Tag: Traffic Monsoon

  • Indicted Payza Announces ‘Restructuring’

    As one of its operators sits in a Michigan federal prison and the other is listed “at large” by U.S. authorities, Payza today announced a purported “restructuring” as a “European service” that has ceased serving U.S. customers.

    “This means that no transactions are allowed for US members at this time and Payza will no longer be servicing businesses registered in the US, neither providing US payout services or US based withdrawals,” Payza said in a Blog post accessible via Twitter.

    Precisely who is running things at the company is unclear. The Blog post had a byline of “Payza Writer.”

    Ferhan Patel, 37, is listed as an inmate at the federal correctional institute in Milan, Mich. He was arrested Sunday in Detroit. Firoz Patel, his brother and co-defendant in a major money-laundering case announced Tuesday by U.S. prosecutors, appears neither to have surrendered or been arrested. Firoz Patel is 43. The brothers are citizens of Canada and reportedly lived in the Montreal area.

    The office of U.S. Attorney Jessie K. Liu of the District of Columbia confirmed Wednesday that Payza’s dotcom domain had been seized.

    Prosecutors said Payza had helped fuel Ponzi schemes, pyramid schemes, a child-porn site and other criminal activities. Homeland Security Investigations is leading the probe.

    Payza and a predecessor company known as AlertPay have been referenced in Ponzi-scheme litigation dating back at least to 2008’s AdSurfDaily Ponzi scheme, a $119 million fraud. More recent “programs” with ties to Payza include Traffic Monsoon and Zeek Rewards.




  • Proposed Class Action Alleges Traffic Monsoon’s Scoville Told PayPal He Was In ‘Investments’ Business

    From a proposed class-action lawsuit against PayPal sparked by the alleged Traffic Monsoon/Charles Scoville Ponzi scheme. Red highlights by PP Blog.

    In the aftermath of the SEC’s securities-fraud action against him last year and a judicial ruling this year that he was opertaing a Ponzi scheme, Traffic Monsoon’s Charles Scoville has blanketed social media with claims he was not offering investments.

    But Scoville told PayPal that “Traffic Monsoon’s business was “Investments – general” when he opened an account for the “program” in 2014, according to a proposed class-action lawsuit against the payment processor for aiding and abetting Scoville’s alleged fraud.

    This happened after PayPal had “previously banned Scoville from using its services following allegations that his prior pay-to-click businesses, which also purportedly sold advertising businesses with revenue sharing, were Ponzi/pyramid schemes,” according to the lawsuit.

    Whether the SEC would seize on the claim as the agency’s case against Scoville and Traffic Monsoon works its way through the courts was not immediately clear. Investigators potentially could argue that Scoville was telling investors one thing while telling PayPal another.

    Likely because of a court-imposed stay of litigation against Scoville and Traffic Monsoon while Scoville appeals judicial findings against him in the SEC case, neither Scoville nor Traffic Monsoon is named a defendant in the proposed class action.

    Named defendants are PayPal Inc. and PayPal Holdings Inc. Plaintiffs are Chukwuka Obi and Kingsley Ezeude. The case was filed May 4 in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California.

    From the complaint (italics added/light editing performed):

    The [Traffic Monsoon] scheme lasted from September 2014 through July 2016. During this time, Traffic Monsoon duped investors into believing it was “a specialized advertising and revenue sharing company” that operated a pay-to-click and Internet traffic exchange program. On its website, Traffic Monsoon falsely told investors that it was not selling investments or operating a Ponzi/pyramid scheme that would pay returns to existing investors with money from new investors . . .

