman of Eagle Research Associates, a California nonprofit entity that works proactively with U.S. law enforcement to educate the public about online financial fraud. Edgington is a longtime contributor to the PP Blog and, like the PP Blog, is a member of RealScam.com, a site that concerns itself with international mass-marketing fraud.
(IMPORTANT NOTE: The PP Blog is providing a link to the RealScam.com thread in which “MoneyMakingBrain” has (for months) been engaging in efforts to intimidate JSS/JBP critics. MoneyMakingBrain has a history of emailing threatening communications to the PP Blog. Among other things, he purports to have an ability to track IP addresses and to be keeping a “dossier” on critics. If these things are true, it could mean that “MoneyMakingBrain” will seek to target you in harassment and intimidation campaigns. [** Caution duly advised. RealScam link. Caution duly advised **])
The PP Blog commends Randy Schroeder for his remarks about Zeek. It encourages Mona Vie to back him. Zeek is awash in the stench of ASD, AVG, JSS/JBP, OneX and the serial scammers who populate the Ponzi boards.
Such “programs” put economic security at risk and thus national security.
Period.
Stories Wouldn’t Sell As Fiction
Thank your lucky stars that Zeek’s apologists and Stepfordians are not the fire department. If they were, they wouldn’t be fighting fires. Instead, they’d be standing in the parking lot, deducing the red glow under the roof of the building to which they’d been dispatched was an optical illusion and that the man on the roof with the gas can wasn’t really there. All the acrid, billowing smoke would be ignored in favor of a theory that smoke doesn’t always mean flame.
“No need to bring out the hoses,” they’d say. “This is nothing.”
And when the cops showed up and observed firefighters standing around watching a blaze and ignoring their duty to put it out, they’d be told to mind their own damned business or get busy hiring a lawyer to defend against a defamation lawsuit.
It wouldn’t sell as fiction — and yet somehow passes the plausibility test with thousands or even hundreds of thousands of individuals who call themselves MLMers.
Bravo to Randy Schroeder for advising the members of his trade to open their eyes and choose to see.
From YouTube sales pitch for BidsThatGive by Randy Jeffers. (Children's faces masked by PP Blog.)
EDITOR’S NOTE: It is true that far too many of the world’s children live in poverty. It also is true that children may become the objects of criminals who engage in human trafficking and that children are exploited in the sex trades. It is equally true that legitimate charities exist to combat these horrific situations and that one MLM “program” after another has tried in recent times to tug at the human heart and “marry” their “programs” to a purported cause. If you desire to improve the human condition for the masses of children, it likely is best to donate directly to a legitimate charitable organization, rather than joining a get-rich-quick scheme that says it is doing good work behind the scenes.
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UPDATED 6:57 P.M. EDT (U.S.A.) WARNING: The following development in MLM La-La Land may be harmful to your gag reflex.
Zeek Rewards, the U.S.-based MLM “program” that wraps itself in the American flag, collects sums of up to $10,000 from participants, plants the seed affiliates can earn a return of between 1 percent and 2 percent a day while insisting it is offering neither securities nor an investment program, has a payout scheme similar to the AdSurfDaily Ponzi scheme and securities swindle, is married to a penny-auction site known as Zeekler that has told successful bidders for sums of U.S. cash that they can receive their money via offshore payment processors and preemptively denies it is a pyramid scheme, has some emerging, U.S.-based competition.
The name of the “program” is “BidsThatGive” — and it unabashedly tugs at heartstrings while at once asking prospects to imagine themselves behind the wheel of a grand automobile and feeling good because they also could become a “Contributor” for $10 a month, a “Guardian” for $50 a month, a “Benefactor” for $100 a month” or a Global Ambassador” for $250 a month and pile up mountains of cash while they’re displaying a social conscience.
Two of the core aims of the “program,” according to a nine-minute video promo running on YouTube, are to help impoverished children and children who’d been exploited and became “sex slave[s].” The prelaunch of BidsThatGive appears to have been timed to coincide with the Independence Day holiday period in the United States.
