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Tag: scam help

  • Watchlist entry · Zavrox

    The Cryptoblackbird investigations desk logs operators that behave like investment fraud rather than legitimate brokerages. Zavrox fits that pattern. What follows is our case summary and the recovery path we recommend.

    The concern in brief

    Zavrox has been flagged as a fake broker/platform by IOSCO I-SCAN (New Zealand – Financial Markets Authority). reported 2025-06-03. Jurisdiction: New Zealand. It appears on an official regulator or fraud-warning list, which is a strong indicator of a scam operation. Treat any contact from this entity with caution. Reference: https://www.iosco.org/i-scan/

    Warning signs to recognise

    • New deposits are requested through crypto, wire, or gift cards — channels that are hard to reverse once funds leave your account.
    • Account managers apply pressure — urgency, bonuses, or threats of “losing your position” — to keep you paying in.
    • Clients are steered toward connecting a wallet, installing remote-access software, or sharing a seed phrase — none of which a legitimate broker would ever require.
    • Withdrawals stall, get delayed, or are blocked behind sudden “tax”, “insurance”, or “anti-money-laundering” fees — money you should never have to pay to access your own balance.

    What to do next

    Gather everything you can: transaction records, wallet addresses, deposit receipts, and any messages with the platform’s representatives. This evidence is what makes a recovery effort actionable, and it is the first thing our team reviews.

    Do not pay any further “fees” to withdraw. If Zavrox is demanding more money before releasing your funds, that demand is itself the strongest confirmation of the fraud. Our analysts can review your case and lay out the realistic next steps.

    Believe you have been affected by Zavrox? Open a case with the Cryptoblackbird recovery team — we will review the details and reach out to you directly. Start your case review.

  • Janco Lazard Transfer Company: case file from our team

    Our team opened a case file on Janco Lazard Transfer Company following reports and warning-list entries that point to a fraudulent brokerage. This page summarises the concerns on record and what recovery options look like for affected clients.

    Why Janco Lazard Transfer Company is on our Watchlist

    Janco Lazard Transfer Company has been flagged as a fake broker/platform by IOSCO I-SCAN (United States of America – Securities and Exchange Commission). reported 2026-06-04. Jurisdiction: United States of America. It appears on an official regulator or fraud-warning list, which is a strong indicator of a scam operation. Treat any contact from this entity with caution. Reference: https://www.iosco.org/i-scan/

    The pattern we see again and again

    • Clients are steered toward connecting a wallet, installing remote-access software, or sharing a seed phrase — none of which a legitimate broker would ever require.
    • Withdrawals stall, get delayed, or are blocked behind sudden “tax”, “insurance”, or “anti-money-laundering” fees — money you should never have to pay to access your own balance.
    • The company cannot show a verifiable licence in the jurisdiction where it solicits clients.
    • The brand name, address, or regulatory claims do not match any official register, and reviews describe the same withdrawal problems.

    Recovering funds sent to Janco Lazard Transfer Company

    Acting quickly matters. The sooner a case is opened, the more options exist for tracing funds and engaging the right institutions. Stop any further payments immediately — additional “release” or “tax” fees are part of the same scheme and will not free your balance.

    Gather everything you can: transaction records, wallet addresses, deposit receipts, and any messages with the platform’s representatives. This evidence is what makes a recovery effort actionable, and it is the first thing our team reviews.

    Believe you have been affected by Janco Lazard Transfer Company? Open a case with the Cryptoblackbird recovery team — we will review the details and reach out to you directly. Start your case review.

  • Case file: Veldorna

    Veldorna caught our team’s attention for a familiar reason: the operation shows the hallmarks of an unlicensed platform built to take deposits rather than return them. Here is what the Cryptoblackbird desk has on file.

    What the record shows

    Veldorna has been flagged as a fake broker/platform by IOSCO I-SCAN (Cyprus – Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission). reported 2025-07-15. Jurisdiction: Cyprus. It appears on an official regulator or fraud-warning list, which is a strong indicator of a scam operation. Treat any contact from this entity with caution. Reference: https://www.iosco.org/i-scan/

    How this operation typically works

    • Account managers apply pressure — urgency, bonuses, or threats of “losing your position” — to keep you paying in.
    • Clients are steered toward connecting a wallet, installing remote-access software, or sharing a seed phrase — none of which a legitimate broker would ever require.
    • Withdrawals stall, get delayed, or are blocked behind sudden “tax”, “insurance”, or “anti-money-laundering” fees — money you should never have to pay to access your own balance.
    • The company cannot show a verifiable licence in the jurisdiction where it solicits clients.

    Recovering funds sent to Veldorna

    Acting quickly matters. The sooner a case is opened, the more options exist for tracing funds and engaging the right institutions. Stop any further payments immediately — additional “release” or “tax” fees are part of the same scheme and will not free your balance.

    Gather everything you can: transaction records, wallet addresses, deposit receipts, and any messages with the platform’s representatives. This evidence is what makes a recovery effort actionable, and it is the first thing our team reviews.

    Need help recovering funds from Veldorna? Share the details with our analysts and we will map out your options. Begin your recovery case review.