    Traffic Monsoon also concealed from its investors that Scoville, its sole member and operator, had a prior history of defrauding investors through similar pay-to-click investment “businesses.” Unbeknownst to investors – but known to PayPal – Traffic Monsoon was not Scoville’s first fraudulent investment scheme disguised as a “pay-to-click” program. In fact, just as he did with Traffic Monsoon, Scoville ran his prior pay-to-click schemes with PayPal’s support and through PayPal’s infrastructure. Indeed, in 2011 PayPal had banned Scoville from using its services following allegations that Scoville was operating a substantially similar – and similarly fraudulent – “pay-to-click” investment scheme. Yet, despite its knowledge of Scoville’s past pay-to-click schemes and its knowledge that pay-to-click websites have Ponzi/pyramid scheme features, PayPal failed to enforce its own ban and allowed Scoville to open an account for Traffic Monsoon in September 2014, using PayPal’s infrastructure to perpetrate and profit from his new – but similar in its material respects – “pay-to-click” investment fraud.

    The 52-page complaint argues that the left hand at PayPal didn’t know what the right had was doing with respect to doing business with and applying policies to Scoville.

    From the complaint (italics added/light editing performed):

    PayPal was aware that Scoville had previously operated similar pay-to-click businesses that PayPal banned from using its services following allegations that the businesses were Ponzi/pyramid schemes. PayPal is also aware that pay-to-click businesses raise concerns regarding fraud and that some have Ponzi/pyramid scheme features. Indeed, PayPal has placed holds or bans on other pay-to-click businesses. Yet PayPal did not enforce its own ban on Scoville’s use of its services.

    By knowingly allowing Scoville’s new pay-to-click scheme, Traffic Monsoon, to use its services, PayPal departed from its own policy that prohibits the use of its services for “transactions that . . . support pyramid or ponzi schemes.” (PayPal Acceptable Use Policy.) . . .

    PayPal was aware that Traffic Monsoon was falsely representing to investors that it sold advertising services, not investments. Scoville told PayPal (but not investors) that Traffic Monsoon offered investments, which PayPal noted in PayPal Account 7752. When PayPal reviewed Traffic Monsoon’s website to verify the information provided by Scoville, PayPal learned that Traffic Monsoon was a pay-to-click scheme; represented to investors that Traffic Monsoon sold advertising services, not investments; and promised to make payments to investors in pyramid scheme fashion . . .

    PayPal also knew that Traffic Monsoon was a Ponzi/pyramid scheme. PayPal actively monitored Traffic Monsoon’s PayPal account. It was aware of each investment and each withdrawal from the account. PayPal was aware that Traffic Monsoon was making Ponzi/pyramid scheme payments to investors and that Traffic Monsoon’s Ponzi/pyramid scheme was growing exponentially in classic Ponzi/pyramid scheme fashion.

    PayPal told Bloomberg that it looked forward to refuting the claims.

    The complaint is posted on Dropbox.




  • In Atmosphere Of Murkiness, Are Violations Of The Traffic Monsoon Asset Freeze Taking Place?

    EDITOR’S NOTE: Traffic Monsoon is a Utah company. The firm also has purported business operations in the United Kingdom and Dubai. Details about the offshore operations are murky.

    A claim from an apparent Traffic Monsoon affiliate appeared Monday (April 3) on Facebook that “Allied Wallet is making refunds of [Traffic Monsoon]  purchases made by credit cards or debit cards. Many people are getting this [sic] refunds.”

    In the same thread on the TrafficMonsoonupdates Facebook site, a poster claimed, “I received this in my bank today . . . 10.04% of my initial deposit to TM.” The apparent partial refund was marked “AW*TRAFFICM.”

    In July, U.S. District Judge Jill N. Parrish ordered all assets of Traffic Monsoon and operator Charles Scoville frozen. An October report by court-appointed receiver Peggy Hunt said that Allied Wallet had claimed it had approximately $7 million in Traffic Monsoon funds on deposit when the SEC filed its Ponzi action against the “program.”

    The asset freeze imposed by Parrish was further reinforced last week when she issued a preliminary injunction at the request of the SEC.

    From the preliminary injunction, which names Allied Wallet and other Traffic Monsoon vendors, including PayPal, Payza, Solid Trust Pay and JPMorgan Chase Bank (italics added):

    Each of the financial or brokerage institutions, debtors, and bailees, or any other person or entity holding Defendants’ Assets shall hold or retain within their control and prohibit the withdrawal, removal, transfer, or other disposal of any such assets, funds, or other properties.

