What's Hot

    Tether’s Gold.com deal aims to make tokenized gold mainstream

    February 14, 2026

    IBIT options went vertical as Bitcoin hit $60k intraday

    February 14, 2026

    Crypto enters a “16-day danger zone” as senior crypto talent rotates into AI

    February 14, 2026
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    • Business
    • Markets
    • Get In Touch
    • Our Authors
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    Crypto News: Latest Cryptocurrency News and Analysis
    • Home
    • Business

      Fidelity Buys 7.4% Of Bitcoin Mining Company Marathon Digital Holdings

      February 11, 2021

      Twitter Reacts as Auto Driver Begins Accepting Crypto as Payment

      February 11, 2021

      HSBC Becomes Latest Bank to Suspend Payments to Crypto

      February 4, 2021

      Bitcoin Holds Support; Approaching $50K Resistance

      February 4, 2021

      Cryptocurrency Prices Today: Bitcoin Up Over $47,000, Ether Rises 3%

      February 3, 2021
    • Technology
      1. Business
      2. Insights
      3. View All

      Fidelity Buys 7.4% Of Bitcoin Mining Company Marathon Digital Holdings

      February 11, 2021

      Twitter Reacts as Auto Driver Begins Accepting Crypto as Payment

      February 11, 2021

      HSBC Becomes Latest Bank to Suspend Payments to Crypto

      February 4, 2021

      Bitcoin Holds Support; Approaching $50K Resistance

      February 4, 2021

      Tether’s Gold.com deal aims to make tokenized gold mainstream

      February 14, 2026

      IBIT options went vertical as Bitcoin hit $60k intraday

      February 14, 2026

      Crypto enters a “16-day danger zone” as senior crypto talent rotates into AI

      February 14, 2026

      Bitcoin refuses to lose $70,000 this weekend. Was my $49k bottom call wrong?

      February 14, 2026

      Bitcoin Climbs as Elon Musk Says Tesla ‘Likely’ to Accept it Again

      March 16, 2021

      Can Cryptocurrency Be Hacked, Stolen Or Scammed? How Can You Be Safe?

      February 11, 2021

      How Investors Can Get In On Crypto Without Actually Buying Any

      February 4, 2021

      Ethereum Just Underwent a Major Change – Hence, The 25% Jump in a Week!

      February 4, 2021
    • Insights
      1. Bitcoin
      2. Ethereum
      3. Eurozone
      4. Monero
      5. View All

      US Bank Lobby Urges OCC to Pause Crypto Trust Charters Amid Stablecoin Uncertainty

      February 13, 2026

      SEC Signals Potential Role in Policing Booming Prediction Markets

      February 13, 2026

      Trump-Backed WLFI Expands Into $9.6T FX Market With ‘World Swap’ Launch

      February 13, 2026

      CFTC Taps Top Crypto CEOs for New Innovation Advisory Committee

      February 13, 2026

      Tether’s Gold.com deal aims to make tokenized gold mainstream

      February 14, 2026

      IBIT options went vertical as Bitcoin hit $60k intraday

      February 14, 2026

      Crypto enters a “16-day danger zone” as senior crypto talent rotates into AI

      February 14, 2026

      Bitcoin refuses to lose $70,000 this weekend. Was my $49k bottom call wrong?

      February 14, 2026

      Perpetual futures changed how retail traders perceived risk in 2025

      February 13, 2026

      AVAX breaks key pattern as $9 turns into major supply zone

      February 13, 2026

      Bitcoin ETFs bleed $410M amid $2.5B options expiry: is BTC facing deeper crash?

      February 13, 2026

      Bitcoin Cash holds near $500 despite broader crypto market slump: check 2026 outlook

      February 12, 2026

      Silver Demand Powers January Results at The Perth Mint

      February 13, 2026

      U.S. Coin Production Jumps in January as 2026 Coins Debut

      February 13, 2026

      CSNS Convention Set for April 23–25 With Missouri Theme

      February 9, 2026

      U.S. Mint Pricing Update Published in Federal Register

      February 6, 2026

      Tether’s Gold.com deal aims to make tokenized gold mainstream

      February 14, 2026

      IBIT options went vertical as Bitcoin hit $60k intraday

      February 14, 2026

      Crypto enters a “16-day danger zone” as senior crypto talent rotates into AI

      February 14, 2026

      Bitcoin refuses to lose $70,000 this weekend. Was my $49k bottom call wrong?