  • Clone Tasman FX — on the Cryptoblackbird Watchlist

    Clone Tasman FX pitches itself as a forward-looking trading destination. The corroborating evidence does not survive contact with normal due-diligence checks.

    INTEL SHEET

    Operator Clone Tasman FX
    Public website https://tasmaltd.com/en/index
    Stated HQ undisclosed
    Regulators no verifiable regulator on file
    Broker type unspecified

    How losses unfold

    Investors who land on Clone Tasman FX typically describe a familiar arc: a friendly first conversation, a small profitable test trade, then escalating deposit pressure once the relationship feels “safe.”

    Red flags on file

    • Pressure to deposit. “Limited-time” bonuses, “account upgrade” tiers, and personal account managers urging larger transfers.
    • Crypto-only on-ramp. The operator only accepts USDT, BTC, or other crypto deposits, removing every chargeback or banking-side recourse path.

    If you’ve already engaged

    File a Signal with our team. We will assess scope within one business day and tell you straight whether recovery is realistic in your case.

    Do not engage with anyone offering recovery in exchange for upfront fees, gift cards, or your seed phrase. We never ask for any of those, and neither does any legitimate recovery service.

    Cryptoblackbird never asks for your seed phrase, private keys, or exchange password. Anyone who does — even someone claiming to represent us — is running a recovery scam.

    Reach our team in Addison, Texas: open a signal or send a tip through our anonymous Black Box.

  • Watchlist entry · FisherForex

    Our analysts have logged FisherForex as a high-risk operator. The pattern fits a script our case files have seen before.

    INTEL SHEET

    Operator FisherForex
    Public website https://fisherforex.com/
    Stated HQ undisclosed
    Regulators no verifiable regulator on file
    Broker type unspecified

    How losses unfold

    Most case files involving operators like FisherForex share the same trajectory — modest entry, painted gains, and a sudden wall of fees, taxes, or “compliance reviews” the moment a withdrawal is requested.

    Red flags on file

    • Pressure to deposit. “Limited-time” bonuses, “account upgrade” tiers, and personal account managers urging larger transfers.
    • Regulator silence. FisherForex either claims a license that cannot be cross-checked, or names a regulator that has never heard of the entity.

    If you’ve already engaged

    Do not engage with anyone offering recovery in exchange for upfront fees, gift cards, or your seed phrase. We never ask for any of those, and neither does any legitimate recovery service.

    File a Signal with our team. We will assess scope within one business day and tell you straight whether recovery is realistic in your case.

    Cryptoblackbird never asks for your seed phrase, private keys, or exchange password. Anyone who does — even someone claiming to represent us — is running a recovery scam.

    Reach our team in Addison, Texas: open a signal or send a tip through our anonymous Black Box.

  • Gainstock: case file from our team

    Gainstock caught our team’s attention for a simple reason: the public footprint does not line up with how a regulated broker normally operates.

    INTEL SHEET

    Operator Gainstock
    Public website https://gainstock.ltd/
    Stated HQ undisclosed
    Regulators no verifiable regulator on file
    Broker type unspecified

    How losses unfold

    Investors who land on Gainstock typically describe a familiar arc: a friendly first conversation, a small profitable test trade, then escalating deposit pressure once the relationship feels “safe.”

    Red flags on file

    • Cloned legitimacy. Branding, language, and design lifted from real regulated brokers to inherit perceived credibility.
    • Cold contact origin. First contact through Telegram, WhatsApp, Instagram DMs, or LinkedIn — not through the operator’s own marketing funnel.

    If you’ve already engaged

    Document everything you have: wallet addresses, transaction hashes, screenshots described in text, the exact account-manager handles, and dates. Our team works from this evidence.

    File a Signal with our team. We will assess scope within one business day and tell you straight whether recovery is realistic in your case.

    Cryptoblackbird never asks for your seed phrase, private keys, or exchange password. Anyone who does — even someone claiming to represent us — is running a recovery scam.

    Signals come into us every day. If Gainstock is in your history, tell us what happened — one business day to a scope assessment.

  • Case file: Aquilamsv

    Aquilamsv caught our team’s attention for a simple reason: the public footprint does not line up with how a regulated broker normally operates.

    INTEL SHEET

    Operator Aquilamsv
    Public website https://aquilamsv.com/
    Stated HQ undisclosed
    Regulators no verifiable regulator on file
    Broker type unspecified

    How losses unfold

    The clients who reach our team after Aquilamsv usually describe being introduced through a messaging app, social media DM, or a referral from someone they thought they knew.

    Red flags on file

    • Regulator silence. Aquilamsv either claims a license that cannot be cross-checked, or names a regulator that has never heard of the entity.
    • Crypto-only on-ramp. The operator only accepts USDT, BTC, or other crypto deposits, removing every chargeback or banking-side recourse path.

    If you’ve already engaged

    If you have already deposited with Aquilamsv, stop sending more — even if a “final fee” will supposedly unlock your balance. That is the pattern that drains the rest.

    Do not engage with anyone offering recovery in exchange for upfront fees, gift cards, or your seed phrase. We never ask for any of those, and neither does any legitimate recovery service.

