Tag: Noelle Talley

  • UPDATE: North Carolina Investigators Demanded Info From Zeek On July 6; State Says It Has Not Taken Shutdown Action

    UPDATED 10:58 A.M. EDT (U.S.A.) Two new details have emerged in the mysterious shutdown yesterday of the office and websites of Zeekler/Zeek Rewards: The office of North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper told the PP Blog this morning that it has taken no action to shut down Zeek, the operator of an MLM and a penny-auction site.

    “We have not taken action to shut the company down and are currently working to get more information so we can pass that along to consumers who may be impacted by this,” said Noelle Talley, a spokeswoman for Cooper.

    But Cooper’s office did say that it had issued a Civil Investigative Demand (CID) to Zeek on July 6. That’s weeks earlier than initially believed and leads to questions about whether Zeek had known for five weeks that it had been under investigation and did not inform participants.

    Without providing details, Zeek announced on its Blog yesterday that it had canceled its Aug. 22 “Red Carpet” event. By early evening, the Zeek Rewards and Zeekler sites began to publish this message: “Zeek Rewards is currently unavailable. More information will be available shortly on this website.”

    Earlier in the week, Zeek announced that “there won’t be any training, recruitment or leadership calls for the next few days while planning is going on.”

    With Zeek leaving affiliates in an information vacuum, many of them took to the Web. At least two petition drives appear to be under way demanding the government to reopen Zeek. As of the time of this post, the PP Blog has been unable to confirm that an action by any government agency — state or federal — was responsible for Zeek’s sudden absence.

    The Blog still is in the process of trying to piece together events in what has emerged as a bizarre and fluid situation. Sensing Zeek affiliates were vulnerable, some MLM opportunists raced to various sites such as The Dispatch newspaper in North Carolina and YouTube with offers to join their “programs.”

    Zeek fans on the MoneyMakerGroup Ponzi forum almost immediately blamed critics for Zeek’s problems, with one poster declaring he’d already mined his profits from Zeek and was confident they could not be attached by prosecutors in the United States.

    The Better Business Bureau said this morning that it was aware of reports that the doors at Zeek’s office in Lexington, N.C., were closed. The BBB added that it would publish more information as it became available.

    Zeek is a purported arm of Rex Venture Group LLC, led by Paul R. Burks.

  • BULLETIN: Zeek Asked To Supply ‘Documents’ To North Carolina Attorney General’s Office; ‘Concerns’ Over Zeek ‘Continue,’ Agency Says

    “The complaints generally seek refunds and say the company has not lived up to its promises.” Office of North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper, Aug. 7, 2012

    BULLETIN: The Zeek “program” that marries an MLM scheme (Zeek Rewards) to a penny-auction site (Zeekler) is the subject of a state examination by the office of Attorney General Roy Cooper, the agency said this morning.

    Cooper’s office did not provide specifics on what the examination would entail, but Zeek has been asked to provide “documents,” said Noelle Talley, a spokeswoman for Cooper.

    “I can tell you that we continue to have concerns about Zeek Rewards and have asked the company to provide us with documents so we can examine its business practices,” Talley said.

    Cooper’s office first expressed those concerns publicly in June, after Zeek’s Blog linked to a television station’s report that suggested Zeek had been deemed legal. No such determination had been made, Cooper’s office said at the time.

    Meanwhile, Talley said Cooper’s office had set up “a recorded message about Zeek Rewards.”

    Such recordings typically are made “when we get a high volume of calls about a particular issue or company,” Talley said.

    News about the Zeek examination occurred against the backdrop of a Saturday (Aug. 4) Blog post by Zeek that blasted unspecified “North Carolina Credit Unions” for expressing concerns about the company to Zeek customers. Zeek is a a purported arm of Rex Venture Group LLC. Paul R. Burks is the chief executive officer of Zeek.

    Talley declined to comment when asked about whether Cooper’s office was aware of Saturday’s post on the Zeek Blog, which accused the credit unions of slander and implied Zeek would penalize members who questioned the company in public.

    But Talley did note that Cooper’s office had received complaints about Zeek and that “[t]he complaints generally seek refunds and say the company has not lived up to its promises.”

    Zeek plants the seed that participants can receive a daily return of between 1 percent and 2 percent, but denies it is offering an investment program. The company also denies it is operating a “pyramid scheme.”

    “Programs” such as AdSurfDaily have made similar claims and have had a similar payout scheme. ASD was accused in 2008 by the U.S. Secret Service of operating a massive online Ponzi scheme that had gathered $110 million and operated across national borders. ASD President Andy Bowdoin pleaded guilty to wire fraud in May 2012. Zeek is known to have promoters in common with ASD, a company that became engulfed in both civil and criminal litigation.

    In 2009, Bowdoin was sued by some of his own members under the federal racketeering statute. That lawsuit was placed on hold because of all the other litigation piling up around ASD, which was named in at least three federal forfeiture actions and was the subject of a federal grand-jury investigation in the District of Columbia that led to the indictment of Bowdoin on charges of wire fraud, securities fraud and selling unregistered securities.

    Like ASD, Zeek has a presence on forums referenced in federal court filings as places from which Ponzi schemes are promoted. Some Zeek members are promoting JSSTripler/JustBeenPaid, a “program” that claims it provides a return of 60 percent a month and may have ties to the “sovereign citizens” movement.

    Consumers can access the state’s recorded message about Zeek by calling 919-716-6046.

    Talley provided this transcript of the recording (italics added):

    Thank you for calling the North Carolina Attorney General’s Consumer Protection Division about Zeek Rewards.  We cannot tell you whether or not to invest or participate in Zeek Rewards or any other company. 

