Tag: BehindMLM.com

  • Email Address In Faith Sloan’s DMCA Complaint Against BehindMLM.com Appears In 2010 Promo About Purported $10,000 Payout From Matrix Cycler; ‘You Can Do That Over And Over Again,’ Veteran HYIP Huckster Claims

    More than two minutes and forty seconds of a special version of "I Gotta Feeling" recorded by the Black Eyed Peas to honor Oprah Winfrey plays in this "team" promo for a matric-cycler "program" known as "Diamond Holiday Feeder." Neither the group nor Winfrey is credited.
    More than two minutes and 40 seconds of a special version of “I Gotta Feeling” recorded by the Black Eyed Peas to honor Oprah Winfrey plays in this “team” promo for a matrix-cycler “program” known as “Diamond Holiday Feeder.” Neither the group nor Winfrey is credited. Source: screen shot from DailyMotion.com.

    The Gmail address used by TelexFree figure Faith Sloan in a Sept. 23 DMCA takedown notice filed against BehindMLM.com appears below a 2010 video promo for a “program” known as “Diamond Holiday Feeder,” part of a larger “program” purportedly engaged in the travel business while also operating a matrix cycler.

    Matrix cyclers sometimes are known as 2x2s or “get two who get two.” MPB Today, a collapsed matrix cycler that led to racketeering charges in Florida against the “program” operator, is an example of a 2×2. Another example is Regenesis 2×2, which led to a U.S. Secret Service probe in Washington state in 2009.

    In a 3:44 video whose publication date is listed as April 8, 2010, Sloan claims to have made $10,000 in the Diamond Holiday Feeder program and further claims “you can do that over and over again.” The headline of the video is, “Ten Thousand Dollars Proof – Diamond Holiday Feeder – BYC.”

    Another Sloan video for a “team” build of the Diamond Holiday “program” uses nearly three full minutes of a special version of “I Gotta Feeling” recorded by The Black Eyed Peas to honor Oprah Winfrey and the 24th year of The Oprah Winfrey Show in September 2009. Neither Winfrey nor the group is credited in the “team” promo. The “team” build video is dated March 21, 2010.

    Ironically, Sloan has accused BehindMLM.com of copyright infringement, amid allegations it used photos to which she owned the copyright on its website.

    BehindMLM.com says Sloan’s claims are bogus.

    Though TelexFree would come later — after the apparent collapse of Diamond Holiday Feeder, with Sloan blaming events on management  — an image of Sloan posing in front of a TelexFree logo appears on the Diamond Holiday Feeder video site. The site appears now to be driving traffic to a “program” known as “RE247365.” (BehindMLM.com is back online after being offline for all or parts of three days. Read its “RE247365” review.)

    In the current TelexFree case in which she is accused of securities fraud, Sloan likewise is blaming management.

    Sloan’s narration in the April 2010 video shows her Diamond Holiday Feeder back office and suggests she did not withdraw her purported earnings of $10,000 all at once to her bank account, but rather in smaller increments. Such a practice may lead to questions about whether she was engaged in structuring transactions to avoid bank-reporting requirements. In a civil action against TelexFree in April, the Massachusetts Securities Division raised the issue of structuring.

    Other information suggests Sloan gravitated to Diamond Holiday Feeder after the collapse of the Noobing MLM scam in 2009. Noobing, in part, was targeted at people with hearing impairments, including a California woman the PP Blog interviewed in 2010 through her interpreter.

    On a website deemed “The Official Web Blog” of Noobing, the program was described as a “hit” among deaf people. Noobing, according to the Blog, was promoted at Deaf Expos in Kansas, Missouri, New Jersey and Texas in 2008 “to connect with the often overlooked hearing impaired business community.”

    Noobing was under the umbrella of an enterprise known as Affiliate Strategies Inc. that was running a government-grants swindle and was sued by the FTC and three state-level attorneys general for fraud. ASI went into receivership, taking Noobing with it. The enterprise had offshore conduits in Belize and Nevis.

    On one August day in 2009, attorneys assisting the ASI receivership “received thirty two US Mail crates” filled with complaints from scam victims, receiver Larry Cook said at the time.

    “The Receiver’s work over the past three weeks suggests the Defendants’ operations were insolvent on the date [July 24, 2009] the [Temporary Restraining Order] was entered and that for at least all of 2009, Defendants operated only by signing up new victims faster than the old victims could obtain refunds,” Cook said at the time.

     

  • BehindMLM.com Offline

    From Google cache earlier today for BehindMLM.com.
    From Google cache earlier today for BehindMLM.com.

    UPDATED 3:21 A.M. EDT SEPT. 30 U.S.A. The PP Blog is aware that BehindMLM.com, the popular review site that covers multilevel marketing and fraud schemes within the sphere, is offline. The precise reason why is unclear at this time.

    BehindMLM.com reported Sept. 26 that it had received a DMCA takedown notice from Faith Sloan, an MLM HYIP huckster and figure in the TelexFree Ponzi- and pyramid-scheme story. In April 2014, Sloan was charged with securities fraud by the SEC for her alleged role in TelexFree, described by regulators as a billion-dollar fraud that crossed national borders.

    In the takedown action, Sloan complained about certain photographs that have appeared on BehindMLM.com. Sloan claims to own the copyrights and that Behind MLM’s use of the photographs was unauthorized.

    BehindMLM has called Sloan’s claims “bogus”  and has said an outage was possible as the situation evolved.

