Tag: JubiMax

  • IRONY: Scheme Whose Actual Name Is ‘PlanB’ Tackled By European Authorities

    planb4youOne of the core signatures of an HYIP scam is highlighted when a “program” is presented as a “Plan B,” typically in the context of creating “multiple income streams” or “in case Plan A fails, you’d better have a “Plan B.”

    Zeek Rewards A-lister Keith Laggos gushed about Lyoness, his “Plan B” program. Zeek collapsed in a pile of Ponzi rubble and Lyoness later caught the attention of authorities in Australia.

    Fellow Zeek A-Lister T. LeMont Silver pushed an ill-fated series of Plans B such as JubiMax/JubiRev and GoFunRewards/GoFunPlaces.

    Zhunrize, remarkably, touted itself as both a “Plan A” and a “Plan B” scheme.

    Now it has come to pass that a “program” whose actual name is Plan B reportedly has encountered a police raid in Europe in which money and expensive cars were seized. Perhaps showcasing its Stepfordian mindlessness, the “program” added “4you” to its name, becoming “PlanB4You.”

    AdVentures4U, a similar MLM fraud, tried a similar tactic before crashing in 2009. That “program” was a “Plan B” for MLM scammers who earlier had joined the AdSurfDaily and AdViewGlobal MLM scams.

    This story about PlanB4You is in Dutch.  An English translation by Google Translate suggests there were police raids in the Netherlands and perhaps other countries, including Belgium.

    If the PlanB4You name wasn’t enough of a giveaway that the “program” was one to be avoided, PlanB4You’s presence on the MoneyMakerGroup Ponzi forum provided another one. (It’s on TalkGold, too.)

    Or you could have read the July 2014 BehindMLM.com review of PlanB4You as yet another scam in progress.

     

     

  • ANOTHER MLM PR DISASTER: Zhunrize, Alleged Worldwide Pyramid Scheme That Gathered $105 Million, Was Presented As A ‘Plan B’

    From a Zhunrize slide as viewed through Open Office. Red highlight by PP Blog.
    From a Zhunrize slide as viewed through Open Office. Red highlight by PP Blog.

    2ND UPDATE 5:25 P.M. EDT U.S.A. Purported “Plans B” are one of the core signatures of the the MLM HYIP sphere, which is known for incredibly toxic global frauds such as Zeek Rewards and AdSurfDaily. In 2009, an ASD reload scam known as AdViewGlobal was positioned as a “Plan B.”

    The individual schemes of Zeek and ASD took in a combined sum of at least $969 million. AdViewGlobal appears to have disappeared with millions of dollars — after targeting ASD victims for a second time.

    In 2012, Zeek and ASD figure Keith Laggos pushed the Lyoness “program” as a “Plan B.”

    Laggos’ listeners were told that, if things went south at Zeek, Lyoness would be an excellent hedge through which $10,000 directed at the scheme might return “a quarter-million dollars.”

    Lyoness is now under investigation in Australia, amid pyramid-scheme allegations.

    “Plan B” also is known as “Don’t put all your eggs in one basket.” HYIP prospects often are told to join more than one scheme or to quickly get in another if something goes wrong with the current scheme, sometimes known as “Plan A.”

    Plan B schemes typically are a means by which prospects are lured into a continuous cycle of MLM frauds. Zeek and OneX promoter T. LeMont Silver later went on to “Plan B” schemes such as GoFunPlaces/GoFunRewards and JubiMax/JubiRev. Those schemes cratered or encountered difficulties. Silver now is pushing the exceptionally murky BitClub Network “opportunity” as a Plan B.

    MLM HYIP schemes may switch forms. They may appear as straight-line investment-fraud schemes such as Legisi, which collapsed after an SEC intervention in 2008. ASD was an “autosurf advertising” scheme that collapsed in 2008 after an intervention by the U.S. Secret Service. Zeek, a purported “penny auction” company, collapsed in 2012 after an SEC intervention.

    WCM777, meanwhile, collapsed in March 2014 after interventions by the SEC and state-level securities regulators. WCM777 purportedly was a “cloud computing” company  that allegedly gathered more than $80 million. In April 2014, another MLM HYIP scheme — TelexFree — collapsed. The SEC and the Massachusetts Securities Division said it was conducting a billion-dollar, cross-border securities swindle. TelexFree positioned itself as a “VOIP” company that also was in the apps, cellphone and credit-repair businesses.

    The trend now appears to be to wrap traditional products such as cosmetics and diet shakes into murky and confusing schemes that pay recruitment commissions. No specific payout may be mentioned.

    The SEC yesterday announced fraud charges against the Zhunrize MLM scheme, accusing it of selling unregistered securities and operating a massive international pyramid scheme.

    The phrase “Plan B” even appears in promo material for Zhunrize. The material also references Plan A. Based on this information, it appears as though Zhunrize was touting itself as both a “Plan A” and “Plan B” scheme.

    “Do you know anyone who would like to develop a plan ‘A’ Or plan ‘B’?” the Zhunrize promo queries.