One of the assertions in a the YouTube video is that the “rewards” the company provides include “an orphanage and a school, church or hospital built in your name.” All of this apparently is possible because BidsThatGive has a “global business model” and employes a “concept” known as “PPSC,” which stands for Private Profit Sharing Company.
But before we get to the uber bizarre, let’s address the run-of-the-mill bizarre in this latest entry in MLM La-La Land.
BidsThatGive is a little bit Andy Bowdoin. Indeed, the emerging penny-auction company with an MLM-style compensation plan, claims it’s not an MLM program and tells prospects they’re “probably not going to sleep at night” once they understand the profit potential. Bowdoin, the infamous AdSurfDaily Ponzi schemer, told prospects that ASD was not a “network marketing company” and used largely the same line about all the sleepless nights excited prospects would experience.
Meanwhile, BidsThatGive is a little bit like AdViewGlobal (AVG), a collapsed 1-percent-a-day Ponzi autosurf federal prosecutors said in April 2012 had ASD ties. AVG once claimed that one of its desires was to save the rainforest through charitable contributions. BidsThatGive also resembles ClubAsteria, which offered outsize weekly returns ranging from 3 percent to 8 percent and told prospects that its charitable arm would provide relief to victims of the devastating earthquake in Japan last year. ClubAsteria also purported to provide aid to children and claimed its mission was to elevate the word’s poor out of poverty.
And BidsThatGive also resembles DataNetworkAffiliates (DNA), which tied itself to the U.S. AMBER Alert system for rescuing abducted children and said its “token system” could help prevent child poverty.
“Help DNA Feed A Million. OVER 1000 AN HOUR DIE. The DNA Token System Can Prevent This!” the company exclaimed.
Among other things, DNA used a YouTube video to trade on the name of Adam Walsh, the 6-year-old who was abducted and murdered in Florida in 1981. Adam’s father, John Walsh, became a prolific advocate for children and later became the host of the “America’s Most Wanted” television series.
DNA, which was associated with longtime MLM huckster Phil Piccolo, appears not to have helped a single abducted child or a single child living in poverty. Affiliates, though, tried to plant the seed that the DNA “program” was backed by Oprah Winfrey and Donald Trump. When DNA’s CEO resigned suddenly in 2010, the company waited nearly a week to announce the departure — and then misspelled the former CEO’s name.
BidsThatGive Operator
Randy Jeffers, an MLM aficionado, is the purported operator of BidsThatGive, according to promo videos on YouTube. Jeffers also presides over a nonprofit entity known as “Liberty Kidz,” which says its “[v]ision is to empower a child to be all that he or she is created to be, by providing homes, help and hope for discouraged, displaced and distressed children of the world.”
A similarly named Jeffers’ entity known as Liberty International LLC filed for bankruptcy in August 2010, listing about $1.94 million in debt and $641 in assets, according to federal records. The assets consisted of the balance of a business checking account.
What follows are comments from Jeffers in the nine-minute sales pitch for BidsThatGive on YouTube (italics added):
You know, there are so many terrible things that happen to children all over the world. Right now a little boy is dying of hunger, a little girl just got sold by her mother and is being forced into life as a sex slave.
Right now, children are being physically abused, and then there’s so many children that are just left by themselves and there’s no one there to love or care for them. I don’t know why bad things happen to innocent little children, but they do. But here’s what I do know: All of us can do something about it.
You see, that’s our No. 1 purpose. This company was founded to be a true partnership between those children, the children’s charities that it supports and its affiliates who make it all happen.
A ‘Founding Member’
One of the founding members of BidsThatGive is Glen Woodfin, according to 6:56 promo video dated July 2 and running on YouTube.
Woodfin describes himself in the video as an American who once moved to Brazil to be with his “multimillionaire” fiance who had 90 employees. Enjoying the “good life” on the beach while sitting around drinking “coconut milk” was fun for a while, but ultimately led to a desire to become more productive and to develop an online skill set. Woodfin ultimately discovered he had a talent for search engine optimization and that clients were interested in those services.