    Content from BehindMLM.com has been cited in court filings by TelexFree members who alleged that racketeering violations occurred within TelexFree. More than 1 million TelexFree victims may exist around the world.

    Analysis by the PP Blog of a small subset of data from 95 self-identified victims of TelexFree shows that the group of 95 lost a whopping average of $27,578 each and that claimed losses ranged from a low of $900 to a high of $427,500.

     

     

  • URGENT >> BULLETIN >> MOVING: TelexFree, Gerald Nehra MLM Law Firm, Banks, Processors Sued In Prospective Class Action That Alleges RICO Violations

    breakingnews72URGENT >> BULLETIN >> MOVING: (18th update 3:49 P.M. EDT U.S.A.) TelexFree, MLM attorney Gerald Nehra, “Doe” insiders and several banks have been sued in a prospective class-action that alleges fraud and violations of the federal RICO (racketeering) statute.

    “Certain Defendants share joint and severable liability, including the Doe Inside Promoters, the licensed professionals such as the RLP Defendants, including certified public accountants and lawyers that specialized in sheltering so-called Multi-Level Marketing schemes having aided and abetted TelexFree’s Pyramid Ponzi Scheme by providing TelexFree with legal and financial advice and assistance during the course of the fraud, despite knowledge of the fraudulent nature of TelexFree’s operation,” the complaint alleges.

    Among other things, Nehra was accused in the complaint of turning a blind eye to securities issues at TelexFree, encouraging others to conceal those issues and engaging in other misconduct.

    Nehra, according to the complaint, was not merely providing zealous representation to TelexFree, he counseled “TelexFree on methods to evade United States securities laws that were intended to offer, in part, protection from pyramid Ponzi schemes; all to enrich himself financially and serve his own selfish interests.”

    With Nehra understanding that “his legal opinions and representations would be used by TelexFree as a marketing tool to further and advance their business model,” his “opinions were packaged and promoted as part of TelexFree’s total ‘post Brazilian shut down package’ to the members of the putative class,” according to the complaint.

    The complaint further alleges that Nehra’s actions in misrepresenting TelexFree as a legitimate business encouraged TelexFree members “unknowingly” to “participate in the evasion of federal and state securities laws.”

    Named defendants included TelexFree LLC, TelexFree Inc., “Paralegal Doe [who] served as TelexFree, LLC’s agent, servant or employee,” TelexFree Financial Inc., TelexElectric LLLP, Telex Mobile Holdings Inc., James M. Merrill, Carlos N. Wanzeler, Steven M. Labriola, Joseph H. Craft, Craft Financial Solutions LLC, Carlos Costa, Gerald P. Nehra, Gerald P. Nehra, Attorney at Law PLLC, Richard W. Waak (Nehra law partner), Law Offices of Nehra and Waak, Richard W. Waak Attorney at Law PLLC, TD Bank NA, Citizens Financial Group Inc., Citizens Bank of Massachusetts, Fidelity Co-Operative Bank, Middlesex Savings Bank, Global Payroll Gateway Inc., International Payout Systems Inc. (I-Payout), ProPay Inc., “Banks Doe,”  “Doe Inside Promoters” and “Credit Processors Doe.”

    Merrill, Wanzeler, Labriola and Craft are former TelexFree managers or executives. The Massachusetts Securities Division has described TelexFree as a combined Ponzi- and pyramid scheme that gathered more than $1.2 billion and crossed national borders. The SEC also has charged TelexFree, Merrill, Wanzeler, Labriola and Craft with fraud, alleging that the firm conducted business in at least 20 U.S. states and mainly targeted Brazilian and Dominican immigrants.

    Plaintiffs are identified as Waldemara Martins and Leandro Valentim.

    The complaint alleges that Craft incorporated TelexFree Financial and that the entity “was fraudulently set up for the purpose of sheltering funds rightfully belonging to the putative class.”

    Among the contentions in the complaint (italics added):

    On March 9, 2014, TelexFree changed its compensation plan, thereby requiring Promoters to sell its VoIP product to qualify for the payments that TelexFree had previously promised to pay them.

    TelexFree’s former officers or employees stated to the TelexFree transition team that under the Pre March 2014 standard form contract TelexFree owes its promoters over $5 billion dollars.

    The rule change generated a storm of protests from Promoters who were unable to
    recover their money. On April 1, 2014, dozens of Promoters descended upon TelexFree’s Marlborough, Massachusetts office to protest this change and attempt to regain access to their money.

    Reporting on TelexFree-related matters by BehindMLM.com, a publication that reports on evolving MLM frauds, is referenced in the complaint.

    In addition, according to the complaint, “TelexFree mailed fraudulent and inaccurate 1099 (Miscellaneous Income) forms to investors, possibly to create the illusion that they had made payments to investors.”

    HYIP schemes in recent years have advised participants to avoid calling the “program” an “investment program.” Here is what the complaint alleges on this subject:

    “TelexFree’s Contract at Section 2.6.5 (m) mandates that Promoters are not to use the term investment with respect to the registration costs . . . Co-Defendant and Company Counsel Attorney Gerald P. Nehra, through his affiliated companies (Law Offices of Nehra and Waak , Gerald P. Nehra, Attorney at Law, PLLC, and Richard W. Waak, Attorney at Law, PLLC), and under the direct supervision of Co-Defendants Richard W. Waak and Richard W. Waak Attorney at Law, PLLC provided this deceitful advice for the purpose of furthering perpetuating Defendants unlawful Pyramid Ponzi Scheme.”