    In the promo, Zhunrize prospects are told they can earn “thousands each month by helping others to save time, gas, money and avoiding crowds.”

    One of the problems in this bizarre sphere of MLM is that tainted money from earlier scams may flow into emerging scams, in effect making banks and payment vendors warehouses for a continuous stream of fraud proceeds that flow between and among pyramid schemes and Ponzi schemes.

    Like Lyoness, Zhunrize is involved in the shopping-portal business. Like Zeek and other “programs,” Zhunrize also was positioned as a “profit-sharing” or “revenue-sharing” opportunity.

    In court filings, Zeek receiver Kenneth D. Bell has suggested that MLM may have a problem with “serial” participants in fraud schemes who tout purported “revenue-sharing” plans.

    Case files associated with various recent HYIP/revenue-sharing schemes put losses in the billions of dollars. Because some promoters simply move from one scam to another, they are eviscerating wealth on a global scale.

    If someone pitches you on an MLM “Plan B,” run like the wind.

  • T. LeMont Silver In Furious Name-Dropping Spree For BitClub Network; Veteran MLM Huckster Still Trails WCM777 Scam In Unofficial Record Book

    3RD UPDATE 11:45 A.M. EDT U.S.A. Zeek Rewards clawback defendant T. LeMont Silver promised “training” to recruits of the emerging BitClub Network “program” — and the veteran HYIP huckster delivered by training his listeners to drop names.

    Lots and lots of names.

    Regardless, Silver might have to dial up his efforts if he hopes to become be the new standard-bearer in the category of name-dropping to sell a purported MLM/direct-sales “opportunity.” That record is held unofficially by the WCM777 “program,” which the SEC described in March as an international pyramid scheme.

    But even longtime MLM huckster Phil Piccolo — known as the “one-man Internet crime wave” in part for the ceaseless dropping of names such as Oprah Winfrey, Donald Trump, Groupon, Walmart and Apple  — must be shaking his head in begrudging awe at Silver’s recent efforts to foist the emerging BitClub Network brand on the consuming public.

    After leading recruits to disaster in Zeek, Silver turned his attentions to the JubiMax/JubiRev and GoFunRewards/GoFunPlaces MLM disasters, supplementing his promos for “Plan B” HYIP schemes by dropping the names of MLM companies such as Herbalife, Amway, Avon, ViSalus and others.

    With BitClub Network, Silver has put his name-dropping into overdrive, joining the likes of the scamming chieftains of WCM777, the collapsed pyramid scheme that traded on the names of Siemens, Goldman Sachs, the Denny’s restaurant chain and a series of hospitality companies with famous flags.

    By the SEC’s count, WCM777 dropped on the order of 700 names to sanitize its bizarre pyramid scheme. (WCM777 also once featured a love letter to the disaffected affiliates in Peru it had drafted into a Ponzi- and pyramid scheme and subjected to police raids while also featuring what BehindMLM.com has described as a “Jesus Sword.”)

    Distressingly, Silver assures his audience in a recent promo that “people from all across the globe” were listening to his webinar and to promos of other affiliates.  The named countries included the Philippines, Russia “and all over Europe, Australia, Canada.”

    The Silver promo session was titled, “Make Money With No List Featuring BitClub Network Webinar.”

    Silver hasn’t topped 700 yet in the unofficial name-dropping calculus, but he’s off to a good start, essentially positioning BitClub Network as a company that will create profit opportunities for the same sort of visionaries who spotted the genius behind one-time emerging brands such as Google, AOL, Microsoft (Internet Explorer), Amazon.com, Apple’s iPhone, Apple’s iPod, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Blogger and more.

    It’s all about “being at the right place at the right time,” Silver bleats. He even suggests in text that BitClub Network could be the next “email.”

    As the video proceeds, Silver talks about Bitcoin, using slides to drop the names of Tiger Direct, the Sacramento Kings NBA franchise, Lord & Taylor, Dish Network, Expedia, Newegg and Gyft. He also works in the names of CVS Pharmacy, Sears, Target, Home Depot, Whole Foods Market and more.

    Along the way, Silver also drops the names of California Gov. Jerry Brown, “China’s Central Bank Governor” and Gerogy Luntovsky, “deputy chairman of the bank of Russia,” according to text Silver displays.

    From a promo for BitClub Network featuring T. LeMont Silver.
    From a promo for BitClub Network featuring T. LeMont Silver.
  • ‘BitClub Network’ Now Reportedly Set To Launch On Sept. 10, Eve Of Anniversary Of 9/11 Attacks

    bitclub350smallThe BitClub Network “program” — originally set to launch Sept 1, the 75th anniversary of the beginning of World War II — reportedly now will launch on Sept. 10.

    That’s the eve of the 13th anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

    The Sept. 10 launch time is pegged for “2pm EST,” which possibly means the “program” is using Panama time. Panama, part of the Americas, does not use Eastern Daylight Time (EDT).

