Recovery Doctrine: chain-of-custody · verifiable on-chain trail · regulator-ready packets verification chain: Etherscan · SlowMist · CertiK
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Casefile A2BFX — The Professor’s Note

// FROM THE CASEFILE — A2BFX

Funds you sent to A2BFX (a2bfx.io) are still recorded on the public ledger; the question is no longer whether the money moved but where the off-ramp opened — and that is what the Professor reads.

On-chain reading — wallet flow for A2BFX:

  • Deposit transaction hashes from the claimant wallet to the A2BFX platform receiving address.
  • Forwarding wallets the platform consolidated through — typically two to four hops on the deposit chain (BTC / ETH / USDT-TRC20 / BSC / Polygon / Arbitrum / Optimism / Avalanche).
  • Bridge crossings between chains, where the operator moves value into a chain with deeper liquidity ahead of the off-ramp.
  • Mixer interactions — Tornado-Cash variants, Sinbad, and the smaller obfuscation services that operators rotate through under regulatory pressure.
  • Final off-ramp wallet — the centralised exchange deposit address that received the consolidated funds.

Off-ramp map — where the funds left the chain:

  • Endpoint counterparty in the A2BFX casefile is named — typically a major venue such as OKX or Bybit, sometimes Gate.io or KuCoin, occasionally Binance or Huobi when liquidity allows.
  • A2BFX’s off-ramp wallet is then matched against compliance feeds the Professor maintains a standing read on.
  • Leverage is applied to that named counterparty — the A2BFX packet is assembled to a standard the off-ramp’s compliance desk reads and acts on.
  • If the A2BFX off-ramp is non-cooperative, the casefile escalates to IC3, the relevant state AG, and (where dollar value warrants) a civil-discovery overlay for KYC.

Pathway to recovery — what happens after the trail is mapped:

  1. Casefile review on A2BFX — reading the submission against the no-go list.
  2. Trace mapping on A2BFX — pathway documented to chain-of-custody standard.
  3. Off-ramp naming on A2BFX — exchange endpoint identified.
  4. Packet filing on A2BFX — to the named off-ramp, IC3, state AG; civil discovery overlay as applicable.
  5. Documented follow-through on A2BFX.

What the Professor tracks across A2BFX casefiles:

  • Chains the Professor reads for A2BFX casefiles — BTC, ETH, Tron USDT, BNB Smart Chain, Avalanche, Polygon, Arbitrum, Optimism, plus the cross-chain bridges that link them.
  • Off-ramps named in A2BFX — major centralised venues with compliance desks that accept regulator-grade packets.
  • Filing pathways available on A2BFX — IC3 for US claimants, state AG offices, off-ramp compliance, and civil-discovery overlay for high-value loss.

Lines the Professor will not cross:

  • What the Professor will not do on A2BFX — ask for a seed phrase.
  • What the Professor will not do on A2BFX — request remote-access logins.
  • What the Professor will not do on A2BFX — demand cash up front.
  • What the Professor will not do on A2BFX — promise a guarantee.
  • What the Professor will not do on A2BFX — call you out of the blue.

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Send the wallet for trace — /submit-a-case/ — the Professor responds in writing.

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