    In the complaint, the plaintiffs further asserted that “Attorney Nehra’s extensive experience in multi-level marketing, and particularly his involvement with the Ponzi schemes involving Ad SurfDaily and Zeek Rewards, armed him with the knowledge of what constitutes violations of United States securities law. Indeed, Attorney Nehra was well aware that the use of semantics and obscured phraseology to obfuscate securities laws fails to legitimize TelexFree’s illegal Pyramid Ponzi Scheme.”

    Craft was accused in the complaint of “Overseeing TelexFree’s creation of falsified accounting records,” “Fraudulently certifying TelexFree’s business operations and accounting practices as good and lawful, despite actual knowledge of their unlawful and illegitimate nature” and “Concealing the fact that the AdCentral Packages purveyed by TelexFree were actually securities.”

    At the same time, Craft was accused of “Concealing and absconding with investor assets.”

    Costa, a TelexFree figure in Brazil, was accused of publicly supporting “TelexFree’s illegal and corrupt activities.”

    The banks and processors were accused of aiding and abetting a fraud scheme.

  • REVISITING ADVIEWGLOBAL AND ‘ONEX’: Why Promoters Of Better-Living Global Marketing, Zeek Rewards, TelexFree And Profitable Sunrise Should Care About Scam History

    EDITOR’S NOTE: The PP Blog is back — after its most recent brush with death led to a suspension of publishing that lasted through all or parts of six days. You’ll read more in the days ahead about certain changes the Blog plans to implement to safeguard its right to publish, to improve revenue, to make it less reliant on a small group of dedicated readers to put out fires and to keep its archives open to the people who can benefit most.

    As for the editorial below: Some of it is based on “Government Exhibit G” and other government exhibits in the criminal prosecution of AdSurfDaily Ponzi schemer Andy Bowdoin. Exhibit G was filed on Aug. 13, 2012, four days before the SEC went to federal court in Charlotte, N.C., and alleged that the Zeek Rewards MLM “program” was a $600 million Ponzi- and pyramid fraud that had victimized hundreds of thousands of participants. Among other things, Exhibit G addressed Bowdoin’s participation as a silent partner in the AdViewGlobal reload scam. Another court document filed by prosecutors on the same day addressed Bowdoin’s participation in OneX, which prosecutors described as yet-another MLM-style scam in which Bowdoin had participated after the U.S. Secret Service moved against ASD in August 2008 and eventually seized more than $80 million.

    _______________________________________

    The evidence sticker from "Government Exhibit G" in the criminal prosecution of AdSurfDaily Ponzi schemer Andy Bowdoin. (Red bar added by PP Blog.)
    The evidence sticker from “Government Exhibit G” in the criminal prosecution of AdSurfDaily Ponzi schemer Andy Bowdoin. (Red bar added by PP Blog.)

    Let’s talk about pollution and how it may be flowing to a bank near you:

    AdSurfDaily Ponzi schemer Andy Bowdoin used a secret hushmail address in 2009 to discuss a bank wire for $38,750 that was to be sent to an account at Regions Bank in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., to pay for servers and programming required by AdViewGlobal.

    AVG, as it was known, was an ASD reload scam that began to unfold in October 2008, just two months after the U.S. Secret Service began the process of seizing more than $65.8 million from at least 10 Bank of America accounts linked to ASD, according to government records.

    The Secret Service, according to court filings, also had its eyes on separate Bank of America accounts linked to an ASD-connected enterprise known as Golden Panda Ad Builder. Golden Panda was operated by Rev. Walter Clarence Busby Jr., a Bowdoin business partner and Georgia grifter implicated by the SEC 11 years earlier in three prime-bank swindles, including one that promised to pay interest of 10,000 percent. Some of the Golden Panda money also made its way into Bartow County Bank, a small Georgia bank that later failed, costing the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. an estimated $70 million, according to government records.

    From this fact set, one can plainly see that ASD and related scams had caused polluted money to flow to Bank of America and Bartow — and that the noxious and ever-evolving ASD enterprise now had its sights on causing polluted money to flow to Regions. That’s three banks put in harm’s way by what effectively was an evolving ASD criminal enterprise.

    There were more.

    At least $413,018 in ASD-infected funds also had made their way into accounts at First National Bank in Ames, Iowa. Another $96,525 in polluted proceeds flowed to two accounts at Wachovia Bank. (The U.S. state in which Wachovia was used to stockpile $96,525 in fraudulent proceeds directed at an ASD member is unclear. What is clear, according to federal court filings, is that the ASD member allegedly was using ASD to promote a “multi-level marketing site that listed classified job postings” and that 17 checks from ASD were deposited into the Wachovia account on a single, fateful day.)

    That day was July 31, 2008.

    History shows that the Secret Service moved against ASD the very next day, Aug. 1, 2008, as a means of stopping the ASD Ponzi monster from sucking in any more cash and from polluting any more banks. The ASD member with the Wachovia accounts had “sponsored 6-8 people to get into the ASD system,” and somehow had managed to receive nearly $100,000 in tainted proceeds after paying ASD only $500 and working as a “consultant” to ASD “for a brief period,” according to court records.

    Because ASD used infected proceeds to pay members with accounts at banks across the U.S. spectrum of hundreds of institutions, each of those institutions became places at which wire-fraud proceeds were deposited. The total flow of fraudulent proceeds linked to Bowdoin and follow-up scams exceeded $120 million, according to federal court files.

    But it gets worse . . .

    At Least 2 Swiss Accounts Discussed In Exchanges Over Hushmail And Gmail

    Why not infect Europe with American Ponzi proceeds?

