Recovery Doctrine: chain-of-custody · verifiable on-chain trail · regulator-ready packets verification chain: Etherscan · SlowMist · CertiK
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Tag: CoinTrade

  • Reading the Chain: CoinTrade

    // FROM THE CASEFILE — COINTRADE

    When a deposit ledgered to CoinTrade at cointrade.cc stops responding, the trail does not stop with the silence — the on-chain record is the syllabus, and the Professor reads it carefully.

    On-chain reading — wallet flow for CoinTrade:

    • Deposit transaction hashes from the claimant wallet to the CoinTrade 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.

    The Professor’s off-ramp note:

    • On the CoinTrade casefile, the off-ramp endpoint resolves to a centralised exchange — Bitfinex, MEXC, or Crypto.com seen often in this segment, with the larger venues routed through under stress.
    • The off-ramp wallet for CoinTrade is run against chain-analytics datasets and the Professor’s own compliance feeds.
    • A regulator-ready packet is delivered to the named counterparty — the CoinTrade casefile is built to the off-ramp’s compliance standard.
    • Where the off-ramp will not engage, CoinTrade escalates to IC3, state AG, and civil-discovery overlay.

    Filing pathway — the next step after the off-ramp is identified:

    1. Triage on CoinTrade — submission read against a no-go checklist, written go/no-go returned to the claimant inside one business day.
    2. Trace on CoinTrade — deposit pathway mapped across chains, captured with chain-of-custody hashes.
    3. Identify on CoinTrade — off-ramp endpoint matched to a named exchange counterparty.
    4. File the CoinTrade packet — IC3, state AG (where loss meets state thresholds), off-ramp compliance desk, and civil-discovery overlay where dollar value supports it.
    5. Follow-through on CoinTrade — the Professor stays on the casefile until a documented next step exists.

    What the casefile records — chains and counterparties:

    • Chains the CoinTrade casefile may touch — Bitcoin and Ethereum at the deposit side, Tron USDT-TRC20 in stablecoin pathways, BNB Smart Chain and the L2s (Arbitrum, Optimism, Polygon, Base) where bridges link them.
    • Off-ramps relevant to CoinTrade — the major venues including OKX, Bybit, Binance and KuCoin, plus the regional venues operators rotate through under regulatory stress.
    • Filings the CoinTrade packet supports — IC3, the appropriate state attorney general, the off-ramp’s compliance desk, and a civil-discovery overlay where dollar value justifies it.

    Recovery scammers do these things; the Professor never does:

    • On the CoinTrade casefile — never request a seed phrase. Ever.
    • On the CoinTrade casefile — never request remote-access logins to a wallet or exchange.
    • On the CoinTrade casefile — never demand an upfront cash retainer to scope the matter.
    • On the CoinTrade casefile — never promise a guaranteed recovery. The trail does not promise one.
    • On the CoinTrade casefile — never call the claimant unsolicited. Written-only.

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

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