Glen Woodfin, who says he's done SEO for a Presidential candidate, does a little dance in his Bids That Give sales pitch on YouTube.
His SEO skills ultimately became so good that “I was hired by somebody running for President . . .,” according to Woodfin, who narrates the video. He did not identify the candidate.
Woodfin, however, goes to to explain that he was fortunate to know author and White House adviser Doug Wead, who wrote “All The President’s Children,” a New York Times Bestseller. (Wead’s Wikipedia entry says he advised GOP Presidents George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush.)
Apparently in the market for SEO advice, Wead turned to Woodfin, according to the video.
“He said, ‘Glen, we’ve got one of the Presidential children about to get married in three weeks, and we don’t have a website up. Can we get in there and get to the top of the search engines with it?’” Woodfin recalled.
That Presidential child, according to Woodfin, was Chelsea Clinton, daughter of former President Bill Clinton and U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
Over the weekend Chelsea Clinton got married, Woodfin said, his SEO techniques on Wead’s behalf put a site known as ChelseaClintonWeddingWatch.com at the top of the rankings. (Chelsea Clinton was married on July 31, 2010.)
When NBC News anchor Lester Holt was interviewing Wead, Woodfin said, Holt mentioned the website Woodfin had put at the top of the rankings, apparently attributing the feat to Wead.
Neither BidsThatGive nor Jeffers is mentioned in the first three minutes of the Woodfin video. But at roughly the 3:03 mark, Woodfin announces, “I’m going in business with a gentleman named Randy Jeffers. Randy Jeffers started the No. 1, fastest-growing MLM of all time, called Destiny. They put in 1 million distributors in 18 months.”
Woodfin goes on to say that Jeffers recently called him and offered him a “founder’s membership” in BidsThatGive.
“While he’s talking, the hair start[s] standing up on my arm, and I got thrilled,” Woodfin recalled. “As a matter of fact, every time I get off the phone with him now, I’m just, ‘Thank you for putting this together.’ It’s based on penny auctions . . .”
It’s not known whether Woodfin contacted the White House, Wead, Clinton and Holt as a courtesy to let them know he’d be using their names in a YouTube pitch for Jeffers’ BidsThatGive. What is known is that namedropping is common in the MLM sphere — often without the knowledge of those whose names are dropped.
Although the Woodfin pitch did not imply that any of the celebrities or institutions mentioned in the pitch endorsed BidsThatGive, the implication was clear that BidsThatGive prospects who joined under Woodfin would gain access to an SEO expert who’d worked for a Presidential candidate and knew a Presidential adviser.
Neither the Jeffers’ video nor the Woodfin video referenced the Liberty International LLC 23-month-old bankruptcy filing. Nor did either video address any of the potential problems BidsThatGive could encounter from regulators.
Like the Zeek Rewards’ business model, the BidsThatGive model resembles that of ASD. In 2008, the U.S. Secret Service seized more than $80 million from ASD-related bank accounts, including $65.8 million in the personal accounts of Andy Bowdoin.
Court records showed that ASD was trading on the name of then-President George W. Bush. Analysts saw it as a transparent bid to sanitize the “opportunity” by trying to link it to the White House.
Major politicians from both sides of the aisle have seen their names used in promos for “opportunities” that proved to be Ponzi schemes.
Former President Clinton’s name and image were used by the Mantria Corp. Ponzi scheme. Clinton is a Democrat.
Retooling as it hatches a plan to launch anew? Huddling with its mysterious lawyer because the U.S. Department of Justice called it a “fraudulent scheme” and “pyramid” pushed by an accused felon awaiting trial in his Ponzi scheme case?
The website of “OneX” has been displaying an “under maintenance” message for days. The development occurs against the backdrop of former OneX pitchman and AdSurfDaily President Andy Bowdoin’s guilty plea to wire fraud in the ASD Ponzi case May 18. In April, federal prosecutors said ASD stalwarts Rayda Roundy and Tari Steward had helped Bowdoin pitch OneX.
Those pitches began in October 2011, with Bowdoin saying he’d use his OneX earnings to pay for his criminal defense in the ASD Ponzi case. Steward is listed in court filings as a potential witness for Bowdoin in his trial on Ponzi-related charges.
