Tag: P.L.I Telexfree Rwanda Ltd

  • AFRICAN NATION NOT ON MLM FIRM’S ‘RADAR’: TelexFree Pushes Back On Reports In African Media Of Rwanda Ban And Money-Laundering: ‘Mistaken Identity’

    newtelexfreelogoUPDATED 8:45 PM EDT (U.S.A.) Already under investigation in Brazil and Massachusetts and linked to at least one affiliate allegedly involved in an earlier pyramid- and affinity-fraud scheme aimed at the Brazilian community, TelexFree acknowledged in a news release this morning that it had a presence in the economically challenged nation of Rwanda.

    But TelexFree said it was not the firm banned from the African country by the Ministry of Trade and Industry on March 14.

    TelexFree’s pushback at African media reports came on the same day the SEC announced a pyramid- and Ponzi case against WCM777, another MLM “program.” WCM777, which has some promoters in common with TelexFree, was accused of targeting Asians and Latinos and using multiple names to gather and move money.

    A recent ad on an auction site offered 550 TelexFree “AdCentrals” for $16,760, a purported discount of $8,190. The AdCentrals, according to the ad, would provide a “minimum” return of $56,100. Where the ad originated is unclear.

    Rwanda, TelexFree claimed, was not even on its “radar” until reports of tax evasion and money-laundering linked to the TelexFree name surfaced in African media.

    “As far as we can tell, this has nothing to do with us other than the fact that somebody is making illegal use of our name,” TelexFree said in a news release. “We have in the neighborhood of half a million customers worldwide, and 121 of them are in Rwanda. But we have no connection with P.L.I. Telexfree Rwanda Ltd., the company shutdown in Rwanda. That company allegedly has been in business for 14 years, whereas we just celebrated our second year in business. We’ve checked our records and find no evidence of the names of the persons associated with that company registered as either our customers or agents. Rwanda wasn’t on our radar until this report hit the Internet.”

    TelexFree did not say how it defined “customers.” Some promoters have claimed $15,125 sent to the firm returns $57,200 in a year through the purchase of “AdCentrals” offered alongside a VOIP service.

    Massachusetts-based TelexFree said it believes the Rwanda matter “to be a case of mistaken identity” and that it had “not been contacted by the Rwandan government.”

    Nor does TelexFree “have any reason to believe any action has been taken against it” in Rwanda, the firm said.

    TelexFree, an MLM company, says it is in a number of businesses, including VOIP, an Internet telephone system.

    Claims in the TelexFree news release were not attributed to a TelexFree corporate officer or executive. Rather, the assertions were attributed only to TelexFree itself. Why the firm chose not to quote an executive to refute the serious allegations in news reports was not immediately clear.

    “It’s both the power and the challenge of VOIP,” TelexFREE explained in its news release. “Virtually anyone can register and use the system. The best we can figure out right now is that somebody is using our sales program to channel their own agenda, and that kind of repackaging is strictly prohibited by our Policies and Procedures. Our attorneys are doing all they can to find out what is going on.”

    A Facebook site styled “telexfreerwanda” and dubbed “Telexfree Rwanda Team” has been promoting TelexFree since at least Jan. 17.

    Here is one of the claims on the Facebook site (italics added):

    A 14 year old Company with an Opportunity for YOU to get hired (as a Promoter) and you start getting paid on average 100 US$ each week for 52weeks. JOIN IT.

    The prompt to “JOIN IT” appears to be a reference to TelexFree itself. And the assertion of a “14 year old Company” appears to reflect similar claims about TelexFree that have appeared on the web since at least July 2013, even though TelexFree says it is only two years old.

    American MLMers have made claims similar to the claims on the Facebook site.

    Any number of TelexFree affiliates appear to be confused about how long the company has been operating. Last summer, some affiliates claimed nine years. Others said 11 and 13 years.

    In addition, the Facebook site says TelexFree can be visited “above Viva Supermarket.” On March 18, RwandaEye reported that the banned Rwandan enterprise operated from the top floor of a Viva supermarket in Remera. At least three links from the Facebook site resolve to the website of TelexFree, suggesting the operator or operators of the Facebook site are TelexFree affiliates.

    The Facebook site uses affiliate identifiers such as “innosantana,” “innosanta01” and “innosanta1301.” Here is one example of a URL from the site: http://www.telexfree.com/innosantana

    TelexFree did not say whether Haiti was on its radar. At a Boston pitchfest earlier this month, a man claimed from the stage that TelexFree reps recently flew on a “private jet” from the Dominican Republic to Haiti, perhaps the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere.