    This is the clincher, the one event that — in the context of other ASD-related events — shows the rampant criminality within the ASD enterprise and this particular wing of MLM. This criminality caused federal prosecutors to describe Bowdoin as a man who roped in at least 96,000 people in part by asserting that his “programs” reflected “God’s will.”

    Bowdoin, prosecutors said, indeed was the personification of a con man and affinity fraudster who “boldly continued or expanded his criminal conduct” even after the Secret Service raid in August 2008.

    Just two months later, in October 2008, Bowdoin and a former ASD insider held discussions aimed at launching AVG, the ASD reload scam that allegedly sucked in millions of dollars — in part by targeting ASD members all over again. The sources for this information are a government sentencing memo and  “Government Exhibit F,” filed on Aug. 13, 2012, four days before the SEC’s Zeek action and confirmation by the Secret Service that it also was investigating Zeek.

    Exhibit F is styled “Summary of AdView Global by T. Andy Bowdoin, Jr.” Precisely when and how the government obtained the document is unclear, but prosecutors say Bowdoin drafted it in “memo” form. Agents are known to have seized ASD-related computers. It also is believed that the government seized at least one AVG-related computer.

    The undated document features a narrative in which Bowdoin, despite the Secret Service raid of ASD and ongoing civil and criminal investigations, suggests he was still sticking to a cover story that ASD was an “advertising” company, not an investment company offering securities that paid a preposterous interest rate of 1 percent a day while magically constituting neither a Ponzi scheme nor an investment firm. In fact, according to the document, AVG hoped to ward off the U.S. government by establishing some sort of presence in Uruguay.

    Another part of the AVG launch plan was to attract “30 founders” in December 2008. In the Exhibit F document, Bowdoin also planted the seed that the nascent AVG MLM program had been vetted by “attorneys.”

    These unidentified “attorneys” purportedly had advised Bowdoin that prosecutors would not be interested in establishing whether the AVG upstart “was OK,” even if Bowdoin submitted an AVG business plan, according to Exhibit F. Bowdoin then moved forward with AVG, despite all that had happened at ASD. Both before and after the ASD debacle, according to assertions by prosecutors, Bowdoin claimed he had acted “on the advice of counsel” and therefore had done nothing wrong.

    “Bowdoin’s reliance on the ‘advice of counsel’ defense became a theme in both the civil and criminal litigation,” prosecutors advised a federal judge.

    It was a defense that failed miserably, as various entries on the public record show. And when Bowdoin got in trouble again — this time for promoting an alleged pyramid scheme known as “OneX” while out on signature bond in the ASD criminal case even as he asserted the OneX “program” had been vetted by attorneys and passed muster and that recruits could earn to the limits of their imaginations — Bowdoin again defaulted to an advice-of-counsel defense.

    This time, however, Bowdoin appears to have merely repeated false assertions that he’d heard from OneX or someone within OneX. The government responded by producing an affidavit from an attorney who’d performed work for OneX but never had drawn a conclusion the “program” was lawful and had never examined the actual business practices of OneX. The attorney swore in an affidavit filed under pain of perjury that the law firm through which he represented MLM clients “has never represented” Bowdoin. (The PP Blog is declining to identify the attorney, a partner in a Southern California law firm.)

    Back to AVG, the scheme Bowdoin helped launch before later trying to sanitize the alleged OneX pyramid scheme by claiming it had been scrubbed clean by attorneys: Bowdoin was to own two-thirds of AVG; the former ASD insider would own the remaining third, according to Exhibit F.

    Among other things, the document shows some of the fractured thinking and incongruities so often associated with HYIP scams. Despite the purported need for an offshore presence to ward off U.S. investigators, for instance, the document asserts that Gary D. Talbert, identified elsewhere as an ASD insider and one-time executive, had hired AVG “customer service people in the U.S.” (Bolding added by PP Blog.)

    Web records show that AVG had come out of the gate with two impossible (if not insane) propositions: The first was that AVG was just like the NBC television network, an absurdity on its face in that NBC doesn’t pay its advertisers to watch ads. Moreover, NBC, unlike the collapsed AVG, doesn’t operate a closed network in which only NBC’s advertisers and not the public at large can view ads. Nor does NBC try to recruit advertisers by telling them they’ll receive a dividend of 125 percent (or more) on their ad spend within a few months and that its advertisers can earn downline commissions two levels deep by recruiting competitors to advertise on NBC’s closed network.

    The second proposition was even more absurd: that AVG had nothing to do with ASD. The absurdity of this obvious lie was exposed before January 2009 even had ticked off the calendar. Indeed, after earlier asserting that AVG had no ties to ASD, the company — using a U.S.-based AVG customer-service rep who’d actually testified on ASD’s behalf in federal court —  announced that ASD’s Talbert was its CEO. If this weren’t absurd enough, AVG insisted through the former ASD member now working as a AVG spokesman that the appearance of AVG graphics in an ASD-controlled webroom was an “operational coincidence.”

    AVG went on to pile on the absurdities, according to court filings. In Exhibit F, the document prosecutors say was Bowdoin’s draft memo of his AVG reflections, members of Bowdoin’s family who allegedly benefited from ASD Ponzi proceeds are described as heroes who tried to save AVG from the thieves.

    With ASD’s Bowdoin’s knowledge, Talbert, according to Exhibit F, also purchased an Arizona “company named TMS” that owned a payment processor named “eWallet.” (Other records strongly suggest that the payment processor actually was named “eWalletPlus” and was operating from servers AVG was using in Panama.)

