ResClub Review: Real-estate investment securities fraud

ResClub operates in the real-estate MLM niche. The company appears to have launched in late 2019 and is based out of Florida.

It should be noted that, although the company has been around since 2019, ResClub as an MLM company only launched in mid 2022:

Heading up ResClub is founder and CEO Craig Shawn Williamson.

As per Williamson’s ResClub corporate bio, he’s

been involved in the Vacation Home Industry since 2003 and has over 20 years of experience in the field of Branded Investment Luxury Property through positions held with Four Seasons, Hard Rock, Fairfield, AECOM, Nicklaus Corporation and most recently with Encore Capital Management.

As far as I can tell, ResClub is Williamson’s first venture as an MLM executive.

Another name I recognized on ResClub’s corporate team was VP of Global Sales, Peter Jensen.

BehindMLM only recently came across Jensen in connection with Real Rise Academy.

We’re assuming Jensen’s executive role in ResClub means he’s no longer with the company.

Jensen has a notable history of promoting and running MLM pyramid schemes, which ResClub reduces to

over 30 years of successful global Networking Marketing experience to the Myresclub Team!

PJ has always been at the pinnacle of every area in network marketing, building some of the largest sales forces in the history of the industry, generating over 3.5 Billion in global sales most notably with YTB Travel!

Jensen did indeed make a name for himself as a top promoter of the YTB pyramid scheme.

In 2008 the company was sued by California Attorney General Jerry Brown.

An out-of-court settlement required changes to the company’s business model, and generated a decrease in membership attributed to bad publicity.

Jensen left YTB in 2009 and went on to launch AMA Nation in mid 2010.

A year later in 2011, AMA stole their affiliate’s customers and shut down their MLM operations.

A year in 2012, Jensen pled guilty to tax evasion. In 2013 he was fined $2.1 million and sentenced to 31 months in prison.

Jensen didn’t serve the entire sentence. He was released early and, in mid 2014, launched RE247365.

RE247365 was a real-estate themed membership pyramid scheme (go figure).

By the end of 2014 RE247365 had collapsed. Rather than just admit he was running a pyramid scheme, Jensen came up with sob story alleging frozen funds and fraud.

Jensen’s next MLM gig was Master Distributor for Direct Cellars in 2016. That lasted until Direct Cellar’s collapse in 2019.

As Direct Cellars was collapsing, Jensen signed on as a “spokesperson/consultant” for isXperia in late 2018.

Jensen’s LinkedIn has him in that role until November 2021, after which we have Real Rise Academy and, as of mid 2022, ResClub.

Read on for a full review of ResClub’s MLM opportunity. [Continue reading…]


TelexFree Receiver announces second claim distribution

The TelexFree Receiver has sent out an email detailing a second distribution to valid claim holders. [Continue reading…]


Radoncap Review: 5% a day tether Ponzi scheme

Radoncap fails to provide company ownership and executive information on its website.

Radoncap’s website domain (“radoncap.com”), was privately registered on August 27th, 2022.

Radoncap is coordinated through “Official Radoncap Group” on Telegram.

A shady Telegram group run by anonymous admins is an MLM due-diligence red flag.

As always, if an MLM company is not openly upfront about who is running or owns it, think long and hard about joining and/or handing over any money. [Continue reading…]


Primebit Review: Dodgy exchange hidden behind shell company

Primebit fails to provide company ownership or executive information on its website.

Primebit operates from the website domain (“primebit.com”), first registered in 2005. The private registration was last updated on May 17th, 2022.

Primebit represents it is run through “PrimeBit Ltd.” PrimeBit Ltd. is a shell company incorporated through a PO Box in St. Vincent and the Grenadines.

As always, if an MLM company is not openly upfront about who is running or owns it, think long and hard about joining and/or handing over any money. [Continue reading…]



BitMonsters Review: Louis Dünweber fronts Dubai Ponzi

BitMonsters operates in the cryptocurrency MLM niche.

The company doesn’t provide a corporate address on its website. “China Hong Kong” appears on BitMonsters’ website footer however, suggesting ties to south-east Asia.

This conflicts with BitMonsters’ website Terms and Conditions, which states;

BitMonsters (SV) Ltd is incorporated in St. Vincent & the Grenadine.

Be it shell companies in Hong Kong or St. Vincent & the Grenadine, both are meaningless with respect to MLM due-diligence.

What isn’t meaningless is BitMonsters’ ties to Dubai:

BitMonsters is headed up by CEO Louis Casper Dünweber (right).

Dünweber’s BitMonsters corporate bio describes him as a “millionaire businessman”. I wasn’t able to verify that claim.

In fact I wasn’t able to verify much about Dünweber. He appears to have wealth of unknown origin and spends most of his time posting photos on Instagram.

There’s a strong possibility Dünweber is a Boris CEO.

SimilarWeb currently tracks 81% of BitMonsters website as originating from Ukraine.

Dünweber is believed to be a UK citizen. Or at the very least has spent a considerable amount of his life there.