    Why, then, are Traffic Monsoon members claiming Allied Wallet is issuing at least partial refunds? And if the refunds are taking place, are they in violation of the asset freeze?

    Allied Wallet did not respond to a request for comment Monday. Neither did the SEC or Hunt.

    But the docket of the SEC’s case against Traffic Monsoon now shows that Hunt filed a notice of a subpoena naming Allied Wallet on Tuesday. How things would proceed was not immediately clear.

    Hunt previously informed the court about a statement Scoville allegedly made about how Traffic Monsoon hooked up with Allied Wallet prior to the SEC action via a company that purportedly was given to him.

    From the statement, as contained in a transcript filed by Hunt last year (italics added):

    Well, the thing is is Traffic Monsoon in the UK was kind of formed in a way because, when we were in Dubai, that’s when we got set up with someone who knew people inside of Allied Wallet to help us get an Allied Wallet account set up. And when we were setting up Allied Wallet, Allied Wallet required us to have a registration in the UK.

    Scoville went on to say, “We had somebody who was there with us who said, I’ve got a UK company. We can change it to the Traffic Monsoon, and then we could use that registration so you can use Allied Wallet. So that’s Taheer and Amir, both of them are on that business registration, but technically they don’t own any of the company.”

    And, according to the transcript, Scoville said, “they were just giving me a company that they had already registered as a speedy process of just making sure that we have a business registration in the UK. But they put me on as the owner.”

    Scoville, according to the transcript, grew to have doubts about the U.K. operation because he could not confirm that staff or security personnel for which he was paying 6,000 pounds per month actually were working at the U.K. office of his own company.

    From the transcript (italics added):

    I went over there, and apparently, the person at the front desk didn’t know who I was, who asked to see the people that were working for Traffic Monsoon, and they said that there’s nobody there. So I don’t know all of the ins and outs of what’s going on there. I may have been scammed. I don’t know.

    Parrish has found that Traffic Monsoon operated as a Ponzi scheme, according to court documents. Scoville has said he will file an appeal.




  • ‘Traffic Hurricane’ Members Beware: Preliminary Injunction Prohibits Traffic Monsoon, Scoville From Benefiting From ‘AdPack’ Businesses

    2ND UPDATE 6:58 P.M. EDT U.S.A. Here’s a news flash for individuals who joined a “program” called Traffic Hurricane with the belief they somehow were helping the defense of Charles Scoville and Traffic Monsoon: Both Scoville and Traffic Monsoon  are “prohibited from soliciting, accepting, or depositing any monies obtained from actual or prospective investors, individuals, customers, companies, and/or entities, through the Internet or other electronic means for Traffic Monsoon or a business model substantially similar to Traffic Monsoon’s sale of AdPacks.” (Bold emphasis added.)

    The quoted passage is from the very first paragraph of a preliminary injunction issued by U.S. District Judge Jill N. Parrish March 28 against Traffic Monsoon and Scoville. The order effectively bars Scoville from being an owner, silent partner or beneficiary of an adpack business.

    Though the passage doesn’t specifically reference Traffic Hurricane, it is known that Traffic Hurricane operates over the Internet and surfaced after the SEC brought Ponzi charges against Traffic Monsoon in July 2016 and that Traffic Hurricane traded on a theme of assisting Scoville and Traffic Monsoon with defense costs.

    In August 2016, the PP Blog reported that Traffic Hurricane was a reload scheme targeting Traffic Monsoon participants.

    Huyugadal!!

    Ernie Ganz, a onetime associate of Scoville’s, reportedly is the operator of Traffic Hurricane. Earlier this month BehindMLM reported on a falling out between Ganz and Scoville.

    Peggy Hunt, the court-appointed receiver for Traffic Monsoon, once subpoenaed Ganz, according to BehindMLM.

    Hunt today published the March 28 preliminary injunction that includes the adpack ban.