    “TMS used a bank in the Caribbean,” according to the document. The signatory on the Caribbean account somehow never was changed after the asserted change in ownership at TMS, and two former TMS associates allegedly stole nearly $2.7 million from AVG. The theft of nearly $3 million led to the collapse of AVG, according to the telling attributed to Bowdoin in the document.

    To date, the PP Blog has been unable to ascertain the truthfulness of the assertions about the thefts allegedly committed by the alleged former TMS insiders.

    What is clear, however, is that as much ASD money that could be found in August 2008 was seized. AVG then launched with cash that hadn’t been seized, and in part was targeted at ASD members.  AVG members then were left holding the bag, with the blame placed on former TMS associates.

    And something else is clear, which brings us to “Government Exhibit G”: AVG, the follow-up scam to ASD that involved Bowdoin and ASD insiders and alleged thefts of millions of dollars by outsiders, had at least two Swiss bank accounts.

    bowdoinhmail
    One of AVG’s Swiss bank accounts allegedly was discussed in this email between Andy Bowdoin and Gary Talbert. Bowdoin was ASD’s operator; Talbert was an ASD insider who allegedly became Bowdoin’s business partner in the AVG Ponzi scheme that sucked away millions of dollars. (Red lines inserted by PP Blog.)

    On Jan. 28, 2009, just days before AVG’s scheduled launch date in early February and less than six months after the Secret Service raid on ASD’s headquarters and Bowdoin’s home in Quincy, Fla., Gary Talbert used a Gmail address to email Andy Bowdoin at a hushmail address, according to Exhibit G.

    Talbert advised Bowdoin that an individual — presumptively one of the 30 AVG founders — had conducted a “Wire Transfer to AVG Swiss Bank Account” and needed assurances that it had posted. The inquiry about the asserted wire transfer appears to have been initiated by another AVG insider who’d emailed Talbert from his Gmail address to Talbert’s Gmail address. Through Gmail, Talbert then checked with Bowdoin at Bowdoin’s hushmail address, instructing the ASD patriarch that someone wanted to “verify that a bank wire hit the Swiss bank account.”

    Upon verification, the customer would make “another large wire,” Exhibit G suggests.

    Another email within the January 2009 chain says that AVG had at least two Swiss accounts.

    What It Means

    Walking this back and assuming the Exhibit G communications were truthful, what it means is that the ASD enterprise — this time in the form of AVG — had set up a banking operation in Switzerland, a secrecy haven. At the same time, it means that the ASD enterprise did this after it earlier had polluted U.S. banks in multiple states with fraudulent proceeds and now was taking its act not only to Switzerland, but also to South America, Central America and the Caribbean.

    Less clear is whether ASD had a preexisting banking network in Switzerland before effectively morphing into AVG. Regardless of when the Swiss accounts were opened, however, the mere presence of them suggests that ASD and AVG insiders had the means to move fraudulent proceeds from U.S.-based crimes offshore and perhaps tap into them later.

    And this brings us to Zeek Rewards, which also used domestic and offshore facilitators and the same fundamental business model of ASD and AVG. It also brings us to Profitable Sunrise and other MLM “programs” such as Better-Living Global Marketing. The now-disappeared Profitable Sunrise scheme allegedly used U.S. bank wires and offshore facilitators to drive tens of millions of dollars to the scheme. BLGM, still active, clearly has U.S. promoters and facilitators while purportedly operating from Hong Kong.

    Meanwhile, BLGM, like ASD, AVG, Profitable Sunrise and Zeek Rewards, has Stepfordian “defenders” running interference online.

    One of those “defenders” is over at the BehindMLM.com antiscam Blog asserting that he “met a guy online. I know him well now. I deposited $6500 into his Bank Of America account at my local branch.”

    Another BLGM defender is at BehindMLM.com asserting that (italics added):

    Got my Hongkong wire/remittance of 6,000 USD at Bank of America, have all my questions and concerns answered by Luke Teng, the teleconference helped a lot, disregard all the unnecessary comments of non-members.

    Get all your transparent answers from Luke Teng, or else you will die of stress reading all the negative comments of people who are not engaging, and guys remember this is our freewill and our own money, our decision, our own risk.

    TelexFree, a scheme more or less operating globally that has U.S. footprints in Massachusetts and Nevada and is under investigation in Brazil, also used Bank of America, according to members. Some TelexFree promoters instructed recruits to walk deposits meant for TelexFree into a Bank of American branch in Massachusetts or TD Bank locations elsewhere. TD Bank, of course, was the bank of Florida Ponzi schemer and racketeer Scott Rothstein. Four years after Rothstein’s $1 billion-plus scam brought great shame to the banking community, it’s still causing ripples.

    The PP Blog previously reported that a former Zeeker who also was associated with Profitable Sunrise — an alleged international pyramid scheme that funneled tens of millions of dollars to Europe, China and Panama amid the murkiest of circumstances — also was pushing BLGM.

    All of these “programs” are operating or have operated within the MLM sphere, the same sphere that produced the incredibly toxic ASD/AVG Ponzi schemes. All of the “programs” either have or had access to the wire facilities of various nations around the globe while using Ponzi- and pyramid schemes as their business model.

    The Piggybackers

    Various destructive forces are piggybacking on the scams, including attack bots and spambots that are keying on the names of HYIP enterprises and HYIP story figures to promote other scams or to drive traffic to other highly questionable “opportunities.”