    Cryptoblackbird never asks for your seed phrase, private keys, or exchange password. Anyone who does — even someone claiming to represent us — is running a recovery scam.

    Signals come into us every day. If Aquilamsv is in your history, tell us what happened — one business day to a scope assessment.

  • Case file: Global Merger Arbitrage Partners

    If you searched for Global Merger Arbitrage Partners you likely want a straight answer about whether it is safe. Based on the evidence our analysts have gathered, Global Merger Arbitrage Partners is a platform to avoid — and if you have already deposited, this page explains what to do next.

    What the record shows

    Global Merger Arbitrage Partners has been flagged as a fake broker/platform by IOSCO I-SCAN (United States of America – Securities and Exchange Commission). reported 2026-06-04. Jurisdiction: United States of America. It appears on an official regulator or fraud-warning list, which is a strong indicator of a scam operation. Treat any contact from this entity with caution. Reference: https://www.iosco.org/i-scan/

    How this operation typically works

    • Account managers apply pressure — urgency, bonuses, or threats of “losing your position” — to keep you paying in.
    • Clients are steered toward connecting a wallet, installing remote-access software, or sharing a seed phrase — none of which a legitimate broker would ever require.
    • Withdrawals stall, get delayed, or are blocked behind sudden “tax”, “insurance”, or “anti-money-laundering” fees — money you should never have to pay to access your own balance.
    • The company cannot show a verifiable licence in the jurisdiction where it solicits clients.

    Your recovery options

    Gather everything you can: transaction records, wallet addresses, deposit receipts, and any messages with the platform’s representatives. This evidence is what makes a recovery effort actionable, and it is the first thing our team reviews.

    Do not pay any further “fees” to withdraw. If Global Merger Arbitrage Partners is demanding more money before releasing your funds, that demand is itself the strongest confirmation of the fraud. Our analysts can review your case and lay out the realistic next steps.

    Sent money to Global Merger Arbitrage Partners and struggling to withdraw? Our recovery team can review your case at no obligation. Open a case and tell us what happened.

  • Cryptglobalmarkets — on the Cryptoblackbird Watchlist

    Cryptglobalmarkets appears to be the latest brand wrapping the same tired crypto-broker playbook in fresh packaging.

    INTEL SHEET

    Operator Cryptglobalmarkets
    Public website https://cryptglobalmarkets.live/
    Stated HQ undisclosed
    Regulators no verifiable regulator on file
    Broker type unspecified

    How losses unfold

    Deposits to Cryptglobalmarkets most often go through pressured stablecoin transfers, “customer-service” wallets, or third-party payment processors that route funds away from the broker brand entirely.

    Red flags on file

    • Crypto-only on-ramp. The operator only accepts USDT, BTC, or other crypto deposits, removing every chargeback or banking-side recourse path.
    • Withdrawal friction. Funds go in cleanly; coming back out triggers a sudden cascade of fees, taxes, and verification demands.

    If you’ve already engaged

    Document everything you have: wallet addresses, transaction hashes, screenshots described in text, the exact account-manager handles, and dates. Our team works from this evidence.

    Do not engage with anyone offering recovery in exchange for upfront fees, gift cards, or your seed phrase. We never ask for any of those, and neither does any legitimate recovery service.

    Cryptoblackbird never asks for your seed phrase, private keys, or exchange password. Anyone who does — even someone claiming to represent us — is running a recovery scam.

    Reach our team in Addison, Texas: open a signal or send a tip through our anonymous Black Box.

  • Case file: Financial Securities Authority

    Financial Securities Authority caught our team’s attention for a familiar reason: the operation shows the hallmarks of an unlicensed platform built to take deposits rather than return them. Here is what the Cryptoblackbird desk has on file.

    The concern in brief

    Financial Securities Authority has been flagged as a fake broker/platform by IOSCO I-SCAN (United States of America – Securities and Exchange Commission). reported 2026-06-04. Jurisdiction: United States of America. It appears on an official regulator or fraud-warning list, which is a strong indicator of a scam operation. Treat any contact from this entity with caution. Reference: https://www.iosco.org/i-scan/

    Warning signs to recognise

    • The brand name, address, or regulatory claims do not match any official register, and reviews describe the same withdrawal problems.
    • A dashboard shows fast, unrealistic profits to encourage larger and larger deposits, while the underlying funds are never actually invested.
    • Support goes quiet, contact numbers stop working, or the website disappears once a withdrawal is requested.
    • New deposits are requested through crypto, wire, or gift cards — channels that are hard to reverse once funds leave your account.

    What to do next

    Gather everything you can: transaction records, wallet addresses, deposit receipts, and any messages with the platform’s representatives. This evidence is what makes a recovery effort actionable, and it is the first thing our team reviews.

    Do not pay any further “fees” to withdraw. If Financial Securities Authority is demanding more money before releasing your funds, that demand is itself the strongest confirmation of the fraud. Our analysts can review your case and lay out the realistic next steps.

    Need help recovering funds from Financial Securities Authority? Share the details with our analysts and we will map out your options. Begin your recovery case review.