    Because the prohibition appeared in the very first paragraph of the preliminary injunction, it appears as though the judge, the receiver and the SEC are aware of reload schemes aimed at members of Traffic Monsoon.

    The receivership website today announced that Parrish had “found that Traffic Monsoon, LLC operated as a Ponzi scheme.”

    Some supporters of Traffic Monsoon and Scoville have claimed on Facebook that that never happened.

    This document on the receivership website today says that it did happen, and Hunt urged Traffic Monsoon members to review the March 28 court rulings against Traffic Monoon and Scoville “in their entirety.”




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  • URGENT >> BULLETIN >> MOVING: Judge Maintains Traffic Monsoon Receivership And Asset Freeze, Grants SEC’s Request For Preliminary Injunction

    URGENT >> BULLETIN >> MOVING: A federal judge in Utah has denied the request of Charles Scoville and Traffic Monsoon to set aside the Traffic Monsoon receivership and has granted the SEC’s motion for a preliminary injunction that continues an asset freeze ordered in July 2016.

    “The evidence clearly points to the fact that Traffic Monsoon’s explosive growth was driven by members purchasing and repurchasing AdPacks in order to obtain the incredible returns on their investment, not by intense demand for Traffic Monsoon’s services,” U.S. District Judge Jill N. Parrish ruled. “Indeed, many AdPack purchasers had no interest in the website visits Traffic Monsoon offered, and Traffic Monsoon only ever delivered a fraction of the clicks it promised to deliver. In short, the economic reality of the AdPack purchases is that they were investments.”

    From a footnote in the judge’s ruling (italics added/light editing performed):

    One of the unique aspects of Traffic Monsoon that differentiates it from other Ponzi schemes is that members had to continually reinvest in the scheme by rolling over the profit from fully matured AdPacks into the purchase of new AdPacks. This amounted to a shell game in which an initial investment of a sum of money would continually cycle among the members’ accounts.

    A large portion of an initial investment would be distributed to other members as either revenue sharing or a commission. Then the members that received the revenue sharing payments or commissions would reinvest it by rolling it over into new AdP[a]ck purchases. Under this system, the same dollar could be distributed to member accounts as revenue sharing or a commission many times, until either Traffic Monsoon withdrew it as profit or a member withdrew it from his or her account.

    This explains why the members had a relatively small amount in their accounts when the court entered the TRO—$34.2 million—while the number of outstanding AdPacks, if allowed to mature, would amount to $243.9 million. So long as the members, encouraged by a continual flow of money into their accounts, reinvested most of their money rather than withdrawing it, a relatively small amount of money continually redistributed among the members through revenue sharing could fuel much greater expectations as to the near-future value of the AdPacks.

    But once the money ceased to continually recycle among the member accounts, as happened when the court entered the TRO, there wasn’t enough money to pay what experience had led the members to believe their AdPack investment would be worth after a short 55-day wait. That is why Traffic Monsoon had only about $60 million in assets to cover outstanding AdPacks that would be worth $243.9 million if they had matured, even though member account balances amounted to only $34.2 million.

    More . . .




  • REPORTS: Traffic Monsoon Pitchman Who Urged ‘RIOT’ And Called Receiver ‘Lying Cow’ Later Accused Of Kicking Woman ‘To The Head’

    Some promoters of Traffic Monsoon have engaged in heated rhetoric. This is a screen shot of a hijacked image that depicts President Trump as a supporter of the “program” the SEC has called a massive Ponzi scheme.

    UPDATED 1:36 P.M. ET U.S.A. Jose Nunes, the Traffic Monsoon pitchman who last fall used a slogan of “RIOT” to support the company and called the receiver in the SEC’s Ponzi case a “lying cow,” later reportedly was involved in domestic-violence incidents in November and January.

    A Feb. 6 report in the North Wales (U.K.) Daily Post says Nunes, 42, of Llanrug, was accused of carrying out “repeated acts of violence” against the woman, including kicking her “to the head” in front of their daughter.