Bowdoin, though, pleaded guilty prior to his trial date, which had been set for Sept. 24.
Just days before his guilty plea, a fellow OneX pitchman known as “Alan” asserted that Bowdoin was “our Mentor,” according to an email some ASD members received.
In at least one of the OneX pitches, Roundy asserted that OneX had a “top attorney.” She did not identify the attorney.
Bowdoin claimed “college students” were great prospects for OneX. But the ASD patriarch did not identify the operators or braintrust behind OneX or say where the “program” was operating from. Instead, he told prospects that they could earn $99,000 very quickly through OneX.
Federal prosecutors now say OneX was recycling money in ASD-like fashion. They also say they’ve linked Bowdoin to AdViewGlobal, an autosurf that launched after the seizure of tens of millions of dollars in the ASD Ponzi case in 2008 and disappeared in the summer of 2009 under mysterious circumstances.
Like ASD’s website during its Ponzi run, the OneX website has a history of going missing for days. It was offline and reportedly under maintenance during the 2011 Holiday season. Now, it’s under maintenance on the heels of Bowdoin’s guilty plea.
In 2009 — after the ASD seizure — Bowdoin also pitched a mysterious “program” known as Paperless Access. Much about Paperless Access remains mysterious. Its website also vanished.
As part of his plea agreement in the ASD case, Bowdoin has been banned from MLM, Internet programs and mass marketing.
URGENT >> BULLETIN >> MOVING:(5TH UPDATE: 5:54 P.M. EDT) Andy Bowdoin has pleaded guilty to wire fraud in the AdSurfDaily Ponzi case.
A bond-review hearing for the 77-year-old ASD patriarch had been scheduled for 2 p.m. today. Instead, the proceeding turned into a plea hearing.
“The Internet now allows swindlers to perpetrate fraud on a much larger scale than Charles Ponzi could have imagined 100 years ago,” said U.S. Attorney Ronald C. Machen Jr. of the District of Columbia. “Andy Bowdoin’s online Ponzi scheme took in $110 million from thousands of people across the United States and other countries. His guilty plea today is another milestone in our efforts to protect the public from being ripped off over the Internet. This case is a healthy reminder that the public should be skeptical when evaluating investment opportunities: If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.”
Bowdoin, who was arrested in Florida by the U.S. Secret Service on Dec. 1, 2010, has been free on bond since his arrest. He will remain free at least until June 12, when another hearing is scheduled.
U.S. District Judge Rosemary Collyer is presiding over the case.
Bowdoin admitted today that he knew ASD was a fraud — but nevertheless continued to operate it between 2006 and 2008. He also admitted that he siphoned more than $1.16 million from the scam, using it to enrich himself and his family.
Under the terms of a plea agreement, Bowdoin faces a maximum sentence of 78 months in federal prison. How soon he would begin any sentence handed down remains unclear. It is believed that Bowdoin — who’d initially began negotiating with prosecutors in late 2008 — reentered negotiations after prosecutors accused him last month of pitching a “fraudulent scheme” and “pyramid” known as OneX.
Prosecutors also say they tied Bowdoin to an autosurf known as AdViewGlobal.
UPDATED 12:06 P.M. EDT (MAY 5, USA): Andy Bowdoin’s bond-review hearing has been rescheduled from May 8 to May 18. Here, below, our earlier story . . .
Only days ago, federal prosecutors described the OneX “program” pitched online by accused Ponzi schemer Andy Bowdoin of AdSurfDaily as a “fraudulent scheme” and “pyramid” that “simply re-distributes funds among participants” in ASD-like fashion.
The PP Blog learned yesterday through a source that Bowdoin was a no-show on last night’s scheduled “team” conference call for OneX. A call Monday apparently was canceled.
According to information provided by the source, Bowdoin was unable to participate in last night’s call — after the cancellation of Monday’s call — because of “personal problems.” The specifics of the personal problems were not disclosed.