    Some of the money from the Profitable Sunrise HYIP swindle last year went to an entity in Panama City, the SEC said last year. Other Profitable Sunrise money ended up in Australia and the Czech Republic, according to court filings.

    Profitable Sunrise operated through a “mail drop” in England and had a “director” in Seychelles, according to court filings.

    Zeek Rewards Ponzi- and pyramid-scheme figure T. LeMont Silver, an early adopter of BitClub Network who is promising a $600 sign-up bonus and “training” for the “program,” now is using a Seychelles address, according to an email pitch he sent last week.

    Seychelles is a known money-laundering haven. Silver may be operating from the Dominican Republic after parachuting into the nation after the collapse of Zeek in 2012 and the later collapse of two other purported “revenue-sharing programs” he was pitching.

    Those “programs,” which ended up suing each other amid allegations of fraud, were GoFunPlaces/GoFun Rewards and JubiMax/JubiRev. Silver described disaffected prospects as “low-hanging fruit.”

    BitClub Network, which purportedly offers “shares” of “mining pools,” has a Bitcoin theme. The reported buy-in levels are $500, $1,000 and $2,000, with “Founders’” positions going for $3,599.

    Whether Silver even knows precisely who is operating the BitClub Network “program” is unclear. Also unclear is why the “program” chose start dates that corresponded with the starting dates of World War II in Europe and the 9/11 terrorist attacks against the United States.

    Are the dates merely coincidences?

    Hitler’s Nazi Third Reich was hoped to last 1,000 years. BitClub Network, early bird MLM HYIPers say, will pay a daily dividend for 1,000 days.

    HYIP schemes in general are exceptionally murky propositions, with narratives, descriptions and actions that may be designed as taunts against both prospects and regulators. Profitable Sunrise, for example, used images of Jesus Christ in promos and offered a purported “Long Haul” plan with a purported Easter gift to be paid out on April 1, 2013 — April Fool’s Day.

    March 31 of that year was Easter Sunday.

    WCM777 also used images of Jesus Christ. A follow-up scam used images of a golden pyramid.

    John Neil Hirst was charged by the U.K. Serious Fraud Office in 2011 with running a Ponzi scheme that targeted British, French and Americans through a company registered in Panama and Seychelles.

    A 2010 scam known as “Alpha Trade Group” that was promoted on well-known Ponzi-scheme forums purported to be registered in Panama and was using “various corporations and fictitious names registered in Florida” to pull off the scheme, according to court filings.

    David F. Merrick of Traders International Return Network (TIRN) was charged in a 2009 Ponzi scheme that was operating in the United States while funneling money to Panama, Mexico, Malaysia, Switzerland and the Netherlands.

    A 2014 online scheme known as Mutual Wealth might have operated through entities in Panama and the United Kingdom “and through Russian or Belarussian nationals,” the SEC said.

    In August 2013, NEOMutual, a purported “crowdfunding” opportunity that claimed it used bitcoin and a series of offshore payment processors, further claimed to provide daily interest rates of 1.4 percent, 1.6 percent and 1.9 percent on sums between $20 and $250,000.

    It was promoted alongside the bizarrely named “Cash Crop Cycler.” Among the provocative claims on the CashCropCycler website was that the “program” was interested in building “a network that ticks.”

    A 2011 scam known as OneX used an image of a bomb in its logo.

    Silver was a OneX pitchman, alongside Andy Bowdoin, the operator of the $119 million AdSurfDaily Ponzi scheme that he positioned as a “revenue-sharing” program.

    At least one promo for Bitclub Network claims “All Countries” and prospects are accepted for “Legal Passive Income.”

    “EARN PASSIVE for 1,000 Days,” the promo roars.

    “No Ponzi,” it says.

     

  • ANOTHER MLM PR TRAIN WRECK: Receiver Alleges Clawback Defendants May Be ‘Serial’ Participants In Zeek-Like ‘Revenue Sharing’ Schemes, Asks Court To Take ‘Judicial Notice’ Of T. LeMont Silver Videos

    Florida “Expat” and  Zeek Rewards Ponzi-scheme figure T. LeMont Silver yuks it up earlier this year in the Dominican Republic. Source: YouTube.
    Florida “Expat” and Zeek Rewards Ponzi-scheme figure T. LeMont Silver yuks it up earlier this year in the Dominican Republic. Source: YouTube.

    MLM, witness your latest PR train wreck — as voiced by alleged Zeek “winner” and purported “revenue sharing” consultant/trainer and Florida “Expat” T. LeMont Silver. (Video below.)

    In a consolidated motion in response to motions by various alleged Zeek “winners” to dismiss the clawback lawsuits against them, the court-appointed receiver in the Zeek Rewards Ponzi- and pyramid case has asked the court to take “judicial notice” of two YouTube videos featuring Silver, a veteran HYIP huckster.

    In typical HYIP fashion that marries the merely imponderable to the truly bizarre, one of them painfully is titled, “(T. Le Mont Silver, Sr.), (7 Figure Producer) shares about Plan B part #2.” (Bold emphasis added by PP Blog.)