    If you would like to file a complaint with our office, you can either leave a message with your name and address after the beep and we will mail you a complaint form, or you can visit our website at www.ncdoj.gov for an online complaint form. 

    Specific questions about how Zeek Rewards works should be directed to the company itself.  Again, the Attorney General’s Office cannot give you investment or legal advice, and we do not endorse any program or business.  However, we always encourage people to do their own research before investing in any business.  Many people have asked if we have received complaints about Zeek Rewards, and we can confirm that we have received several complaints. Thank you again for contacting our office.

    Zeek has gone viral and is being pitched by some promoters of JSS Tripler/JustBeenPaid, an "opportunity" that purports to provide a return of 60 percent a month.
  • BULLETIN: North Carolina Attorney General’s Office Refutes Suggestion That Zeek Has Been Deemed ‘Legal’; ‘We Do Have Concerns,’ Agency Says; TV Station Removes Video Report Zeek Was Linking To On Its Blog

    BULLETIN: (UPDATED 2:04 P.M. EDT U.S.A.) The office of North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper told the PP Blog this morning that it never said the Zeek MLM or auctions programs were legal.

    The agency said it had asked a local television station to issue a corrected report, and the station has removed a video report that Zeek was linking to from its Blog this morning.

    “We do have concerns about [Zeek],” said Noelle Talley, a spokeswoman for Cooper.

    Zeek has two arms: an MLM program known as Zeek Rewards, and a penny-auction site known as Zeekler. Zeek Rewards plants the seed that participants can earn a return of between 1 percent and 2 percent a day. The Zeekler arm is auctioning sums of U.S. currency and advertising that successful bidders can receive their winnings through offshore payment processors.

    Zeek has denied it is operating either an investment program or a “pyramid scheme” through its Zeek Rewards’ MLM arm. It also claims to run clean penny auctions through Zeekler. Some customers, however, have complained they had not received their winnings of auction cash.

    The TV station — WFMY Channel 2 — aired a video report that focused on a “penny auction craze.” The report, which made a passing reference to Zeek’s MLM arm, focused on Zeek’s Zeekler arm while explaining the concept behind penny auctions and the potential pitfalls. A Blog version of the station’s report references both company arms and notes that “a court has not yet ruled whether this operation is legal or illegal.”

    WFMY’s video version, however, suggested that Cooper’s office had received a handful of complaints about the Zeek arms but had determined Zeek was conducting business legally.

    No determination that Zeek is operating legally has been made, Talley stressed this morning.

    The PP Blog learned this morning that Zeek’s news Blog was linking to the broadcast version of the WFMY report. The TV station now has removed the video, Cooper’s office said.

    In another strange development, at least two Zeek affiliates have spammed the TV’s station’s website with offers for Zeek. One of the spams appears to have originated with Barbara Alford, a promoter of the AdSurfDaily Ponzi scheme and a former moderator of the pro-ASD “Surf’s Up” forum that mysteriously disappeared in 2010 after shilling for accused ASD Ponzi schemer Andy Bowdoin around the clock for more than a year.

    Bowdoin pleaded guilty to wire fraud in the ASD Ponzi case last month. He is jailed in the District of Columbia. Zeek’s business model is similar to the model employed by ASD.

    Cooper’s office supplied the PP Blog with a list of complaints the state has received about Zeek. (Note: The paragraphs below do not take into account all of the complaints Cooper’s office has received about Zeek. There are at least 10 complaints on file.)

    One complaint that originated in Utah on May 16, 2012, alleged that a customer had given Zeek $20,000 in April but never received credit and was unable to get any satisfaction from customer service.

    “The customer service is non existent and I am beginning to think Zeekler is a pyramid scam,” the customer told Cooper’s office.

    Zeek responded to the complaint by informing Cooper’s office that it believed the Utah complainant wasn’t actually a Zeek customer. Rather, according to Zeek, the complainant was the father of two sons who were Zeek affiliates and had contacted the attorney general out of “personal curiosity.”

    Another complaint received by Cooper’s office from a Florida man in November 2011 was forwarded to the Securities Division of the North Carolina Secretary of State’s office for review, according to the correspondence trail. No final outcome is noted.

    Another complaint Cooper’s office received on May 8 originated in the District of Columbia after being sent to the Office of the Attorney General of District of Columbia by an individual in Oregon four days earlier. The District of Columbia forwarded the complaint to Cooper’s office, which opened a file.

    “This is a Huge Ponzi scheme,” the sender complained. “If not [looked] at carefully and stopped by the US AG, [t]his would be a tremendous task to [sort] out to pay back the consumer. This is [n]o different tha[n] AD Surf Daily ([i]f you remember the [c]ase).”

    Meanwhile, a Zeek customer in Miami contacted Cooper’s office and told the agency that he had sent U.S. Postal Service money orders totaling $1,000 to Zeek in April and that the sum never was credited to his Zeek account.

    Yet another Zeek customer — this one from California — told Cooper’s office that he had wired more than $2,000 in March from his account at Bank of America to Zeek’s account at NewBridge Bank in North Carolina. Although the complainant said he’d confirmed both through his bank and NewBridge that Zeek had received the money, the money never got credited to his Zeek account.

    The California customer also told Cooper’s office that Zeek closed his support ticket without providing a resolution, a circumstance that forced the aggrieved customer to open a second ticket.

    Zeek announced suddenly on May 28 — Memorial Day — that it was closing its NewBridge bank account.

    Another individual who contacted Cooper’s office suggested she’d also contacted her member of Congress, the IRS, the FTC and the SEC about Zeek and questioned whether a “whistleblower” award might be available if Zeek proved to be a scam. That communication identified several purported Zeek promoters, including former AdSurfDaily promoter Todd Disner.