Unless U.S. District Judge Rosemary Collyer postpones a May 8 bond-review hearing for Bowdoin, prosecutors are expected to argue on Tuesday that Bowdoin was pushing the OneX pyramid scheme while awaiting his September trial in the ASD Ponzi scheme case.
Although a postponement of the bond-review hearing is possible because one of Bowdoin’s two lawyers is ill and the government has not objected to a delay, the judge has not entered an order delaying the proceeding, according to docket entries as of this morning. (May 5 update: The May 8 hearing has been rescheduled for May 18.)
Last night’s OneX call, according to information provided by the source, was conducted by “Allen” (or Alan).
“First and foremost, Andy has some personal problems that he has to deal with, so he will not be with us for a few days,” Allen said, according to information from the source.
Whether Bowdoin’s OneX “team” is aware that federal prosecutors have described the “program” as a scam is unclear. What is clear, according to filings by the government, is that Bowdoin has a long history of recruiting people into financial debacles and withholding information that would enable them to make informed investment decisions.
Prosecutors also say they’ve tied Bowdoin to the failed AdViewGlobal (AVG) autosurf, which came to life in the weeks and months after the U.S. Secret Service seized tens of millions of dollars from ASD-related bank accounts in August 2008 as part of a Ponzi probe. AVG vanished during the summer of 2009 — about a year after the ASD seizure — amid claims that someone had stolen money from the enterprise.
Even as AVG was tanking, members and critics were threatened with lawsuits for sharing news about the purported Uruguay-based entity.
While at ASD’s helm in 2007, Bowdoin explained that members were not getting paid because of script problems and because “Russian” hackers had stolen $1 million, according to records. Prosecutors said Bowdoin never filed a police report about the purported $1 million theft.
Prosecutors have argued that ASD collapsed before Bowdoin resurrected it and started operating it under a new name (ASDCashGenerator). Incoming members were not told they were funding payouts to members affected by the collapse. Over time, Bowdoin dialed up the criminality to keep ASD afloat in what was at least its second iteration, according to court filings.
In the 1990s — in at least three Alabama counties — Bowdoin was charged with securities-related crimes similar to his later illegal behavior at ASD, prosecutors now say. ASD members, however, were led to believe that the ASD patriarch’s only encounter with law enforcement had been a speeding ticket.
Bowdoin has been participating in OneX conference calls since at least October 2011, explaining in the earliest calls that we was seeking to fund his criminal defense to the ASD-related Ponzi charges through OneX and that OneX was brought to members and prospects by “God.”
The indictment against Bowdoin was made public in December 2010. It charges him with wire fraud, securities fraud and selling unregistered securities.
Details about OneX, including the identities of its operators, are exceptionally murky.
Frederick Mann, onetime ASD pitchman and the purported operator of JSS Tripler/JustBeenPaid
UPDATED 7:44 A.M. EDT (U.S.A.). A potentially damning audio recording of a March 15 conference call in which Frederick Mann told JSS Tripler/JustBeenPaid members that the “opportunity” was paying them with money from “new members” has gone missing from the JSS/JBP website.
Mann, whose name appeared in 2008 promos as a pitchman for AdSurfDaily, is the purported operator of JSS/JBP. The U.S. Secret Service seized tens of millions of dollars tied to ASD in 2008, amid allegations it was conducting an international Ponzi scheme over the Internet.
Andy Bowdoin now has been accused of serial scamming dating back at least two decades. He faces a May 8 bond-review hearing. Frederick Mann, the purported operator of JSS/JBP, was identified in 2008 promos as an ASD pitchman.
ASD President Andy Bowdoin was charged criminally in 2010. He now faces a May 8 bond-review hearing amid allegations that he continued to scam the public even after the August 2008 seizure of $65.8 million from his 10 personal bank accounts and even after his December 2010 arrest in Florida on ASD-related Ponzi charges of wire fraud, securities fraud and selling unregistered securities.
“I (Frederick Mann) have been with ASD since January 07,” remarks attributed to Mann on a site known as BigBooster read on May 14, 2008. “Past performance indicates a strong probablility (sic) that ASD will continue to perform as advertised. (By early May 2008, I had received 14 payments totalling over $6,000!”)