    The HYIP sphere, the staging waters for boat sharks who throw purported rescue jackets to victims bloodied in the water from earlier scams and desperately struggling to stay afloat, is infamous for Plans B.

    Although the “program” isn’t identified in the video, Silver’s Plan B appears to be the ill-fated JubiRev/JubiMax. (See June 18, 2013, BehindMLM.com story.)

    MLM may have a problem with “serial participants” in Zeek-like schemes to defraud, Zeek receiver Kenneth D. Bell suggests in the motion asking the court to take judicial notice of the Silver videos.

    The language chosen by the receiver is similar to language the SEC used in 2013 to describe MLM HYIP huckster Matthew John Gagnon. Gagnon, the SEC said at the time, was a “serial fraudster.”

    Earlier, in 2010, the SEC described Gagnon as a “danger to the investing public.”

    The context of the SEC’s Gagnon prosecution may be important. Indeed, one of the “programs” he was accused of promoting was the infamous Legisi scheme, a semi-offshore debacle the SEC took down in 2008. Like Zeek, the Legisi case started with asset freezes and the appointment of a receiver.

    Time slowly marched on. But in 2009, the receiver sued Gagnon. In 2010, the SEC filed civil charges against him. He was charged criminally in 2011.

    Legisi, the SEC said, operated a “classic pooled investment vehicle.” In one of the Silver videos cited by the receiver, Silver describes his “Plan B” program as the operator of a “pot.”

    Women between the ages of 30 and 55  were the financial targets of the “opportunity,” according to one of the videos referenced by Bell.

    The video tends to suggest that Silver understood how Zeek got caught by using highly questionable “bids” as its “product” and that the MLM’s trade’s serial fraud wing immediately sought more clever disguises — hiding an HYIP scam behind the purported sale of ostensibly legitimate products such as cosmetics and diet shakes, for instance.

    Silver has appeared in “many” online videos and has promoted “several ‘revenue sharing’ schemes in addition to Zeek,” receiver Kenneth D. Bell advised Senior U.S. District Judge Graham C. Mullen.

    Bell supplied the court links to the videos.

    In the HYIP sphere, the term “revenue sharing” is used to make schemes appear to be innocuous.

    As noted above, the HYIP sphere is infamous for purported Plans B, which typically are cosmetically tweaked reload schemes designed to fleece an initial group of marks for a second time.

    Here, it’s appropriate to revisit HYIP history for a second time. If you believe AdSurfDaily Ponzi schemer Andy Bowdoin caused an almost inconceivable amount of PR damage to the MLM trade by comparing the U.S. Secret Service to “Satan” and the 9/11 terrorists, wait until you get a load of what T. LeMont Silver does in one of his videos cited by the receiver. (Video appears at bottom of this column.)

    By way of background, the HYIP sphere is infamous for dropping the names of famous entities and people, even if they have no ties whatsoever to the “opportunity” being presented.

    Although Silver apparently isn’t selling Avon or Amway or Mary Kay or Herbalife or ViSalus in the video, he drops the names of all of them (and more). Along the way he drops in a veiled reference to Zeek, describing it as a penny auction “program” in which affiliates would “make large purchases of . . . let’s say ‘bids’,” with Zeek’s product creating a “big issue” with regulators.

    Silver notes that he’ll provide “training” for the upstart “program,” positioning it as a way for average MLMers to make money without having to recruit or to orchestrate “dog and pony” presentations. Regardless, Silver assures the audience that he’s a master of the MLM dog and pony. He further suggests that, because Zeek’s “bids” had caught the attention of regulators, the trade’s braintrust now is turning toward “more traditional MLM-type products and services.”

    Putting lipstick on brand-new HYIP pigs or evolving ones is part and parcel to the HYIP sphere. Silver’s video suggests that the HYIP trade has learned that sketchy products such as Zeek’s bids might not fly and now was concentrating on attracting women between the ages of 30 and 55 by wrapping cosmetics, weight-loss shakes, home products and travel into a purported “revenue sharing” model in which participants who bought in would receive “pro rata” shares from a giant revenue pot.

    After suggesting he has inside information about the new HYIP regime, Silver curiously observes that he is “very, very key on genealogical integrity.” We interpret this to mean that he’d be exceptionally pleased if people with existing MLM organizations within traditional companies would port them into his next scam.

    Even though he’s apparently not selling Amway in the video, he bizarrely also prompts viewers not to dare “call Amway Scamway.” Equally bizarrely, Silver congratulates the company for “legitimizing this industry” back in the 1970s by purportedly “kick[ing] the backside” of the U.S. government and the government’s “[p]atootie.”

    “My goodness,” he says. “Thank you, Amway.”

    Yes. T. LeMont Silver has now publicly thanked Amway for kicking the government’s ass 35 years ago and, under his interpretation of In the Matter of Amway Corporation, Inc., et al., paving the way for people to send tremendous sums of money to companies with presumptively better disguises than Zeek.