    The most recent attacks reportedly marked at least the third time Nunes had been accused of assaulting the woman. According to the Daily Post, Nunes pleaded guilty to assaulting her in 2011.

    A purported “Revenue Shares Matter” campaign backed in September by Nunes featured a flaming graphic with the word “RIOT” in all-caps. By October, Nunes was calling Utah attorney Peggy Hunt — the receiver in the July 2016 Traffic Monsoon case — “Piggy,” a “[b . . . h” and a “Lying cow.”

    Attacks against his former girlfriend allegedly followed in November and January. The newspaper account of Nunes’ most recent alleged assaults does not report specific reasons or dates on which they occurred, but stress has been high in some Traffic Monsoon circles.

    Some supporters of Traffic Monsoon have been awaiting impatiently since November for key rulings from U.S. District Judge Jill N. Parrish.

    Rhetoric among some supporters of the “program” has been over-the-top. One effort in support of Traffic Monsoon on a Facebook site featured a hijacked photo of President Trump displaying a bogus executive order shutting down the SEC and declaring the agency “full of shit” and “useless.”

    The SEC alleged that Traffic Monsoon’s claim that it was a successful advertising business was “merely an illusion” and that 99 percent of the “program’s” revenue was derived from new investor funds.

    Traffic Monsoon operator Charles Scoville — who once appeared in a promotional photograph with Nunes — contends no Ponzi existed. He has asked Parrish to shut down the receivership and to dismiss the charges.




  • BRIEF: Feds Tweet Photo Of $20 Million Allegedly Found In Box Spring And Tied To TelexFree

    Federal prosecutors have Tweeted a photo of $20 million allegedly found stuffed in a box spring and linked to the massive TelexFree Ponzi- and pyramid caper.

    The cash was found Jan. 4 by the Homeland Security Investigations branch of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, an arm of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

    Agents seized the cash and arrested Cleber Rene Rizerio Rocha, 28, of Brazil. He remains jailed.

    In other HYIP news, apparent supporters of the Traffic Monsoon “program” have been using Twitter in the past 24 hours to ask President Trump to intervene in the SEC’s fraud case brought in July 2016.

    Traffic Monsoon was pitched as an “advertising” program. The SEC alleged the program operated as a Ponzi scheme.




  • SALT LAKE TRIBUNE: No Decision Reached At Traffic Monsoon Hearing Today

    BRIEF: Lots of people are awaiting word on what happened today at the big Traffic Monsoon hearing in Salt Lake City.

    In a story titled “Age of the Internet creates questions in alleged international Ponzi scheme case,” The Salt Lake Tribune is reporting this evening that U.S. District Judge Jill Parrish has taken the issues under advisement and will rule later.

    More . . .

  • Bogus Magazine Cover Depicts Alleged Ponzi Schemer Charles Scoville Of Traffic Monsoon As 2016’s Best CEO

    This bogus Forbes' cover says Charles Scoville was 2016's BEST CEO. (Red markings by PP Blog.)
    This bogus Forbes’ cover says Charles Scoville was 2016’s BEST CEO. (Red markings by PP Blog.)

    DISCLOSURE: The PP Blog is a Google publisher.

    A bogus cover of Forbes magazine circulating on Facebook depicts SEC Ponzi defendant Charles Scoville of Traffic Monsoon as the “BEST” CEO of 2016 — all while misspelling his last name.

    The image, which falsely showcases the Forbes’ issue as a “LIMITED EDITION,” appears today on the “TrafficMonsoonupdates” page on Facebook, a cheerleading site for the alleged Ponzi scheme. The post comes at a time that both Facebook and Google have been criticized for not screening out fake news during the recent U.S. presidential election.

    Scoville, of Utah, was not named the best CEO by Forbes either before or after the SEC alleged in July that he was at the helm of a Ponzi scheme that had gathered more than $207 million and had affected at least 162,000 investors across the globe.