    Even after the PP Blog announced the temporary suspension of the publication of new stories last week, it continued to be targeted by resources-draining bots. One wave knocked the Blog offline for about an hour two days ago. During the involuntary outage, legitimate readers and researchers  could not access the Blog.

    One of the spammers left the signature of an IP associated with the country of Indonesia. A spam bid from the specific IP keyed on a PP Blog story about ASD figure and purported “sovereign citizen” Kenneth Wayne Leaming, now in federal prison for targeting U.S. federal officials and a Secret Service agent in an abuse campaign, harboring fugitives and possessing firearms as a convicted felon. Records in Washington state show that a Leaming-connected enterprise once traded on the name of JPMorgan, a famous banking concern. (“Sovereign citizens” are becoming increasingly infamous for harassing banks.)

    Another spammer — one that left an IP signature from Belarus — also targeted a Leaming story thread at the PP Blog.

    In recent weeks, the Blog has recorded data that plainly show that  botnets, spambots or human spammers are circling antiscam sites and attempting to execute command strings that — if enough volume is applied — can cause databases to malfunction or even cause the sites to go offline.

    This creates an atmosphere that affects the publishing of information not only on current scams, but also on emerging scams and scams of the past. The downstream effects are potentially ruinous — and yet it continues.

    ASD and AVG were discredited long ago. But scams that use their core business model not only are launching, but in some cases thriving. Serial promoters are racing from one fraud scheme to the next. This sets the stage for schemes to fill up the world’s largest sports stadiums eight or 10 times over with victims. In 2008, ASD could have filled the Rose Bowl to capacity with victims one time. By 2012, Zeek could have filled the Rose Bowl with victims 10 times.

    The “defenses” for these various schemes range from the bizarre to the utterly mindless — and they absolutely must be decimated with the full, combined weight of the various world governments.

    It is in the interest of the worldwide public to connect the dots of these schemes and to eradicate them through the maximum application of the force of law. Left unchecked, they will erode the very foundations of freedom and permit the criminal underworld of MLM to thrive.

    NOTE: Our thanks to the ASDUpdates Blog.

     

  • DISTURBING NEW LOW FOR MLM: TelexFree Affiliate Spams Sign-Up Offer In Comments Thread About Tragic Suicide Death Of Fellow Affiliate

    Not even the tragic suicide death of a TelexFree member in Brazil could stop promos for TelexFree -- right below a story reporting on the woman's death.
    Not even the tragic suicide of a TelexFree member in Brazil could stop promos for the purported “opportunity” — right below a story reporting on the woman’s death.

    Citing a Brazilian media account, Oz at BehindMLM.com reported tonight that the TelexFree member who jumped from the fifth floor of a parking garage in the state of Paraiba last month has died. The PP Blog reported on Nov. 27 that the woman initially survived the plunge and was hospitalized in critical condition.

    PBAgora.com.br, a news site in Paraiba, reported on Nov. 29 (Portuguese) that the 22-year-old woman died of her injuries. It also reported that there is a family dispute over the degree to which the woman’s participation in TelexFree had a role in the death.

    There likely will be little rational dispute, however, about whether MLM just set a new low: Indeed, the Comments thread below the PBAgora story on the tragic death included a spam in Portuguese from a TelexFree affiliate interested in recruiting a downline. The spam ignored the woman’s death. The PP Blog used Google Translate to translate the Portuguese spam to English. Google Translate isn’t perfect, but it can give users a pretty solid idea of meanings.

    Here is a snippet from the Portuguese-to-English translation (italics added):

    $ $ $ $ Telexfree INTERNATIONAL – TORQUE DESIGN PERFECT $ $ $ $ $
    Join this amazing project Telexfree Internaconal group ! !

    The avatar of the poster was the Union Jack, the flag of the United Kingdom. Another part of the pitch, according to the Google translation, read as such: “We have gained a lot from the network.” The pitch included directions to contact the spammer at a Gmail address.

    On Sept. 9, the PP Blog reported that TelexFree promoters were encouraging prospects in Brazil to fabricate an address in England to register for the “program.”

    TelexFree is under investigation in Brazil, with new registrations banned in the country while a pyramid-scheme probe continues. Promotions in other countries have continued, even in the aftermath of reported death threats against a judge and prosecutor in Brazil — and now a reported suicide.

    Another comment in the thread sought to blame a Brazilian judge for the woman’s suicide.

    Also see June 20, 2012, PP Blog story on weird spam associated with the Zeek Rewards MLM “program.” Less than two months later — on Aug. 17, 2012, the SEC filed an emergency complaint in federal court that alleged Zeek was a $600 million Ponzi- and pyramid scheme.

     

     

  • UPDATE: (1) Article In Portuguese By Zeek Affiliate On Google News Says Program Has 100,000 Members In Brazil Alone; (2) American Pitchman Calls Zeek An ‘Investment’ On YouTube — And Then Takes It Back

    Screenshot: Part of a promo for Zeek translated from Portuguese to English by Google Translate

    UPDATED 1:59 P.M. EDT (U.S.A.) An article on Google News by an apparent Portuguese-speaking affiliate of the U.S.-based Zeek Rewards MLM “program” that is married to a penny-auction site known as Zeekler claims that Zeek has more than 100,000 members in Brazil alone.

    Meanwhile, a promo by an American affiliate dated July 7 on YouTube describes Zeek as an investment program — before the affiliate backtracks and says Zeek is not an investment program. The YouTube development first was reported by BehindMLM.com. (Link at bottom of story.)