    Amway is a lot of things — good and bad — to a lot of people. Unlike Zeek, however, it is not an HYIP that offered “passive” investors who sent in $10,000 or smaller sums a laugh-out-loud,  average daily return of 1.5 percent, basically in perpetuity.

    Gawd!

    Our take on Silver’s take of the 1979 non-HYIP Amway decision is that it somehow made preposterous “revenue sharing programs” as seen in the HYIP sphere lawful or that all HYIP schemes are lawful if they have product such as those offered by Avon, Amway, Herbalife and the others. But the pyramid analysis, of course, does not exclusively hinge on whether a company has a “product.” If it did, Zeek (“bids”) and BurnLounge (“music”) would still be in business. Moreover, there would be no Bill Ackman/Herbalife dichotomy, no question about whether Herbalife was Jurassic Park or Disneyland. In short, MLM heaven on earth would not be a rumor, it would be a reality.

    “Plan B,” meanwhile, is a virtual calling card of HYIP swindles, with prospects typically given instructions to join at least two “programs” in case one of them fails or to quickly join another “program” when a favored one collapses or encounters regulatory scrutiny.

    Silver is a longtime pusher of “Plan B” MLM HYIPs, which, as noted above, typically call themselves “revenue sharing programs.” He’s hardly alone. Zeek figure and purported MLM expert Keith Laggos pushed the Lyoness “program” to Zeekers as a “Plan B” just prior to the Aug. 17, 2012, collapse of Zeek. (See Aug. 12, 2012, PP Blog editorial: “Karl Wallenda Wouldn’t Do Zeek.”)

    Lyoness, among other things, dropped the name of Nelson Mandela in sales promos.

    Among the tips Laggos provided to listeners of a 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.”

    Laggos, an alleged Zeek winner of more than $1,000, also was a figure in the AdSurfDaily Ponzi scheme story, now making news in the context of Zeek.

    One of the problems with HYIP schemes is that they cause polluted money to flow between and among scams, in part because the scams have serial promoters in common. The inevitable result is that payment vendors become warehouses for fraud proceeds, prompting the government to apply for asset freezes and account seizures to stop the flow of tainted cash.

    Receiver Cites Second Silver Video

    The second video featuring Silver — an alleged winner of more than $1.71 million in Zeek — is titled “Internet Entreprenuer Family Chooses Cabrera [Dominican Republic] For Their New Expat Lifestyle.” It shows Silver and his wife — another alleged Zeek winner — lounging in the Dominican Republic after the collapse of the Zeek scheme.

    As the PP Blog reported on April 26, 2014 (italics added):

    Prior to relocating to the Dominican Republic, Silver told his downline in a failed MLM “program” known as GoFunPlaces to take advantage of “low-hanging fruit” (other disaffected GoFunPlaces members) and become recruiters for a “program” known as Jubimax. The “programs” ultimately accused each other of fraud.

    Silver also promoted “OneX,” which federal prosecutors in the District of Columbia described as an AdSurfDaily-like, money-circulating scheme. ASD operator Andy Bowdoin, now jailed after the collapse of the ASD fraud in 2008, also promoted OneX, explaining to prospects that they’d earn $99,000 very quickly and that he’d use the money he’d earned to pay for his criminal defense in the ASD case.

    Bowdoin asserted OneX was great for college students. Silver asserted that positions being given away were worth $5,000.

    Prosecutors also linked Bowdoin to AdViewGlobal, an ASD reload scam that operated as a “Plan B.” AdViewGlobal, which purported to operate offshore but actually was operating from Florida and Arizona, mysteriously vanished in the summer of 2009.

    Zeek receiver Bell, who connected alleged Zeek winner Todd Disner to the ASD Ponzi scheme in court filings this week, now says in court filings that certain Zeek clawback defendants “may well be serial participants in these types of schemes.”

    Well-known HYIP huckster Faith Sloan has been charged by the SEC with securities fraud in the April 2014 TelexFree case. Sloan also promoted Zeek and Profitable Sunrise, which cratered after an SEC action in April 2013.

    One of the things that makes Zeek-related litigation unique in the history of actions flowing from HYIP schemes is that Bell is not limiting his lawsuits to a relatively small universe of alleged major winners such as Silver. In a proposed class action, he’s also pursuing more than 9,000 alleged winners of smaller sums (more than $1,000 but less than $900,000), something that could have a long-needed chilling effect on serial promoters who may enter an HYIP Ponzi knowingly but less publicly.

    Some early HYIP Ponzi entrants may recruit heavily at first and be satisfied with smaller sums, because the larger plan is to get out quickly on the theory smaller winners won’t be pursued.

    Regulators have warned for years about the online phenomenon of “riding the Ponzi.”

    Our thanks to the ASD Updates Blog. (See Page 32 of Doc. 67 for reference to Silver videos and “serial” participants.)