    And despite the implication that Forbes had named Traffic Monsoon the “BEST TRAFFIC EXCHANGE IN THE WORLD,” no such thing happened. The SEC’s case against Scoville and his company is still being actively litigated, according to the website of the court-appointed receiver for Traffic Monsoon.

    It is not unusual for promoters of HYIP schemes to claim major publications have lauded them or even that U.S. Presidents supported them. Prior to its 2014 collapse, the TelexFree Ponzi- and pyramid scheme wrapped logos of local TV stations into its promos to imply endorsement. TelexFree may have generated more than $3 billion in illicit transactions.

    In 2008, the $119 million AdSurfDaily Ponzi scheme falsely claimed then-President George W. Bush had given ASD operator Andy Bowdoin a special award for business achievement. An ASD knockoff scam known as AdViewGlobal fraudulently traded on the logos of Forbes and other publishers in 2009.

    A current fraudulent scheme known as OneCoin also has traded on the name of Forbes, according to BehindMLM.com. Earlier, promoters of the WCM777 scam implied the endorsement of the Wall Street Journal.




  • WCM777 Receiver Proposes To Disallow Huge Percentage Of Claims; Some ‘Leaders’ Allegedly ‘Perpetrated Their Own Side Scheme’

    Because we’re writing about the uber-bizarre HYIP wing of MLM/direct sales, we’ll emphasize at the beginning of this story that the WCM777’s receiver’s recommendation to a federal judge to disallow nearly 85 percent of filed claims DOES NOT MEAN she gets to pocket the money from the disallowed claims.

    HYIP hucksters are infamous for recklessly accusing receivers of misdeeds and even felonies, never mind that the “program” in receivership was a train-wreck-waiting-to-happen because the advertised payouts were preposterously large or unusually consistent (or both) to such an extent that even Bernard Madoff would laugh out loud. (See graphic below of an ad for WCM777.)

    Sometimes the accusations are preemptive, with ad hominem attacks thrown in for good measure. That’s what’s going on now on the sidelines of the Traffic Monsoon scheme. The receiver there is being called “Piggy” and “b***h” and “Lying cow.” (We’re noting this near the top in part because both receivers happen to be women and because both hired Epiq, a global provider of integrated technology and services for the legal profession, to assist with receivership chores. Conspiracy theories almost certainly will follow.)

    But back to the main point of this column: Krista L. Freitag, the WCM777 receiver, recommended that U.S. District Judge John F. Walter of the Central District of California disallow a whopping 84.6 percent of the claims. This was not done out of meanness — in fact, it was done to preserve funds for people whose claims could be legitimized. Court submissions by Freitag show that she tested claims in multiple ways to provide a real-world means by which fleeced investors in this fantastic scheme targeted at Christians would have the best chance to file an approved claim.

    Just how fantastic was WCM777? As chronicled by the PP Blog prior to the SEC’s 2014 action, one affiliate’s ad claimed $14,000 sent to the scheme would fetch back $500,000, 35 times-plus the initial outlay. In HYIP Ponzi Land, this memorably was called “The Power of Seven Units.”)

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    Here is some of the WCM777 claims math, as presented by Freitag to Walter:

    • Total number of claimed investments: 72,753.
    • Claims that should be allowed: 4,018 (5.6 percent of the total claimed investments).
    • Claims that should be partially allowed: 7,159 (9.8 percent of total claimed investments).
    • Claims that should be disallowed (includes Disallowed portion of Partially Allowed): 61,576 (84.6 percent of total claimed investments).

    It’s easy enough here to suggest that one remedy disallowed claimants who are legitimate victims should consider is suing their sponsor, sometimes known as the upline. Freitag doesn’t specifically mention this, but she informed Walter that a “very large amount of investors” paid their “leaders” or others, instead of paying WCM777 directly.

    Some of those “leaders” and others “perpetrated their own side scheme,” Freitag informed the judge.

    This skulduggery happens in scheme after scheme. Regardless, some investors may be reluctant to identify their “leaders” or others because it very well could be a spouse, family member or friend. Beyond that, many of the transactions involve cash. Freitag points out that many individuals who filed claims “did not/could not provide bank record documentation to support their claim.”

