Recovery Doctrine: chain-of-custody · verifiable on-chain trail · regulator-ready packets verification chain: Etherscan · SlowMist · CertiK
40 claims under active investigation 88 wallet routes mapped this month Open a Free Recovery Consultation →

Tag: ETFinance

  • From the Lectern: ETFinance

    // FROM THE CASEFILE — ETFINANCE

    The Professor opens the file on ETFinance the same way every casefile is opened — by treating the wallet history as text and the off-ramp endpoint as the citation a regulator can verify.

    Trace summary — funds that left etfinance.eu:

    • Claimant deposit hashes — provided in the case submission and verified against the public ledger for ETFinance.
    • Forwarding wallets on the deposit chain — each hop documented with the forwarding tx hash and the consolidating wallet.
    • Bridge events into chains where the operator can off-ramp at scale.
    • Mixer or privacy-service interactions, where present, listed with the contract address and the deposit/withdraw side.
    • Off-ramp endpoint — the centralised exchange deposit address holding the compliance lever.

    The Professor’s off-ramp note:

    • ETFinance off-ramps consistently to centralised exchanges — Coinbase, Kraken, and Gemini appear less often than the offshore venues; the casefile names the actual endpoint.
    • The ETFinance off-ramp address is matched to known compliance feeds — the Professor’s standing dataset plus chain-analytics references.
    • Compliance leverage is applied at the named counterparty for ETFinance — the packet meets the off-ramp’s published compliance standard.
    • When the ETFinance off-ramp does not respond, escalation runs through IC3 (for US claimants), state AG, and (above a dollar threshold) civil-discovery overlay.

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

    1. Casefile triage on ETFinance — the submission is read; a written assessment is delivered.
    2. Forensic trace on ETFinance — every hop in the deposit pathway is captured and hashed.
    3. Off-ramp identification — the ETFinance endpoint is named.
    4. Recovery filing on ETFinance — packet delivered to IC3, state AG, off-ramp compliance, and civil discovery as applicable.
    5. Continuing review of ETFinance — the Professor follows the casefile until next-step documentation exists.

    What we read in a ETFinance casefile:

    • Chains in scope for ETFinance — the chains that handle the volume of casefile activity in this segment (BTC, ETH, Tron, BSC, plus L2s).
    • Off-ramps in scope for ETFinance — named centralised exchanges with compliance leverage.
    • Filings supported on ETFinance — IC3, state AG, off-ramp desk, civil discovery as applicable.

    Lines we never cross — by published policy:

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

    Open a free consultation

    Book a reading of your wallet — file at /submit-a-case/.

    Open a Free Case Consultation   Submit Wallet for Trace