    Portuguese is the official language of Brazil, the largest country in South America. The claim of 100,000 Brazilian members could not immediately be confirmed, and no breakdown of the specific Zeek membership ranks Brazilian members had chosen was provided in the article. Zeek categorizes members as “Free,” “Silver” ($10 a month), “Gold” ($50 a month) and “Diamond” ($99 a month).

    In addition to selecting a membership rank within the Zeek MLM organization, affiliates can opt to send the company up to $10,000 as a means of gaining a daily share of what is known as the Retail Points Pool (RPP). Those shares later can be converted to cash payouts that correspond to an annualized return in the hundreds of percent. The RPP program has led to questions about whether Zeek is selling unregistered securities as investment contracts and using linguistic sleight-of-hand in a bid to avoid regulatory scrutiny.

    Zeek, purportedly part of Rex Venture Group LLC,  is based in North Carolina. On June 20, the office of North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper said it had concerns about the company, which plants the seed that members can earn a return of between 1 percent and 2 percent a day but denies it is offering an investment program. Zeek’s business model resembles that of AdSurfDaily, which the U.S. Secret Service said in 2008 was a massive, online Ponzi scheme that was offering securities and disguising itself as an “advertising” program.

    Andy Bowdoin's booking photo in the District of Columbia.

    ASD President Andy Bowdoin is now jailed in the District of Columbia after pleading guilty to wire fraud in the ASD Ponzi case in May 2012. ASD’s purported payout of 1 percent a day was on par with Zeek’s purported daily payout. Because it is known that some affiliates of the ASD Ponzi scheme also are promoting Zeek and because Zeek has highlighted some of those ASD promoters on its website, questions have been raised about whether a core group of MLMers who move individually or as part of “teams” from one investment scheme to another is engaging in willful blindness by promoting Zeek, which is similar to ASD in key respects.

    And because the U.S. government returned millions of dollars to ASD victims last year in the form of remissions payments that came from funds seized in the ASD Ponzi case, questions have been raised about whether Zeek’s growth has been fueled at least in part by the funds originally seized in the ASD case. The government is believed to have returned about $59 million to former ASD members.

    Although Zeek says it is not offering a return on investment and instead is offering revenue-sharing program, the resultant payouts correspond to figures typically associated with HYIP Ponzi investment schemes. Like Zeek, ASD also claimed to be a revenue-sharing program.

    The English version of the Portuguese article for Zeek, according to Google Translate, includes this line: “The easiest way to earn money is by posting at least one ad per day to earn a daily rebate.” (Emphasis added by PP Blog.)

    ASD also called its payouts to members “rebates.” The affiliate article for Zeek in Portuguese includes this phrase: “uma bonificação diária.” The phrase, according to Google Translate, means “a daily subsidy” or “a daily rebate.”

    In the ASD case, federal prosecutors said use of the word “rebate” was a means of masking the investment element of the ASD “program.”

    Zeek also may have a presence in Portugal itself, according to text below a YouTube video (www.youtube.com/watch?v=w07uP5XF39w) in which former ASD pitchman Todd Disner appears. Disner speaks in English in the video, but others appear to be speaking Portuguese and a link below the video points to a website styled in part as zeekportugal.com. Other text at the YouTube site points to a YouTube site styled “parttimezeekrewards’s channel.”

    Disner and former ASD member Dwight Owen Schweitzer sued the United States in November 2011, claiming that ASD was a legitimate business and that government undercover agents who joined ASD had a duty to identify themselves to ASD management. Schweitzer also is promoting Zeek, according to an online promo on a classified-ad site.

    ASD’s Andy Bowdoin’s guilty plea and acknowledgement ASD was a Ponzi scheme were recorded in May 2012, about six months after Disner and Schweitzer sued the government. Both men are seeking to press forward with the lawsuit, despite Bowdoin’s guilty plea to wire fraud and Ponzi concession. The duo claims the seizure of information from ASD’s database by the government was unconstitutional under the 4th Amendment. A federal judge in Florida is expected to rule soon on whether the Disner/Schweizer claims can proceed.

    Virality And Customer-Service Concerns

    The article on Google News that claims that Zeek has 100,000 members in the Portuguese-speaking country of Brazil may speak to the virality of the “program” on the Internet. At the same time, it may explain — at least in part — why Zeek’s customer-support systems appear to be severely taxed if not broken, with Zeek instructing its members to go to their uplines for support. Requests for help through Zeek itself have backed up for weeks or even months. Some English-speaking members of Zeek have complained their support tickets were ignored or closed without explanation.

    Having thousands or even tens of thousands of affiliates in countries whose citizens may not be fully conversant in English leads to questions about whether Zeek has both the resources and the infrastructure to support a global membership base, even as some Zeek members who may not speak English are sending the company one-time sums of up to $10,000 and monthly fees on top of that. It also leads to questions about whether Zeek can police its own global network of affiliates, whether Zeek has the capacity to adequately monitor claims about the “program” in languages other than English and whether Zeek can determine whether its U.S. domestic and international affiliates are operating in “teams” to engage in downline “stacking” designed to concentrate earnings in favored familial or local pools.

    Like ASD, Zeek has instructed members not to describe the “opportunity” as an investment program. But BehindMLM reported yesterday that a Zeek member on YouTube was doing just that before catching himself and going into backtrack mode. From BehindMLM.com, quoting from a Zeek affiliate’s July 7 YouTube promo (italics added):

    [8:58] Do it, I did it! Do it and you’ll see how quickly you can recoup your investm..recoup your investment-ahh, I’m sorry, it’s not an investment – your original purchasing of bids.