  • Zeek Ponzi-Scheme Figure T. LeMont Silver Now Spokesman For Florida ‘Expat’ Lifestyle In Dominican Republic

    Florida "Expat" T. Zeek Rewards Ponzi-scheme figure and Florida "Expat" T. LeMont Silver yuks it up in the Dominican Republic.
    Florida “Expat” and  Zeek Rewards Ponzi-scheme figure T. LeMont Silver yuks it up in the Dominican Republic. Source: YouTube.

    (UPDATED 9:33 A.M. EDT, APRIL 27 U.S.A.) T. LeMont Silver, a pitchman for the $850 million Zeek Rewards Ponzi scheme and the OneX pyramid scheme, is now a spokesman for the “Florida Expat” lifestyle in the Dominican Republic, which recently has been rocked by what the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission describes as the collapse of the TelexFree pyramid scheme.

    The Massachusetts Securities Division has described TelexFree as a “financial pariah” that gathered more than $1.2 billion.

    Whether Silver ever had a position in TelexFree is unclear, and he is not referenced in any TelexFree-related court files. What is clear is that the court-appointed receiver in the Zeek case sued Silver in March 2014, alleging that Silver was a  Zeek “net winner” of more than $1.71 million.

    Karen Silver, Silver’s wife, also is an alleged Zeek winner. In her case, the receiver says she received “more than $600,000.”

    Kenneth D. Bell, the Zeek receiver, wants the money returned, saying it came from Zeek victims.

    Like her husband, Karen Silver has emerged as a fan of the “Florida Expat” lifestyle in the Dominican Republic.

    A video dated Jan. 16, 2014, and posted on YouTube features the Silvers being interviewed on the subject of their decision to move to the Dominican Republic. The logo of an enterprise known as DRESCAPES rolls on the screen.

    The website of DRESCAPES says its clients will “Survive the Collapse of Fiat Currencies, Including the Dollar & Euro.”

    “In our opinion, it’s time to take proactive steps to protect your assets and provide a safe fallback position for your family,” the site ventures.

    Prior to relocating to the Dominican Republic, Silver told his downline in a failed MLM “program” known as GoFunPlaces to take advantage of “low-hanging fruit” (other disaffected GoFunPlaces members) and become recruiters for a “program” known as Jubimax. The “programs” ultimately accused each other of fraud.

    In the “Expat” video, Silver says he pays his housekeeper in the Dominican Republic $175 a month and that she does an “excellent” job. How many hours she worked to earn her wages was unclear.

    Many MLM “programs” sell dreams of riches to low-wage workers. Tens of thousands of Dominicans are believed to be members of TelexFree, which filed for bankruptcy in Nevada April 13.

    In March, prior to the April bankruptcy filing, a TelexFree pitchman explained at a convention in Boston that he’d recently been a passenger with other TelexFree pitchmen on a “private jet” that had flown from the Dominican Republic to Haiti. The jet purportedly  was met at the airport by “the Prime Minister of Haiti’s motorcade,” which triggered “high-fiving.”

    “I felt like a rockstar,” the man said.

    Disaffected TelexFree members are now “low-hanging fruit” for other MLM “programs.” Many pitches have been targeted at them.

    The SEC said last week that TelexFree mainly targeted Dominican and Brazilian immigrants in the United States.

  • SPECIAL REPORT: Like AdSurfDaily And OneX Before It, Alleged TelexFree Pyramid Scheme May Be Engaging In Game Of Payment-Processor Roulette

    “While reviewing the ASD website in the District of Columbia, [an undercover agent] found a posting within ASD’s News section, apparently posted by ASD on July 2, 2008. The title of the posting was, “Alert Pay & Direct Deposit are being phased out July 31, 2008.” According to ASD’s posting, “We have notified BOA not to accept cash or personal checks for deposit account – English or Spanish.” ASD further stated, “Please remember that the preferred method of purchasing Ad Packages is by mailing a Check or by Solid Trust Pay . . . Solid Trust Pay is a Canada based money transmitting and payment company that, like the e-Gold system, operates over the Internet. It appears that beginning August 1, 2008, Solid Trust Pay will be ASD’s preferred method for receiving funds from members, and for paying rebates and commissions to members . . . Within the past two weeks, ASD has wired several million dollars to Solid Trust Pay from its BOA Accounts. A TFA also learned that earlier in July 2008, a bank other than BOA closed the last account that was controlled by Bowdoin or family members after that bank determined, and explained to them, that an investigation by the bank determined that Bowdoin appeared to be operating a Ponzi scheme.”AdSurfDaily Ponzi scheme forfeiture complaint, August 2008

    TelexFree affiliate promos encouraging participants to register for International Payout Systems (I-Payout) began to appear online in recent hours. Just last month, TelexFree affiliates were encouraged to register for Global Payout Gateway, another e-Wallet vendor that supposedly would solve TelexFree's payment problems. There now are reports online that GPG has dumped TelexFree, leading to questions about whether TelexFree is trying to port its alleged fraud scheme to yet another vendor -- I-Payout.
    TelexFree affiliate promos encouraging participants to register for International Payout Systems (I-Payout) began to appear online in recent hours. Just last month, TelexFree affiliates were encouraged to register for Global Payroll Gateway, another e-Wallet vendor that supposedly would solve TelexFree’s payment problems as a pyramid-scheme probe moved forward in Brazil. There now are reports online that GPG has dumped TelexFree, leading to questions about whether TelexFree is trying to port its alleged fraud scheme to yet another vendor — I-Payout. Source: Google search results.