    TelexFree is based in a shared-office facility in Massachusetts, sharing a suite with at least 25 other firms. Promos have sought to plant the seed that TelexFree occupied the entire structure.  The firm has been associated with a growing list of companies in various states, some of which use the name “TelexFree” and others that simply use “Telex.”

    A document dated-stamped March 20 and on file at the Idaho Public Utilities Commission claims “[a]pplicant’s legal name is TelexFREE Telephone Company, LLC, with its principal place of business located at 225 Cedar Hill Street, Suite 200, Marlborough, MA 01752.”

    That’s also the address of TelexFree Inc. at the shared office facility. There’s also a TelexFree LLC in Nevada.

    The Idaho filing stressed in all-caps that TelexFree wanted its financial information kept “CONFIDENTIAL.” In Washington state, the Utilities and Transportation Commission published a document in February that asserted TelexFree LLC had made millions of dollars in intracompany loans to other TelexFree-related enterprises, including to TelexElectric LLLP, Telexfree Financial Inc., TelexMobile and Ympactus.

    Filed by a self-identified TelexFree “consultant,” the Washington document also claimed TelexFree LLC had “21,613,289.00” in “Federal Income Taxes Payable” and another “3,924,262.30” in “State/Local Income Tax Payable” on its balance sheet as of Dec. 31, 2013.

     

  • Government Of Rwanda, Citing Pyramid And Money-Laundering Concerns, Bans TelexFree Enterprise After Joint Probe With Nation’s Central Bank

    RwandaTelexFreeThe Ministry of Trade and Industry of the Republic of Rwanda has announced that a TelexFree enterprise has been banned in the country after a joint investigation with the National Bank of Rwanda, the nation’s central bank.

    Central banks control monetary policy in their respective countries. Other examples of central banks include the Bank of Canada, Banco Centro do Brasil and the U.S. Federal Reserve.

    The move by the Rwandan government and the central bank may mark the first public effort to choke off TelexFree.

    Whether TelexFree headquarters in the United States had direct/indirect or no control over the operation in Rwanda was not immediately clear. Nor was it clear whether any help from TelexFree’s U.S. or Brazilian operations would be forthcoming.

    Kanimba Francois, Rwanda’s Trade and Industry Minister, signed the order, specifically naming an entity known as P.L.I Telexfree Rwanda Ltd.

    How many other TelexFree-related enterprises may be operating in Rwanda wasn’t immediately clear. In theory, a single distributor could recruit tens, hundreds or even thousands of affiliates, with those affiliates creating even more.

    TelexFree has thrived, based on assertions that sums sent to the firm triple or quadruple in a year.

    Separately, Uganda is signaling that it may follow Rwanda’s lead. The Twitter site of Richard Kabonero, Uganda’s ambassador to Rwanda, has published the Rwanda ban signed by Francois.

    A Tweet attributed to Kabonero read, “like [all] good ponzi schemes the people who get in first make the money but eventually they fold.”

    Following a common theme when a government moves against an MLM “program,” a fellow Tweeter asserted that Kabonero was jealous because he wasn’t earning money in TelexFree.

    RwandaEye, an online financial publication, is reporting that TelexFree operated from the second floor of a supermarket in Remera.

    TelexFree is under investigation in Brazil, amid pyramid allegations. The “program” also is under investigation in the U.S. state of Massachusetts.

    News of the Rwanda ban after the joint probe with the central bank came while some TelexFree affiliates were complaining about not getting paid and poor response to customer-service issues.

    On March 14, this message appeared on a Facebook site dubbed “TelexFreeInUSA” (italics added/quoted section verbatim except as noted):

    Hello, i opened an account the 27/2/20014 and i payed invoice for a family pack (amount 1425$) the 10/03/2014. In ewallet i recived this message from TelexFree near my payed invoice: “Invoice Number [deleted by PP Blog] Voided as per management request. Package is no longer available”.

    !!! AT THIS MOMENT MY ACCOUNT IS NOT ACTIVATED, I HAVE NOT RECIVED A REFUND FROM TELEXFREE, ANYONE ANSWER TO MY EMAILS AND MY SUPPORT REQUESTS !!!

    Efforts to get a refund have failed so far, the poster claimed. Many TelexFree affiliates have claimed that purchases of “family packs” generate guaranteed income. Sales of “packs” are typical of HYIP Ponzi schemes.