    Visit this story thread on BehindMLM.com.

  • RECOMMENDED READING: The Age Of Evolving MLM Radicalism: BehindMLM Reports On Lawsuit Threats And Security Taunts Directed At Blogger Who Took Issue With How American MLM Brand ‘Xocai’ Chocolate Was Being Marketed In Norway

    U.S.-based Xocai features attractive products in attractive packaging. The behavior of some of its supporters is decidedly less than attractive, something that is generating negative headlines in Europe and the United States.

    From the Stepfordian cheerleading for the Zeek Rewards MLM “program” (and its purported nonguaranteed, nonreturn return of between 1 percent and 2 percent a day) to the mind-bending and long-running circus surrounding AdSurfDaily (1 percent a day with an operator who was a recidivist securities huckster and now has pleaded guilty in the ASD MLM Ponzi case) and JSS Tripler/JustBeenPaid (2 percent a day while fretting about “cruise missile” attacks on its server by purported criminal governments bent on destroying free enterprise), a certain sphere of the MLM universe has been serving up a symphony of the bizarre.

    But what reportedly occurred in Norway recently in the MLM sphere not only is bizarre, but also makes some MLMers look like a gang of out-of-control, conspiring thugs and extortionists.

    BehindMLM.com is reporting today on lawsuit threats and other hair-raising taunts directed at a Norwegian critic who raised questions about how the Xocai MLM “opportunity” was being presented in Norway.

    Xocai is a brand of chocolate marketed by Nevada-based MXI Corp. MXI stands for Marketing Xocolate International Corp., according to the company.

    No legitimate MLM company or MLM affiliate should tolerate or model this fantastically ill-advised behavior, which can have severe repercussions and is creating negative headlines for both Xocai and MLM.

    It is the worst possible sort of “public relations” in “defense” of a company. Not only does it smack of a bid to force mob rule in the Internet Age and speak to issues of extortion, emotional blackmail and the disingenuous whitewashing of ill intent, it raises very real concerns about how a mob can undermine free speech and jeopardize the security of individual MLM critics and their family members, friends and associates.

    It is worth noting that supporters of AdSurfDaily also threatened to sue critics. At the same time, it’s worth noting that a threat to sue an ASD critic for $40 million in July 2008 became part of a government series of exhibits in the ASD Ponzi case.

    But the story about the negative PR Xocai suddenly is experiencing goes far beyond simple lawsuit threat reportedly made in its name. Indeed, the story of the lawsuit threat is gathering attention because of companion threats, even as company says it is trying to build a powerful brand.

    Xocai says it recently obtained a trademark on the phrase “Healthy Chocolate” and seeks to become a business icon. These things are commendable, and the company has made its accomplishments and goals part of its PR stable.

    “Approval of the ‘Healthy Chocolate’ trademark represents a significant milestone for MXI,” said Andrew Brooks, founder and chief operating officer of MXI Corp., in a May 21 news release on the company’s website.

    “We’ve increasingly become known as the ‘Healthy Chocolate’ company, utilizing proprietary formulations of premium ingredients, along with cold-processing techniques, to retain the nutritional potency of cacao and açai berries,” said Brooks. “With this milestone, we now have another important tool to establish ourselves as the icon for Healthy Chocolate, both inside and outside our industry.”

    We’re wondering today whether the company, which plainly states it seeks to become a business icon and clearly values its brand and its new trademark, finds the BehindMLM story disturbing enough to repudiate the behavior that is the subject of the story.

    The PP Blog will provide space to Xocai should it choose to speak to the events in Norway. It could score a lot of PR points by denouncing those events and putting it on the record that it will not tolerate MLM thuggery in its name.

    Every word of the BehindMLM story is worth reading. (Link below.)

    The upshot is this: An apparent Xocai “defender” unhappy about a series of Blog reports planted the seed that the company would be filing a “a seven digit lawsuit” against the Blogger. The lawsuit, according to the “defender,” was backed by the majority of a trade association consisting of 9,000 Norwegian Xocai members.

    But the menacing reportedly didn’t stop there.

    In fact, according to the BehindMLM story, it devolved into a situation in which the “defender” planted the seed that other Xocai “defenders” would make trouble for the Blogger with his private employer. To maximize the chill, the “defender” made sure the critic knew that an intelligence-gathering operation was occurring behind the scenes and that Xocai supporters might just appear at his gate and at the gates of his loved ones.

    Of course, the Xocai “defender,” a purported “association,” washed its hands of any suggestion its intent was anything less than noble. The seeds planted that the life of the Blogger, his personal security and the security of his loved ones could be ruined in an instant if he didn’t behave in a certain way — well, those things apparently were not to be viewed as threatening. It was just business, or so the disingenuous, vomitous talking points of the “defender” go.

    Our view is that is just the latest example of something we’re inclined to describe as an  evolving MLM radicalism. It is particularly dangerous because certain parts of the MLM universe are known to reflexively model anything that “works” with complete disregard for the consequences.

    It reminded us of what happened to this police chief in Georgia earlier this year. The chief allegedly was targeted in an intimidation campaign by a “sovereign citizen.”

    The bid to “defend” Xocai by trying to make a Blogger believe everything he valued in life could be gone in an instant is deplorable. It is ugly past comparison. Unfortunately it is hardly unique in the recent annals of MLM’s Thug Wing.

    Read the story on BehindMLM.com.