    In 2008, the U.S. Secret Service effectively accused the AdSurfDaily MLM “program” of playing a game of payment-processor roulette as U.S. law enforcement put the squeeze on certain money-movers, the willfully blind enablers of online fraud schemes.

    ASD, a $119 million HYIP Ponzi scheme that led to a 78-month prison sentence for operator Andy Bowdoin, started out by accepting “e-Gold and Virtual Money,” according to a Ponzi-scheme forfeiture complaint filed in federal court in August 2008.

    But ASD, according to the complaint, realized e-Gold had come under investigation for enabling the laundering of money, something that could put the heat on ASD.

    “Shortly after publicity surrounding the government’s investigation into e-Gold appeared, ASD discontinued using the e-Gold system as a means for receiving member funds,” the complaint alleged.

    And even as these events were occurring, according to court filings in the ASD case and in other cases, Robert Hodgins, a supplier of debit cards and the operator of Virtual Money Inc. — now listed by INTERPOL as an international fugitive — came under investigation in Connecticut amid allegations he was assisting in the laundering of narcotics proceeds in Medellin, Colombia, and prepping himself to assist in the laundering of funds in the Dominican Republic.

    Virtual Money, whom some ASD members said was supplying debit cards to ASD, also was linked to the PhoenixSurf Ponzi scheme, according to court filings.

    In December 2010, federal prosecutors alleged that ASD also had accepted money from e-Bullion, a California firm that processed payments for Ponzi schemes, including the $72 million Legisi HYIP scheme in Michigan that led to prison sentences for operator Gregory McKnight and pitchman Matthew John Gagnon. E-Bullion operator James Fayed has been sentenced to death for ordering the brutal contract slaying of his wife, a potential witness against him. Pamela Fayed’s throat was slashed repeatedly in the shadows of a Greater Los Angeles parking garage, her husband seated on a nearby park bench “like he doesn’t have a care in the world.”

    ASD, according to court filings, also used AlertPay and SolidTrustPay, money-movers based in Canada that have been linked to multiple Ponzi schemes, including the alleged $600 million Zeek Rewards Ponzi scheme broken up by the SEC last year.

    Not even Bowdoin’s arrest in 2010 stopped him from pitching fraud schemes, according to court filings. Facing serious criminal charges for his actions in ASD, Bowdoin (in 2011) became a pitchmen for the OneX “program,” which federal prosecutors later alleged to be a pyramid scheme recycling money in ASD-like fashion. Among Bowdoin’s fellow OneX pitchmen was T. LeMont Silver, later of Zeek and later of  JubiMax and GoFunPlaces, two MLM “programs” that are suing each other amid allegations of financial fraud.

    At one time, OneX claimed to have a relationship with SolidTrustPay. It then claimed to have ended that relationship and to have started a relationship with I-Payout. Earlier, I-Payout had listed the uber-bizarre TextCashNetwork MLM “program” with ties to the Phil Piccolo organization as a “selected client.” TextCashNetwork now appears to have disappeared, but still is operating with the acronym “TCN” — this time as TrueCashNetwork. How the “new” TCN is processing payments is unknown. What is known is that someone associated with the “new” TCN has sent emails to “winners” in the Zeek scheme in an apparent bid to get them to flog for the new iteration, an apparent investment arm of which is being promoted as an opportunity to earn an interest rate of 50 percent.

    Now — as incredible as it seems — promoters of the alleged TelexFree pyramid scheme operating in Brazil and the United States now are claiming that TelexFree is using I-Payout, known formally as International Payout Systems Inc. Equally incredibly, this is happening less than a month after TelexFree promoters advised TelexFree participants to register with Global Payroll Gateway (GPG), another eWallet company and supplier of debit cards, as a means of getting paid after payouts to Brazilian members of TelexFree were blocked in Brazil.

    Just last month, TelexFree affiliates were encouraging prospects to register with Global Payroll Gateway (GPG). In recent hours --0 and amid reports GPG has given TelexFree the boot -- TelexFree affiliates have been urged to register with I-Payout.
    Just last month, TelexFree affiliates were encouraging prospects to register with Global Payroll Gateway (GPG). In recent hours — and amid reports GPG has given TelexFree the boot — TelexFree affiliates have been urged to register with I-Payout. Source: Google search results.

    There are reports online, including on Facebook from self-identified members of TelexFree, that GPG gave TelexFree the boot in recent days. No sooner did those reports surface than videos went up on YouTube encouraging TelexFree members to register for I-Payout.