      February 14, 2026
    • Markets
    • Get In Touch
    Crypto News: Latest Cryptocurrency News and Analysis
    Home » SEC filings reveal the multi-million dollar trap hiding inside ‘exclusive’ WhatsApp crypto investment clubs
    Ethereum

    SEC filings reveal the multi-million dollar trap hiding inside ‘exclusive’ WhatsApp crypto investment clubs

    行政By 行政December 30, 2025No Comments11 Mins Read
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Investors logged into glossy crypto trading dashboards showing five-figure “profits,” then found themselves blocked from withdrawing a cent unless they first wired extra “taxes” or “loan repayments” to overseas accounts.

    When victims tried to cash out, the platforms demanded advance fees to “unlock” their accounts, yet never released any money.

    On Dec. 22, the SEC charged three purported crypto trading platforms and four investment clubs over an alleged $14 million fraud that ran from January 2024 to January 2025.

    Playbook in five steps

    The complaint reads like a manual for how these schemes work, and the structure is clean enough to serve as a warning checklist.

    The first step consisted of social ads in WhatsApp clubs. According to the SEC, AI Wealth, Lane Wealth, AIIEF, and Zenith advertised on social media and then ran “investment clubs” on WhatsApp, fronted by “professor” and “assistant” personas in each group.

    The groups gave the appearance of exclusive access to expert guidance, a technique now common enough that Investor.gov has issued specific alerts warning that unsolicited investment clubs in messaging apps are a primary gateway for scams.

    The second step started with AI “signals” and curated screenshots. In those chats, the “professors” allegedly promised high returns from AI-generated trading signals and shared screenshots of supposedly successful trades to build trust.

    The complaint says they falsely held themselves out as financial professionals and claimed to use proprietary AI software for stock and crypto tips.

    The SEC’s AI fraud alert notes that scammers now use AI to generate fake websites, screenshots, and even deepfake videos to sell bogus investments or impersonate professionals, which is precisely the approach the complaint describes.

    The third step funnels to fake licensed platforms. Once investors were primed, the clubs steered them to three supposed trading platforms: Morocoin, Berge, and Cirkor.

    The SEC says these sites claimed to have government licenses and security protections, but in reality, there was no actual trading, and all the accounts were fabricated.

    The platforms allegedly referenced supposed regulatory investigations to add credibility, a tactic that Investor.gov’s PAUSE program explicitly tracks as a major red flag.

    Pushing fictitious STOs was the fourth step of this structure. The next escalation was “Security Token Offerings” in names like NNET, SCT, and HMB, marketed as if they were regulated IPO-style offerings by real companies such as “NeuralNet” and “SatCommTech.”

    The complaint alleges that the issuers and offerings did not exist and that the tokens were simply another way to attract deposits. By framing the tokens as IPO-equivalents, the operators borrowed the legitimacy of traditional securities without any of the disclosure or registration that real offerings require.

    The fifth and final step was withdrawal gate and advance fees. When victims tried to withdraw, the platforms and club operators allegedly demanded multiple advance payments. These include purported loan repayments, “investigation” fees, and expedited withdrawal charges.

    Along with the new requirements, there was a warning that accounts could be frozen for three years if investors did not comply. The SEC calls this a classic advance-fee fraud layered on top of the fake trading platform.

    Legitimate firms deduct fees from proceeds rather than asking customers to prepay taxes or pay upfront for access to their own money, a point regulators repeatedly stress in investor alerts.

    What the SEC alleges

    The case is filed in the US District Court for the District of Colorado against Morocoin Tech Corp., Berge Blockchain Technology Co. Ltd., Cirkor Inc., AI Wealth Inc., Lane Wealth Inc., AI Investment Education Foundation Ltd. and Zenith Asset Tech Foundation.

    The SEC alleges that, acting together, they took in at least $14 million from US retail investors between January 2024 and January 2025 and misappropriated all of it, sending funds through overlapping bank accounts and crypto wallets overseas.

    The complaint charges violations of the antifraud provisions of the Securities Act and Exchange Act and seeks permanent injunctions, civil penalties, and disgorgement with interest for the platform entities.

    The allegations paint a coordinated scheme in which the investment clubs fed victims to the platforms, the platforms fabricated account balances, and the STO layer took a second bite at the same victims before the withdrawal gate closed the trap.

    Flowchart for AI-related scams
    Flow chart showing the SEC’s alleged scam progression from social media ads through WhatsApp clubs to fake platforms and advance-fee withdrawal traps.

    Red flags

    Current investor education materials map directly onto the tactics alleged in this case.

    Regarding group chats “professors,” Investor.gov’s alert warns that unsolicited investment clubs on messaging apps are now a primary gateway for scams and that investors should be wary of any group where an unknown “leader” dispenses stock or crypto tips.

    BC GameBC Game

    The complaint describes exactly that structure: WhatsApp groups led by personas claiming expertise, building trust through fake wins before steering members to the real trap.