Not surprisingly, Dünweber is also based out of Dubai:

Dubai is the MLM crime capital of the world.

BehindMLM’s guidelines for Dubai are:

  1. If someone lives in Dubai and approaches you about an MLM opportunity, they’re trying to scam you.
  2. 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 BitMonsters, read on for a full review. [Continue reading…]


Be Infinity Review: Christian Nickel’s securities fraud from Dubai

Be Infinity operates in the education and trading MLM niches.

Be Infinity operates as a Hong Kong shell company, headed up by founder Christian Nickel, who also goes by the alias “Chriz Nickel”.

Nickel, who also goes by “Chriz Nickel”, found moderate success in Eaconomy circa 2019:

Eaconomy collapsed in March 2020. After which Nickel launched a PR spam campaign:

In one of the spam articles Nickel reveals his MLM history;

Today he is a global sales director at his company and is associated with many other MLM companies like Wealth Generators, Imarketslive, Economy and Auvoria Prime.

Long story short, Nickel was a nobody in MLM till around 2017 – when he got involved in MLM forex scams.

  • Wealth Generators, rebooted as Kuvera and now iGenius, was fined by the CFTC for commodities fraud in 2018
  • iMarkets Live, rebooted as IM Mastery Academy, was also sued by the CFTC for commodities fraud in 2018 (see link above)
  • I believe “Economy” refers to Eaconomy, a reboot of the collapsed Silverstar Live scam (also sued by the CFTC)
  • Auvoria Prime launched in 2020 as a reboot of Eaconomy, fronted by former OneCoin Ponzi promoter Sal Leto

You’ve probably noticed commodities fraud being a recurring theme in the MLM companies Nickel has promoted. We’ll get more into that in the conclusion of the review.

At some point during his promotion of MLM companies committing commodities fraud, Nickel relocated from Germany to Dubai.

Dubai is the MLM crime capital of the world.

BehindMLM’s guidelines for Dubai are:

  1. If someone lives in Dubai and approaches you about an MLM opportunity, they’re trying to scam you.
  2. If an MLM company is based out of or represents it has ties to Dubai, it’s a scam.

If you want to know exactly how this applies to Be Infinity, read on for a full review. [Continue reading…]


Fine Infinity Review: 10% a month Ponzi scheme

Fine Infinity fails to provide company ownership or executive information on its website.

Fine Infinity’s website domain (“fineinfinity.com”), was privately registered on May 23rd, 2022.

Although it’s not linked from their website, Fine Infinity has an official YouTube channel:

The one video uploaded to the channel has a title in Persian.

This suggest whoever is running Fine Infinity has ties to the Middle East.

As always, if an MLM company is not openly upfront about who is running or owns it, think long and hard about joining and/or handing over any money. [Continue reading…]



Greek Mythology Club Review: Passive Legends’ own Ponzi

Greek Mythology Club operates in the NFT MLM niche.

The company is headed up by co-founders Brendon Parker and Zak Anstis. Parker is a resident of Washington in the US. Anstis is believed to be a resident of the UK.

Both Parker and Anstis are your typical crypto bro grifters. Together they run the private FaceBook group Passive Legends.

This is your one stop shop for creating multiple passive income streams in the biggest financial industries in the world. All waiting for you to tap into and start earning today.

In other words, Passive Legends is a funnel for crypto scams – recruitment of which into through Passive Legends, primarily benefits Parker (right) and Anstis.

Brendon Parker goes by “Crypto Bren”.

On a corresponding YouTube channel Parker promotes MLM crypto Ponzi schemes:

Zak Anstis’ Ponzi scamming goes back years.

Anstis started his crypto bro journey in 2017 with bitcoin mining. In mid 2018 Anstis transitioned to MLM crypto Ponzi scamming.

MLM crypto Ponzis Anstis has promoted include iCenter, Arbistar, Pro Mine Technologies (PowerBot), Daisy AI and SwapIT.

Anstis (right) also runs ItsFX, a passive forex trading scheme. Traffic to ItsFX’s website is so low that SimilarWeb doesn’t track it.

I’m not sure if they met in Arbistar or 7K Metals, but Anstis and Parker appear to have been working together since 2020.

The last Ponzi the pair promoted was SwapIT. Here’s the SwapIT pitch on Passive Legends’ website:

SwapIT’s SWIT token is currently trading at 1.4 cents. And that brings us to Greek Mythology Club.

Read on for a full review of Greek Mythology Club’s MLM opportunity. [Continue reading…]


BINT scammers cry poor, plead with court for protection

Blessings In No Time owners LaShonda Moore and Marlon Moore have asked for protection against FTC depositions. [Continue reading…]


Now Lifestyle Review v2: Fitness dropped for marketing suite

BehindMLM first reviewed Now Lifestyle back in 2017. Back then it was a fitness orientated reboot of 7 Minute Workout.

Today Now Lifestyle’s offering looks very different:

Read on for an updated review of Now Lifestyle’s MLM opportunity. [Continue reading…]