    One of the reports that TelexFree suddenly had shifted from GPG to I-Payout is published on the MoneyMakerGroup forum. MoneyMakerGroup’s name appears in U.S. court files as a place from which Ponzi and fraud schemes are promoted. Both FINRA and the SEC have warned that HYIP schemes spread in part through social-media sites such as forums, YouTube and Facebook.

    Because international MLM HYIP fraud schemes often have promoters in common — and because the schemes are promoted on Ponzi cesspits such as MoneyMakerGroup and TalkGold —  proceeds from the schemes can flow into banks at the local level, putting them in the position of becoming warehouses for the ill-gotten gains of participants, including winners and insiders. The use of stored-value debit cards such as those in play in HYIP schemes can lead to the quick dissipation of assets, meaning that victims of an HYIP scheme may have limited hope (or even no hope) that a recovery can be made for their benefit.

    The most recent incongruous events involving TelexFree are occurring even as at least one judge and one prosecutor involved in the TelexFree pyramid probe in Brazil reportedly have been threatened with death. And, as was the case with ASD, some promoters of TelexFree have claimed an ability to expedite the flow of money to the scheme — perhaps through back-office transactions within the TelexFree system.

    Also see report on BehindMLM.com.

     

     

  • Zeekers Targeted As Early Ponzi-Board Rift Develops Over Promo For ‘My Fun Life’; Lawsuits Involving Other MLMs Make Headlines

    This attractive blonde woman is featured on the landing page of My Fun Places.
    This attractive blonde woman is featured on the landing page of My Fun Life.

    UPDATED 4:04 P.M. EDT (U.S.A.) It has been another miserable PR week for MLM.

    Some members of the alleged Zeek Rewards Ponzi- and pyramid scheme now are receiving over-the-top emails for an emerging travel-membership “program” known as “MyFunLife,” a source tells the PP Blog.

    Meanwhile, executives from a longstanding MLM company are suing each other in Utah while other baffling cases involving upstart MLMs remain in the courts.

    The nascent My Fun Life “program” appears already to have sparked a thread deletion at the DreamTeamMoney Ponzi forum — after two posters complained that a huckster had purloined sales content and used it to recruit downline members. (More on the DreamTeamMoney pitch below. First, the email pitch . . .)

    According to a PP Blog source, Zeekers were emailed a MyFunLife affiliate offer that blared, “There is a CHANGE taking place in our industry . . .  Something SO BIG, SO NEW, and SO COMPELLING I just have to SHARE IT with you . . .”

    The email hype-fest went on to declare My Fun Life “a revolutionary company in the emerging MOBILE APP Industry that’s about to take the world by STORM. They are in the process of building the largest GLOBAL NETWORK of their kind by introducing the HOTTEST APPS in the HOTTEST MARKETS!”

    The pitch appeared below a subject line of “This will be BIGGER and SAFER then Zeek, and it’s LEGAL! You’ll thank me later! ONLY $21 THAT’S IT!!!” The 19-word subject line was backed by five exclamation points.

    Here’s how another part of the email pitch read (italics added):

    The company is using a 3X10 Forced Matrix Compensation structure with up to 50% check matching (on all your personals) with upfront coding bonuses that pay out weekly! And you can earn up to 7 Levels in the Matrix without having to sponsor or talk with anyone! Hello??? (Sponsoring is only required to get paid on levels 8,9 &10) Its INCREDIBLE and its gonna BLOW UP and it’s only $21 to get in.

    As of today, the only content visible on the MyFunLife.com landing page are the words “Coming Soon.” Those words are backed by a series of rotating photographs, including a photo of an attractive blonde woman taking in some sun from a hammock under palm trees.

    “They are positioning several big global leaders now and anticipate 200,000 members in the first 6 months!” the email pitch contended. “Please get back with me asap so I can secure YOU a Top position in my matrix prior to launch!”

    The now-missing pitch on DreamTeamMoney urged prospects to GET IN “EARLYYYY!!” — in part because the “COMP PLAN” for My Fun Life called for “‘matching’ bonuses up to 50%, and ‘coded bonuses’ to die for -> they are UNREAL!! Launching in 45 countries. Major money and talent behind this.”

    As part of the Ponzi-board pitch, the poster shared a plan to “build it fast and hard with . . .  solo ads, FB, Craigslist, my list, and more.”

    In its early days, MyFunLife appears not to have a presence on other well-known Ponzi boards. Like TalkGold and MoneyMakerGroup, DreamTeamMoney is infamous as a launch pad for scores and scores of fraud schemes, including a bizarre “program” known as “Insectrio.”

    Zeek also was promoted widely on the Ponzi boards.

    News of the impending debut of MyFunLife came during the same week that MLM was generating more bad headlines in the mainstream press. XanGo co-founder and board member Bryan B. Davis accused the Utah-based firm of looting. Meanwhile, XanGo accused Davis of extortion and incompetent lawyering.

    Those lawsuits followed a lawsuit and counter-lawsuit earlier this year by the purported Go Fun Places and JubiMax opportunities, both of which have a presence on the Ponzi boards.