The U.S. Secret Service conducted a Ponzi raid of ASD less than three months later. Despite the Ponzi allegations against Bowdoin and ASD, Mann purportedly went on to launch JSS/JBP, which purports to pay members a return of 2 percent a day — double the purported return of ASD.
In January 2012, JSS/JBP-related claims came under the lens of CONSOB, the Italian securities regulator. The agency banned promos for the “opportunity” last month after earlier announcing a 90-day suspension.
Just days before CONSOB’s April 23 announcement of the ban — on April 17 — U.S. federal prosecutors sent a letter to Bowdoin’s defense attorney in the ASD Ponzi case. The letter informed the attorney — Charles A. Murray — that the government intended to introduce evidence that Bowdoin continued to commit crimes after the August 2008 ASD seizure and after Bowdoin’s subsequent indictment on charges that could put him behind bars for 125 years if he is convicted on all counts.
Prosecutors said they had tied Bowdoin to AdViewGlobal (AVG), an autosurf that collapsed in 2009. They also said Bowdoin had emerged as a pitchman for a “fraudulent scheme” known as OneX that — in ASD-like fashion — “simply re-distributes funds among participants.”
Online Ponzi schemes are infamous for morphing into new forms. Serial scammers who populate Ponzi boards such as TalkGold and MoneyMakerGroup drive business to the purported “opportunities,” which often advertise MLM-style, tiered recruitment “commissions” on top of preposterous rates of return.
ASD, AVG, OneX and JSS/JBP all have (or had) a presence on the Ponzi boards. Serial apologists for JSS/JBP have pooh-poohed the CONSOB developments.
In the now-missing March 15 recording, a caller purportedly from “San Francisco” asked Mann where “JustBeenPaid get[s] the money to pay that kind of interest.”
The reference was to the advertised return of 2 percent a day, which corresponds to a precompounding, annualized return of 730 percent — a figure that would make Bernard Madoff blush.
“Well, first of all, JBP or JSS Tripler is a revenue-sharing program, so that means some of the money comes from new members buying positions,” Mann responded to the caller. “Then, we are in the process of developing additional income streams, so that’s relevant. And eventually the additional income streams may be sufficient to pay the 2 percent — maybe not.”
With federal prosecutors in the District of Columbia now saying AdSurfDaily President Andy Bowdoin was involved in multiple fraud schemes after the U.S. Secret Service seized $65.8 million from his personal bank accounts in August 2008 in a Ponzi probe, the ASD patriarch now faces a bond-review hearing in Washington.
U.S. District Judge Rosemary Collyer has scheduled the hearing for May 8.
Prosecutors pointedly asserted on April 17 that Bowdoin, 77, was promoting a “fraudulent scheme” known as “OneX,” informing Collyer that Bowdoin’s OneX pitches began in 2011 –after Bowdoin was indicted in 2010 on charges of wire fraud, securities fraud and selling unregistered securities in his operation of ASD.
Collyer now has ordered prosecutors to present “all evidence (written and testimonial) regarding Defendant’s alleged involvement in OneX or any other alleged Internet scheme since the Indictment in this case.”
Bowdoin’s OneX pitches, which mixed in commentary about his criminal case, began in October 2011. The ASD-related indictment against him was unsealed in November 2010 and announced publicly on Dec. 1, 2010.
Prosecutors also say Bowdoin was involved in AdViewGlobal, an autosurf that came to life in late 2008 and early 2009 — after the August 2008 Secret Service seizure. At the same time, prosecutors say Bowdoin, Clarence Busby and “others” were involved in the operation of the Golden Panda Ad Builder autosurf, the so-called “Chinese” version of ASD.
Money from at least five Golden Panda bank accounts was seized as part of the ASD probe in 2008. All in all, the combined sums seized from ASD and Golden Panda totaled about $80 million.
