Tag: instant2u

  • Words That Should Become The New ‘Shot Heard ‘Round The World’ Spoken By Former CFTC Enforcement Chief

    By coincidence the words appear in the 13th paragraph of a Chicago Tribune story invoking investors’ sustained lack of luck and reporting on a new series of Ponzi schemes the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission is investigating.

    The words were spoken by Gregory Mocek, former CFTC enforcement director, and are the most important words spoken to date during the financial meltdown. They should be the new “Shot heard ’round the world.”

    Ponzi schemes involving foreign currency trading have been so rampant they could “eat up all of the commission’s investigation and litigation resources, and there will be nothing left to protect the integrity of legitimate markets,” Mocek told the newspaper.

    It’s the problem in a nutshell. With great economy and not an ounce of hyberbole, Mocek defined the problem. As always, the question is, “Will anybody listen?”

    Give Them Big Guns And A Camera

    Regulators need the financial equivalent of automatic weapons provided the DEA when drug dealers switched from 38s to Uzis. They need bigger budgets, more enforcement staff, more computers, more laptops, more training, more undercover agents, more political support, less criticism and tools that work. At the same time, they need better PR skills, more news savvy and the power of arrest. They need cameras to take mugshots, a website that publishes the mugshots, and the ability to explain the arrest in nontechnical terms.

    To the best of our knowledge, no federal law-enforcement agency provided photos of Bernard Madoff or R. Allen Stanford, despite the extraordinary allegations against them. The public needs those photos. The media need those photos. Bloggers need those photos. Webmasters need those photos. It’s a key step in getting this cancer under control. The Sarasota County Sheriff’s office provided a photo of Arthur Nadel. Why can’t federal agencies do the same?

    Clean Up The Internet

    It is a mistake of grand proportions to assume the Ponzi problem and the financial skullduggery exist only in the brick-and-mortar world, that the practitioners exclusively wear suits, read the Wall Street Journal and shuttle from appointment to appointment in fine rides like Madoff or Stanford.

    Indeed, many of the most egregious offenders don’t have well-known names, spend much of the day in their underwear, read Internet boards as opposed to the Journal, don’t have appointments that even resemble anything traditional and don’t even leave their homes — not even to go to the bank.

    They are destroying wealth. They are sucking hundreds of millions of dollars out of the economy, perhaps even billions of dollars. Their ability to accumulate wealth at the expense of others has nothing to do with skill and has everything to do with timing: They read High Yield Investment Program (HYIP) and “autosurf” boards on the Internet, send email to their followers when they spot an opportunity, fund their purchases via wire transfer through Canada and, when it’s time to take their “profits,” they take them by wire transfer and deposit them in banks via ACH.

    At this very minute, hundreds of HYIPs and autosurfs are selling unregistered securities to U.S. residents and are using virtually pure Ponzi models to do it. They’re advertising huge returns — 30 percent a month and even 144 percent in 12 days — while stressing in U.S. English that they are safe opportunities and outside the reach of U.S. law enforcement in places such as Panama and Uruguay.

    Because they use U.S. English and their websites can be copied, nonEnglish-speaking criminals and people who speak limited English as a second language are simply cutting and pasting content, starting their own HYIPs and autosurfs, paying off members to instill early trust — and then vanishing with U.S. dollars when they’ve met their criminal target.

    And then starting all over again.

    They need only about $400 to steal tens of millions of dollars. If they already own the php script, their investment shrinks to the price of a domain name, a hosting account for a month or two and their time.

    Canadian companies used by the criminals include AlertPay and SolidTrustPay. These companies are permitting money-laundering by turning a blind eye to it. If they do take an overt step to instill client discipline, they get targeted by DDOS attacks that knock their servers offline.

    PayPal won’t touch this business. Much of it went to Canada when the United States put an end to eGold’s love affair with customers who laundered money through the system.

    A surf known as “MegaLido” is a case in point. No one other than the operator knows for certain where MegaLido was located. It came to life in the aftermath of the government seizure of nearly $100 million from Florida-based AdSurfDaily Inc. amid Ponzi allegations, and even was promoted by ASD members. MegaLido used AlertPay and SolidTrustPay, recruited an estimated 27,000 members, collected money from the members — and then simply vanished.

    It looks as though it had a partner in the crime — a surf known as Instant2U — which also fled with money it collected. AlertPay and SolidTrustPay reportedly are providing partial refunds from money the criminal surfs left in the system, but it wasn’t enough to make “investors” whole.

    See this post. And see this post.

    AlertPay suffered a DDOS attack during the process and was knocked offline.

    Forex scheming also is a big part of these games. CFTC, the SEC, the FBI, the IRS and prosecutors need tools. They need political clout behind them. It is clear that the American people have had it with Ponzi schemes and massive financial fraud. There never has been a better time for politicians to curry favor with voters by blasting these schemes back to the Stone Age.

    The new “Shot heard ’round the world’ should be plugged into one of the bailout packages because it provides exceptional value for taxpayers, exquisite headlines for politicians and exceptional tools for law enforcement to nuke these operations and stem the flow of poison.

    At the moment, advocates for Ponzi schemes — yes, the schemes have advocates and even crackpots who want to sue the government for enforcing existing laws — are sending letters to Sen. Patrick Leahy.

    They want Leahy, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, to investigate the prosecutors and the U.S. Secret Service for breaking up the ASD Ponzi scheme. Some of the very same people are promoting offshore scams in Panama and Uruguay.

    It is time to nuke these miserable businesses. Gregory Mocek laid out the problem, and he couldn’t be more right.

    Fire the shot.

    Read the Chicago Tribune story.

  • MegaLido: Is There An ‘Instant2U.com’ Tie?

    egoldenpandasmallIn the weeks following the seizure of cash and property linked to AdSurfDaily Inc., some former members of ASD turned their attention to promoting MegaLido.

    MegaLido was pushed as a safe, offshore alternative to ASD and Golden Panda, and a way to make up ASD/Golden Panda losses that stemmed from the government seizure of cash and other assets linked to the firms.

    “MegaLido Rocks!” one promoter blared, noting excitedly that it paid 12 percent a day and “It’s Offshore!”

    MegaLido ultimately tanked, leaving members holding the bag.

    Now it appears as though MegaLido had at least an indirect tie to an autosurf known as instant2u.com, the domain for which was registered July 27, only a few days before the government seized ASD assets.

    instant2u promoted 14 percent a day.

    instant2u.com also failed. Based on forum reports, the surf began to fail sometime in November — just as MegaLido was coming to prominence in the surf world. Soon thereafter, though, MegaLido also failed.

    If you type instant2u.com into the location bar of your browser, you’ll see that the domain tries to redirect to MegaLido, which is throwing a “Failed To Connect” error.

    It is not known if the domains had common ownership or were working together in indirect fashion to harvest money from customers. What is known is that autosurfs often join forces to create churn. CEP, yet another autosurf Ponzi scheme, had money in 26 separate autosurfs or HYIPs, prosecutors said.

    The instant2u redirect to MegaLido might not be evident in all browsers, but we tested it in Firefox and it tried to redirect to MegaLido. People are complaining about it on a MegaLido forum. They know they’ve been “had” whether the two surfs had common ownership or not.

    These developments demonstrate, once again, that there is nothing noble about the autosurf business. instant2u became the subject of Web discussions as early as July 31, just one day before ASD’s assets were seized.

    ASD effectively went out of business Aug. 1, followed within weeks by both instant2u and MegaLido. Some of the people who promoted all three surfs are still promoting surf sites, demonstrating that they’re willing to relieve people of their money no matter what.