Tag: HYIP frauds

  • BULLETIN: ‘PerfectMoney,’ Fraud-Scheme Processor Purportedly Based In Panama, Says It Is Banning U.S. Customers

    breakingnews72BULLETIN: On the heels of the apparent shutdown of Costa Rica-based Liberty Reserve as part of an international money-laundering investigation, “PerfectMoney” says it is banning users from the United States. Perfect Money purportedly operates from Panama. (More below.)

    In an announcement dated today on its website, Perfect Money says that “due to changes in our policy we forbid new registrations from individuals or companies based in the United States of America. This includes US citizens residing overseas. If you fall under the above mentioned category, please do not register an account with us.”

    How PerfectMoney intends to treat existing U.S. users was not immediately clear, and the firm did not explain why it suddenly had changed its policy. The company is favored by criminals and HYIP scammers and has a history of advertising on behalf of purported Forex “opportunities” that have been the subjects of sweeping court actions in the United States.

    In January 2013, the Superintendency of the Securities Market of the Republic of Panama (SMV) warned that Perfect Money “has not been granted any kind of license by the SMV, nor has been authorized to carry on activities of intermediation, administration, or advisory in securities, financial instruments or forex, in or from the Republic of Panama, within the scope of the Securities Law.

    “PERFECT MONEY FINANCE CORP. does not have [its] own offices in Panama, the office and its P.O. Box claim in its website [deleted by PP Blog], belong to the companies Azuero Business Center, Inc. and Panama Net Buy, which provides online shopping services,” SMV said.

    In 2011, the PP Blog reported that an individual referenced as a Perfect Money contact person is referenced in federal court filings that tie money from the alleged EMG/Finanzas Forex fraud scheme to an international narcotics probe that led to the seizure of at least 59 bank accounts in the United States and the companion seizure of 294 bars of gold and at least seven luxury vehicles.

    PerfectMoney’s name also is referenced in case filings from the SEC’s 2010 fraud complaint against Imperia Invest IBC, a scam purportedly operating offshore. Deaf people lost millions of dollars to Imperia, the SEC said.

    A quick check today by the PPBlog showed dozens of HYIP sites that claim to accept PerfectMoney. Many of the same sites also claimed to accept LibertyReserve. How the “programs” — all of which advertise preposterous returns — will contend with the absence of LibertyReserve and the new restrictions imposed by PerfectMoney was not immediately clear.

    Liberty Reserve operator Arthur Budovsky Belanchuk is reported to be under arrest in Spain as part of a probe by authorities in Costa Rica and the United States.

    Based on U.S. court files and certain extrapolations, murky HYIPs may be raking in billions of dollars. In August 2012, the SEC alleged that the Zeek Rewards “program” gathered at least $600 million. Legisi, another HYIP scam, gathered at least $72 million before its 2008 collapse. Pathway To Prosperity appears to have churned at least $70 million prior to its 2010 collapse. The 2008 AdSurfDaily scheme gathered at least $119 million, according to federal prosecutors.

    Zeek and ASD — at least — did business with AlertPay and SolidTrustPay, processors based in Canada.

    In April 2013, the SEC alleged that a murky “program” known as Profitable Sunrise may have gathered tens of millions of dollars. Profitable Sunrise is the subject of regulatory actions or Investor Alerts in at least five countries: the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Italy and New Zealand.

    Profitable Sunrise pitchmen may not even have known for whom they were working to glean commissions, the SEC alleged.

    There may be hundreds or perhaps thousands of HYIP scams operating online at any given point in time. Some of them — like Profitable Sunrise — even advertise they accept bank wires. HYIP scams often have promoters in common, a situation that sets the stage for banks to come into possession of funds tainted by a revolving door of fraud schemes.

    In recent weeks, the PP Blog has reported on a number of reload scams aimed at victims of the Profitable Sunrise scheme. Virtually all of the schemes accepted PerfectMoney, LibertyReserve or both. Some also advertised they accepted SolidTrustPay and EgoPay.

    These schemes included BiwakoBank Limited, SuperWithdraw, Whos12, Fairy Funds, Roxili, OptiEarn, AVVGlobal, ProForexUnion, MajestiCrown and TelexFree.

  • KABOOM! Is It Real — Or Is It The Feds? Agents Created ‘Payment Processor’ As Part Of Undercover Sting Designed To Infiltrate Corrupt Companies; 11 Bank Accounts And 10 Domain Names Seized; 3 Individuals, 2 Firms Indicted

    One of the domain name seizure notices in a federal sting operation in which agents created a "payment processor" to infiltrate operations alleged to be corrupt.

    Kaboom! In a move that may send shockwaves across the fraudulent HYIP, autosurf, sports-betting and “arbitrage” universes domestically and offshore, Maryland’s top federal prosecutor has released details of a two-year long undercover sting in which federal agents created a “payment processor” to infiltrate illegal gambling operations.

    Using methods straight out of the scammer’s playbook and turning the playbook back on the alleged scammers themselves, the federal operation resulted in the seizure of 11 bank accounts in the United States, Guam, Panama, Malta, Portugal and the Netherlands, prosecutors said.

    Ten domain names associated with illegal gambling sites also were seized.

    “It is illegal for internet gambling enterprises to do business in Maryland, regardless of where the website operator is located,” said U.S. Attorney Rod J. Rosenstein. “We cannot allow foreign website operators to flout the law simply because their headquarters are based outside the country.”

    The name of the Feds’ “payment processor” was Linwood Payment Solutions — and its website now serves this message:

    “Linwood Payment Solutions is a Department of Homeland Security Undercover Business set up to identify and prosecute companies accepting and paying out funds for U.S. customers who gamble online illegally.

    “If you have questions regarding funds withdrawn from your bank account for gambling purposes contact the online gambling company you provided your banking information to.”

    As part of the sting, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (Homeland Security Investigations or HSI) “obtained a business address near Atlantic City, New Jersey,” according to court records.

    HSI then created a website for the “payment processor,” opened bank accounts, set up a “payment processing plant” and staffed it until it could process “thousands” of transactions daily.

    Undercover operatives then began to mix with “top managers of gambling organizations,” discussing fees and contracts. Having established ties to the alleged scammers, Linwood began to process payments — in excess of $33 million in all, involving more than 300,000 transactions, according to court records.

    Seized domain names include:

    • Bookmaker.com
    • 2Betsdi.com
    • Funtimebingo.com
    • Goldenarchcasino.com
    • Truepoker.com
    • Betmaker.com
    • Betgrandesports.com
    • Doylesroom.com
    • Betehorse.com
    • Beted.com

    Seizure notices now adorn the websites.

    Indicted were ThrillX Systems Ltd., d/b/a BetEd; Darren Wright and David Parchomchuk of British Columbia, Canada;  K23 Group Financial Services, d/b/a BMX Entertainment; and Ann Marie Puig, 35, of San Jose, Costa Rica.

    “The proceeds from illegal Internet gambling are often used to fuel organized crime and support criminal activity,” said William Winter, special agent in charge of ICE’s HSI unit.