OSE Review: Dubai MLM investment fraud
OSE, aka Opportunity Safe Experience, launched in 2024. The company operates in the investment fraud MLM niche.
OSE initially launched on the domain “osez.pro”, privately registered on June 19th, 2024. In or around August 2025 OSE switched to “ose.pro”, privately registered on August 16th, 2025.
OSE cites Christophe Verschueren as founder and CEO on its website.

Patrick Tchissambou is cited as OSE’s Chief Financial Officer.
Christophe Verschueren goes by Chris Vrsch on social media. Per his Facebook Profile, Verschueren is a Belgian national residing in Dubai.

The website Warning Trading cites Verschueren as co-founder of the collapsed 5 Star MLM scheme.
5 Star was purportedly an AI sports betting scam. In an undated post in a 5 Star FaceBook group, in which Verschueren was a ‘primary contributor”, Verschueren admitted he co-founded 5 Star with Ghislain Emonts.

Perhaps explaining why Verschueren is hiding out in Dubai, Emonts was convicted in Belgium on charges relating to cryptocurrency investment fraud in 2023.
In April 2023, Ghislain Emonts was sentenced in absentia, since he was already stuck in Mauritius, by the Namur court to 3 years in prison for defrauding 27 victims of 4 million euros through cryptocurrency investments.
Emonts fled Belgium for Mauritius but was arrested pending extradition proceedings in 2023. As of November 2025, Emonts had gone on the run with an estimated $4 billion in cryptocurrency.
On its website OSE claims it’s a a “service provider operating as a private and licensed fund management company based in the Czech Republic.”
Other than a registered shell company to launder money through, OSE doesn’t appear to have any actual business operations in the Czech Republic.
Christophe Verschueren is based out of Dubai and this is where OSE is operated from.
Due to the proliferation of scams and failure to enforce securities fraud regulation, BehindMLM ranks Dubai as the MLM crime capital of the world.
BehindMLM’s guidelines for Dubai are:
- If someone lives in Dubai and approaches you about an MLM opportunity, they’re trying to scam you.
- If an MLM company is based out of or represents it has ties to Dubai, it’s a scam.
If you want to know specifically how this applies to OSE, read on for a full review.
OSE’s Products
OSE has no retailable products or services.
Promoters are only able to market OSE promoter membership itself.
OSE’s Compensation Plan
OSE promoters pay an undisclosed subscription fee. This fee provides access to an investment scheme OSE claims pays 12% annually.
The MLM side of OSE pays on recruitment of promoter investors. Note that OSE caps weekly commissions based on how much an OSE promoter has invested.
Like specifics of its investment scheme, OSE also hides details of its MLM compensation plan.
That said, what is disclosed in OSE’s website FAQ is enough to confirm MLM;
Affiliating new members allows you to grow your team, advance in the career plan, and increase your commissions.
To be eligible for the network bonus, you must obviously have an active service, and you must also have directly (personally) affiliated one person on the right and one person on the left.
From this we can surmise OSE’s compensation plan utilizes a binary compensation structure.
Joining OSE
OSE promoter membership is tied to an undisclosed subscription fee and minimum investment amount.
OSE Conclusion
OSE hides details of its investment scheme and MLM compensation plan from the public. This alone is enough to avoid the company.
On top of these major MLM red flags though, we can also add investment fraud.
While OSE is correct in identifying itself as a “regulated private investment fund”…
OSE is a regulated private investment fund that allows investors to pool their resources into a single portfolio in order to benefit from the advantages of a large portfolio, thereby achieving better returns on their capital.
…the company itself operates illegally in violation of regulations pertaining to passive returns investment schemes (securities offerings).
OSE might have a Czech Republic shell company it launders money through but this is not permission to offer securities.

The Czech National Bank regulates securities in the Czech Republic. OSE fails to provide evidence it has registered its passive returns investment scheme with financial regulators in any jurisdiction.
This means that OSE is committing securities fraud and operating illegally in every jurisdiction it solicits investment in.
In addition to being a legal requirement, registering with financial regulators would see OSE periodically file audited financial reports.
This is the only way for consumers to verify OSE is generating external revenue as claimed;
At OSE, we pool capital from various investors to create a common fund. This fund is then submitted to strategic partners to secure particularly advantageous preferential rates.
As a trusted intermediary, we ensure that your investments benefit from the best conditions available in the market.
As it stands, the only verifiable source of revenue entering OSE is new investment.
Using new investment to pay ROI withdrawals would make OSE a Ponzi scheme. Additionally, with nothing marketed or sold to retail customers, the MLM side of OSE operates as a pyramid scheme.
As with all MLM Ponzi schemes, once promoter recruitment dries up so too will new investment.
This will starve OSE of ROI revenue, eventually prompting a collapse.
Math guarantees that when a Ponzi scheme collapses, the majority of participants lose money.


Verschueren was also a big promoter of Omegapro SCAM….. Serial scammer.
I believe he first scammed people out of their money with the GetEasy fraud and was even condemned by the court for doing this.
Is it 4 billion or million that got defrauded? If there are 27 people holding 4 billion they could afford to lose to an absolute scam then I would like to meet them
I did query that. I saw something about 120,000 bitcoin getting siphoned off in the linked SudInfo report but didn’t check the math.
Still not 100% sure if it’s a translation error or the actual quoted figure.
As I understand it the 27 investors is where the $4 mill comes from, whereas $4 billion was the total taken in (crypto conversion shenanigans).
Verschueren has a long history in MLM schemes. As mentioned previously, he admitted being part of Get Easy and OmegaPro in a Facebook group that is no longer available. [postimg.cc/sGXVv11j].
There are also pictures on his Facebook profile that suggest he attended a Euphony trip (a famous Dutch-Belgian MLM company that collapsed around 2014). [postimg.cc/HcLGtRmP]
@Oz, regarding the claim that Verschueren is hiding in Dubai, just FYI, he seems comfortable enough to come back to Belgium, as he was recently (January 2026) attending the “Salon de l’investissement” (a so-called investment fair) in Mons, Belgium. [salon-investissement.com/les-conferenciers/] – [postimg.cc/xNC0cqqd]
BTW, the event was organized by Florian Prodéo (former MWR Life distributor and recruiter for Catherine Técher’s “To the Top” scam). For the record, Técher was also a Get Easy distributor. See this thread about the convention if interested: [x.com/itsonlyscam/status/2017596364943687938]
Not only was Verschueren a speaker, but he was also a sponsor/partner of the event. [postimg.cc/bSJzsddJ]
One can be hiding in Dubai from many things. Regulators, authorites (including tax authorities), your victims etc.
Nobody in MLM has any legitimate reason to move to Dubai. It’s a slave city in the middle of the desert.