UPDATED 11:40 P.M. EDT (U.S.A.) Federal prosecutors say they’ve tied AdSurfDaily President Andy Bowdoin to the failed AdViewGlobal autosurf and intend to introduce evidence of “uncharged misconduct” at Bowdoin’s trial for the alleged ASD Ponzi scheme.
Meanwhile, prosecutors say “OneX” — a “program” Bowdoin said he was pitching to help pay for his criminal defense in the ASD Ponzi case — is a “fraudulent scheme.”
The OneX organization and its “matrix,” prosecutors said, are more accurately described as a “pyramid” and the purported opportunity “simply re-distributes funds among participants.”
“In this latest venture, Bowdoin has again partnered with Tari Steward and Rayda Roundy, both of whom were involved in the operation of ASD,” prosecutors said.
Prosecutors’ references to AdViewGlobal and OneX are believed to mark the first time the government has acknowledged publicly it was gathering information about the schemes. The government says its probe into Bowdoin continues and that it intends to introduce other evidence of criminal conduct at his September Ponzi trial.
“The government is aware of additional criminal matters lodged against Bowdoin,” prosecutors said.
Precisely what those alleged matters entailed was not immediately clear.
Here (below) are some highlights from an April 17 letter and an April 24 list of exhibits prosecutors filed with the court and sent to Charles A. Murray, Bowdoin’s defense attorney. The letter and exhibits inform Murray about certain matters the government intends to introduce at trial. (Italics and/or bold emphasis added by PP Blog):
Bowdoin’s history involves at least four instances in which he was charged with securities-related crimes during the 1990s in Alabama. Three indictments were returned in Montgomery County, and one was returned in Wilcox County. There were multiple victims. Bowdoin accepted plea agreements, agreed to testify for the state against at least five defendants and agreed to make restitution to his fleeced investors. (Note: These assertions by the government may be aimed at short-circuiting any claim by Bowdoin that he was ignorant of securities laws when he started ASD. At the same time, the assertions are potentially useful in making a case that Bowdoin was committed to making a living from securities fraud even after agreeing to testify against alleged securities fraudsters.)
Bowdoin allegedly paid some of the Alabama restitution with proceeds from the ASD Ponzi scheme.
In one of the Alabama cases, a grand jury accused Bowdoin of not telling investors he was using their money to make “full and/or partial refunds to investors in earlier projects” involving a cell-phone business.
Bowdoin solicited $600,000 from an Alabama investor, but allegedly did not disclose that his company had been sued four times under a previous name. (Note: Lack of disclosure and a name change also are alleged parts of the ASD scheme.) Moreover, Bowdoin allegedly sold the $600,000 contract despite the fact that neither cell-phone entity had the required license to operate from the Federal Communications Commission.
Bowdoin was “permanently barred” from engaging in the securities industry in Alabama. (This point leads to questions about whether Bowdoin potentially could face state-level charges for selling ASD in Alabama after his ban in the 1990s.)
Included in Bowdoin’s history are a bankruptcy filing and string of lawsuits naming him a defendant. (Details of these are unclear, but the government says it expects to produce additional documents in the “near future.”
Although Bowdoin claimed to have run successful mobile-phone, GPS-tracking and dry-cleaning businesses, “those businesses were not successful and on several occasions were the subject of civil and criminal proceedings.”
“After the United States Secret Service seized ASD’s bank accounts in August 2008, Bowdoin, Gary Talbert . . . and others began operating another version of ASD over the Internet at adviewglobal.com (‘AVG’).” (Talbert was a former ASD executive, according to court filings.)
In 2009, AVG “ceased operation when allegations arose that an individual associated with AVG purportedly stole money from AVG.” (Note: A purported theft of $1 million at the purported hands of “Russian” hackers is an alleged element of the ASD case.)
Bowdoin’s claims about OneX are “inherently deceptive.” Like ASD, OneX “does not generate income by selling a product to consumers outside the system. Instead, it simply re-distributes funds among participants.” (Note: The letter strongly suggests that the government is well-versed on the internal operations of OneX.)
Bowdoin is targeting former ASD members in his OneX promos and offered “leads” from the ASD database.
One of the exhibits filed by the government is the AVG Terms of Service.