The Portfolio Manager I Never Met
Five months. That is how long the relationship ran before the first dollar moved, and it is why this is one of our hardest case files to write. By the time the client accepted what Omenyx Group ↗ really was, the money had been laundered methodically across months. We recovered what we could. It was not much, and I will not pretend otherwise.
Last Known Position
Wei Lin is forty-eight, an engineer in Singapore, widowed three years. The connection began on a language-exchange app and moved to daily messages — patient, warm, never rushed. Months in, the partner mentioned a relative who managed crypto portfolios through Omenyx Group and offered to “help him learn.” There was no hard sell. That is the signature of pig-butchering: the fattening is the relationship itself.
The first small deposit on Omenyx grew and, crucially, a modest withdrawal paid out. After that the amounts climbed with his confidence in the person, not the platform.
Point of No Return
When Wei Lin eventually tried to take a large sum out, Omenyx Group required a “tax bond” to release it — and the partner, ever supportive, offered to “split” the cost. The contradiction finally landed. When he asked to meet, even by video, the excuses began. He came to us the week he accepted the answer.
I was not chasing returns. I trusted a person. The platform was just where they told me to put it.
Recovery Track
Map five months of movement
We reconstructed every deposit across the full timeline — multiple chains, dozens of transfers — to see how much had genuinely left and where it first pooled.
Accept what was already gone
A long con launders as it goes. The earliest deposits were untraceable months before he reached us; we focused on the most recent, still-warm transfers.
Chase the recent tranches
The final two deposits had not fully dispersed. We followed them to collector wallets and on toward two exchange deposit addresses.
File on the warm slice
We submitted a documented trace and victim report to the exchanges and a referral to the relevant fraud authorities, covering the recoverable tranches only.
Recover the recoverable
One exchange held and returned a portion after verification. The honest total is a fraction — the cost of a fraud built to run for months before anyone reports it.
$31,200 of $164,000 returned. We publish the low numbers on purpose. The single biggest factor in a romance-investment case is how long it ran before it was reported — and five months is a long time for a trail to cool.
Warning Lights
- An online-only partner who introduces a crypto “opportunity” is the most common pig-butchering script.
- The early small withdrawal that pays is the anchor; it exists to justify the large deposits later.
- “Trusting a person” is not the same as vetting a platform — the person is the bait.
- A “tax” or “bond” required to withdraw your own balance is never real.
- Refusal to meet on a live video call, after months, is a red flag — not shyness.
Was your “investment” introduced by someone you met online?
The sooner the last transfers are traced, the more survives. Bring us the wallet history and we will tell you what the chain still shows.
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