    Thousands of WCM777 claimants also may have tried to game the system. Freitag told Walter that a “high number of suspicious claims” were received. “Notably” among them were “approximately 27,000 claims” submitted “immediately before” the Dec. 24, 2015 claims deadline.

    Schemes such as WCM777 also create the MLM equivalent of money mules — people who accidentally or purposely end up gathering money for a scam. Freitag told Walter that “[t]his scheme involved countless ways in which investors purportedly transferred funds, much of which went to leaders or other individuals and may or may not have ever reached the Receivership Entities.”

    All in all, Freitag informed Walter, claims seeking more than $412 million were filed, and yet “the net loss transacted at the defendant entity level was $80.8 million.” This again shows how hard it may be for people who pay their upline to gain even a partial recovery from a scam. At the same time, it may suggest that any number of participants tried to claim losses beyond their initial outlays, perhaps attempting to recover lost profits or even fictitious ones.

    Schemes such as WCM777 are always rancid and always include elements of magical thinking.

    The receivership estate is in possession of about $27 million. Freitag is proposing distributing about $21 million to approved claimants in an initial disbursement, with the balance of the allowed claims paid in a second or subsequent distribution in the future. Some holdback is required because more work needs to be done,  according to the motion.

    From the receiver (italics added):

    Although it is possible that claims of some investors who gave cash to another investor and therefore are unable to substantiate their claims will be disallowed, there is no reliable and consistent way to differentiate such investors from people who transferred funds to a leader operating a side scheme or people asserting bogus or duplicative claims. The huge volume of cash transactions, including those amongst individuals, and the lack of investor bank record support means the claims review and analysis cannot be perfect. The scheme itself was wildly disorganized, with numerous individuals paying cash to other (and oftentimes unknown) individuals . . . and leaders propagating their own scheme of sorts (selling points for their own profit such that “investors” paid money to individuals who never forwarded said funds to the defendant entities), making the claims review process extremely challenging. That said substantial effort has been made to make the system as fair and inclusive as possible. The Receiver has not only attempted to match each sufficiently supported claim to a deposit, but has also conducted supplemental testing to try and match unclaimed deposits to unsupported and unidentified claims. This was successful in many instances and reduced the number of real investors whose claims may be disallowed. 

    Read the receiver’s motion, which includes information on the supplemental testing in the interest of fairness to all investors.




  • REPORT: Nicholas Smirnow, Pathway To Prosperity Operator, Sentenced To Prison In Canada

    Nicholas Smirnow: From INTERPOL.
    Nicholas Smirnow: From INTERPOL.

    Nicholas Smirnow, the operator of the Pathway To Prosperity Ponzi-board “program” charged with fraud by U.S. authorities in 2010, has been sentenced in Canada to seven years in prison.

    News of the sentence appeared Sept. 30 at MuskokaRegion.com.

    Smirnow was arrested in Canada for P2P-related crimes in 2014. The United States has submitted an extradition request.

    INTERPOL’s wanted notice for Smirnow is still active. It lists his age as 59 and says he faces charges of conspiracy, securities fraud, wire fraud and money-laundering in the United States.

    In June 2010, the U.S. Department of Justice pointed to P2P as an example of international mass-marketing fraud that occurs on the Internet. The “program” was a Ponzi-forum darling. MoneyMakerGroup and TalkGold are referenced in P2P-related filings in the United States as places from which Ponzi schemes are promoted.

    P2P operated in all the  “permanently inhabited continents of the world,” a member of the U.S. Postal Inspection Service said in 2010.

    Losses were pegged at about $70 million.

    Ponzi forums and social media continue to drive traffic to hideous schemes. Recent examples of Ponzi-board programs include Traffic Monsoon, Zeek Rewards and TelexFree. There are many more.

    NOTE: Thanks to a reader for the heads-up on Smirnow’s sentencing in Canada.