    1. AI-generated signals

    The platforms allegedly used AI-generated signals and testimonials to create an aura of sophistication. The SEC’s AI fraud alert notes that scammers use AI to generate fake content, including deepfake videos, to sell bogus investments or impersonate professionals.

    2. Too good to be true

    If the “professor” or “assistant” seems too polished or the screenshots too perfect, that’s a reason to dig deeper, not to invest faster.

    3. Fake licenses

    This leads to the third red flag: fake licenses and regulators. The platforms claimed government licenses and referenced supposed regulatory investigations to pressure victims into paying fees.

    Investor.gov’s PAUSE program explicitly tracks firms and fictitious “regulators” that falsely present themselves as registered or US-based.

    A claimed license is only as good as the regulator’s confirmation, and if the platform resists giving details that can be independently verified, that resistance is the tell.

    4. Guaranteed returns

    The fourth red flag is the argument of guaranteed returns and “can’t-lose” AI. Both the complaint and multiple Investor.gov alerts flag promises of high, low-risk returns as a hallmark of fraud.

    The group chat and social media alerts stress that stock-tip and crypto scams often hinge on claims that an algorithm or insider access can deliver outsized gains. Real markets involve risk. Claims that erase that risk are claims that erase reality.

    5. Withdrawal taxes or fees

    Another red flag is the presence of fees and taxes to withdraw. The SEC says most of the losses came from “advance fees” demanded to unlock accounts or avoid three-year freezes.

    Regulators repeatedly warn that legitimate firms deduct fees from proceeds rather than asking customers to prepay taxes or pay upfront for access to their own money.

    Once a platform starts asking for money to give back money, the relationship has flipped from investment to extortion.

    6. Pressure to send crypto

    The last red flag pointed by the SEC is the pressure to wire or send crypto to unknown wallets.
    The complaint details wire transfers and crypto transactions to dozens of bank accounts and wallet addresses unrelated to any regulated broker. The group chat alert specifically lists wiring money to individuals or sending crypto to unknown wallets as a key sign of fraud.

    Real brokers use clearing accounts with transparent ownership and regulatory oversight. If the destination account changes or the platform insists on crypto-only transfers to a wallet address with no institutional backing, that’s the exit sign.

    Identifying scams
    Scam claim (or pattern) What’s actually happening How a reader can check it
    “We’re SEC-licensed / fully regulated” The entities behind Morocoin/Berge/Cirkor are not in SEC, FINRA, or state registries. The “licenses” and badges on the site are invented. Search the person and firm on Investor.gov’s “Check Out Your Investment Professional” and on the SEC’s PAUSE list. No hit = walk away.
    “Look at your profits in the app – you’re up 40% already” The “portfolio” screen is just a UI; there is no real brokerage account or external custody. Scammers can type any balance they like. Ask: “Where is my account held, and what’s the custodian?” Then independently contact that firm or check your name and holdings in their portal. If everything lives only inside one obscure app, that’s a major red flag.
    “Our AI trading model has never lost – low risk, guaranteed returns” Real advisers cannot truthfully guarantee returns. Here the “AI” is just marketing gloss to justify aggressive signals and bigger deposits. On Investor.gov, look up the individual/firm and review Form CRS and ADV. Any talk of “guaranteed” or “risk-free” performance is itself a sign you’re dealing with a scam.
    “This STO is like an IPO – pre-screened and approved by regulators” The alleged STOs and issuers do not exist in any securities registry; they are made-up tickers on a fake platform, used to demand larger investments. Search the token name and issuer on EDGAR (sec.gov), on your national securities regulator’s site, and in basic corporate registries. If you only find the scam site promoting it, assume it’s fictitious.
    “To withdraw you must first pay taxes/loan fees/‘investigation’ costs” Classic advance-fee fraud. Legitimate firms deduct taxes and fees from your proceeds; they don’t require you to wire more money just to access your own balance. Ask any licensed broker or bank how withdrawals work. If someone insists you must pre-pay taxes or ‘unlock’ fees by sending money to a new wallet/account, stop and report it.
    “Send funds by wire or crypto to this wallet – your account will be credited” Victims are sending money straight to the scammers’ bank accounts and wallets, often in other countries. Once sent, it’s very hard to recover. Check the payee name on wires: does it match a real, registered firm? For crypto, be suspicious of any platform that only funds via transfers to personal or OTC-looking addresses rather than through known exchanges.
    “We are investigating your account; if you don’t cooperate, it will be frozen for years” Fear tactic to keep you engaged and paying more “fees.” There is no regulator involved and no legal power to freeze anything – they control the database. Independently contact the regulator they claim to represent. Use contact details from the official website, not from the chat or app. If the regulator has never heard of your case, you’re dealing with impostors.

    Verify claims in 90 seconds

    Investor.gov provides a verification routine that takes less time than scrolling through a group chat.

    1. Potential investors should check the person via Investor.gov using the “Check Out Your Investment Professional” search, and look up the individual’s name and the firm they claim to represent.

      The group chat alert and AI fraud alert both tell investors to confirm they are dealing with the real, registered firm using Form CRS details, not phone numbers or links sent in a chat. If the search returns nothing or returns a different firm with a similar name, that is a stop sign.

    2. Check the platform. Search for the trading site’s name on the SEC’s PAUSE list and in general web searches, using terms like “scam,” “complaint,” or “Investor.gov alert.”

      The PAUSE program is designed specifically to surface unregistered entities and fake regulators. A clean PAUSE result does not guarantee legitimacy, but a hit on the list is definitive.

    3. Sanity-check the claims. Copy a line of promotional text or a “testimonial” into a search engine and see if it appears word-for-word across different sites, which is common with template scam content.

      Cross-check any purported licenses against the relevant national regulator’s database rather than relying on screenshots. If the platform or club resists providing verifiable details, that resistance is an answer.

    Callboxes to avoid scamsCallboxes to avoid scams
    Three-step verification checklist for crypto investments: check the person on Investor.gov, search the platform for warnings, and test promises for boilerplate language.

    Why this case matters now

    The SEC’s newsroom write-up explicitly links this enforcement action to its broader warning that fraudsters are now using popular social-media platforms and messaging apps to target US retail investors with AI-flavored pitches.

    Recent Investor.gov alerts add context: regulators are seeing more “long-con” relationship and group chat scams in which trust is built over weeks through friendly or romantic exchanges before the investment hook appears, often involving crypto platforms that exist only on the scammer’s servers.

    AI lowers the cost of churning out convincing screenshots, prospectuses, “STO” white papers, and even deepfake videos. At the same time, encrypted chats give scammers a closed, high-pressure funnel to migrate victims off public platforms.

    The combination makes these schemes scalable in ways that earlier generations of fraud were not. A single operator can run dozens of WhatsApp groups, each with a different “professor” persona, feeding victims to the same set of fake platforms with minimal marginal cost per new victim.

    On the legal side, the SEC is seeking permanent injunctions, civil penalties, and disgorgement with interest from the main platform entities.

    That means, if it prevails, the court can bar the defendants from future violations, impose money penalties, and order any traceable funds to be repaid into a distribution process for victims.

    For investors suspecting they have been targeted by a similar scheme, the SEC and FBI accept tips through the SEC’s online complaint center and the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3).

    Even if the money is gone, filing a report creates a record that can help regulators identify patterns, freeze assets, and potentially recover funds for other victims. The PAUSE list gets updated as new entities surface, and each report makes the next warning faster.

    Mentioned in this article

    Community,Culture,Featured,Scams,Trading#SEC #filings #reveal #multimillion #dollar #trap #hiding #exclusive #WhatsApp #crypto #investment #clubs1767108944

    clubs Crypto dollar exclusive filings hiding Investment multimillion reveal SEC trap WhatsApp
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    行政
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Tether’s Gold.com deal aims to make tokenized gold mainstream

    February 14, 2026

    IBIT options went vertical as Bitcoin hit $60k intraday

    February 14, 2026

    Crypto enters a “16-day danger zone” as senior crypto talent rotates into AI

    February 14, 2026

    Bitcoin refuses to lose $70,000 this weekend. Was my $49k bottom call wrong?

    February 14, 2026
    Add A Comment

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Millennials Are Quitting Job to Become Day Traders

    January 20, 2021

    Jack Dorsey Says Bitcoin Will Unite The World

    January 15, 2021

    Hong Kong Customs Arrest Four in Crypto Laundering Bust

    January 15, 2021

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest sports news from SportsSite about soccer, football and tennis.

    Advertisement
    Demo

    Your source for the serious news. This demo is crafted specifically to exhibit the use of the theme as a news site. Visit our main page for more demos.

    We're social. Connect with us:

    Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest YouTube
    Top Insights

    Tether’s Gold.com deal aims to make tokenized gold mainstream

    February 14, 2026

    IBIT options went vertical as Bitcoin hit $60k intraday

    February 14, 2026

    Crypto enters a “16-day danger zone” as senior crypto talent rotates into AI

    February 14, 2026
    Get Informed

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest
    • Home
    • Business
    • Markets
    • Technology
    • Contact us
    © 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by WPfastworld.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.