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

  • Professor’s Brief: CMG

    // FROM THE CASEFILE — CMG

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

    Trace summary — funds that left cmgau.com:

    • Claimant deposit hashes — provided in the case submission and verified against the public ledger for CMG.
    • 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.

    Off-ramp reading — exchange counterparty for CMG:

    • CMG off-ramps consistently to centralised exchanges — Coinbase, Kraken, and Gemini appear less often than the offshore venues; the casefile names the actual endpoint.
    • The CMG 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 CMG — the packet meets the off-ramp’s published compliance standard.
    • When the CMG off-ramp does not respond, escalation runs through IC3 (for US claimants), state AG, and (above a dollar threshold) civil-discovery overlay.

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

    1. First read on CMG — incoming submission is reviewed against the no-go list and a written go/no-go is returned in writing.
    2. Wallet trace on CMG — deposit-to-off-ramp pathway is mapped across chains with verifiable hashes.
    3. Counterparty identification — the off-ramp endpoint for CMG is named to a centralised exchange wallet.
    4. Packet filing on CMG — IC3, state AG, off-ramp compliance desk; civil discovery if dollar value justifies it.
    5. Casefile follow-through — the Professor stays with CMG until a documented outcome or escalation step is on file.

    What the on-chain reading covers:

    • Chains the CMG 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 CMG — the major venues including OKX, Bybit, Binance and KuCoin, plus the regional venues operators rotate through under regulatory stress.
    • Filings the CMG packet supports — IC3, the appropriate state attorney general, the off-ramp’s compliance desk, and a civil-discovery overlay where dollar value justifies it.

    Lines we never cross — by published policy:

    • Hard line on CMG — no seed-phrase requests, period.
    • Hard line on CMG — no remote logins requested.
    • Hard line on CMG — no upfront cash retainer.
    • Hard line on CMG — no guarantee language.
    • Hard line on CMG — no unsolicited phone outreach.

    Open a free consultation

    Bring the casefile to office hours — open a free consultation at /contact-us/.

    Open a Free Case Consultation   Submit Wallet for Trace

  • Casefile JLLA GROUP — The Professor’s Note

    // FROM THE CASEFILE — JLLA GROUP

    JLLA GROUP is a casefile under reading. The deposits to jllagroup.com sit on-chain, immutable; the wallet pathway is the primary source, and the off-ramp endpoint is the conclusion the Professor’s marginalia points toward.

    Reading the wallets — JLLA GROUP casefile:

    • Claimant deposit hashes — provided in the case submission and verified against the public ledger for JLLA GROUP.
    • 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.

    From the lectern — off-ramp identification:

    • JLLA GROUP casefiles end at a centralised exchange — Bybit, KuCoin, OKX, or Gate.io are common; the casefile names the actual deposit address that received the consolidated funds.
    • Off-ramp wallet for JLLA GROUP is matched against compliance and chain-analytics datasets the Professor reads daily.
    • Compliance leverage applied to the named off-ramp for JLLA GROUP — the packet is delivered in compliance-desk format.
    • Non-cooperative off-ramps trigger IC3 + state-AG + civil-discovery escalation on the JLLA GROUP casefile.

    How a JLLA GROUP casefile becomes a regulator-ready filing:

    1. Triage on JLLA GROUP — submission read against a no-go checklist, written go/no-go returned to the claimant inside one business day.
    2. Trace on JLLA GROUP — deposit pathway mapped across chains, captured with chain-of-custody hashes.
    3. Identify on JLLA GROUP — off-ramp endpoint matched to a named exchange counterparty.
    4. File the JLLA GROUP 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 JLLA GROUP — the Professor stays on the casefile until a documented next step exists.

    What we read in a JLLA GROUP casefile:

    • Deposit-side chains in JLLA GROUP casefiles — typically the major chains (BTC, ETH) and the high-throughput stablecoin chains (Tron USDT, BSC USDT) — with bridge crossings noted.
    • Off-ramps named in JLLA GROUP packets — centralised exchanges that accept regulator-grade compliance filings.
    • Filing options on JLLA GROUP — IC3 (US), state AG, off-ramp compliance desk, civil-discovery KYC where the dollar value warrants it.

    What is never asked of a claimant:

    • Hard line on JLLA GROUP — no seed-phrase requests, period.
    • Hard line on JLLA GROUP — no remote logins requested.
    • Hard line on JLLA GROUP — no upfront cash retainer.
    • Hard line on JLLA GROUP — no guarantee language.
    • Hard line on JLLA GROUP — no unsolicited phone outreach.

    Open a free consultation

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

    Open a Free Case Consultation   Submit Wallet for Trace

  • Reading the Chain: Coinvestor AI

    // FROM THE CASEFILE — COINVESTOR AI

    Funds you sent to Coinvestor AI (coinvestor-ai.com) 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.

    Reading the wallets — Coinvestor AI casefile:

    • Claimant-to-platform deposit transactions on the deposit chain used by Coinvestor AI.
    • Operator-controlled forwarding wallets where deposits consolidate ahead of laundering or off-ramping.
    • Cross-chain bridge events to chains with deeper exchange liquidity.
    • Privacy-service interactions, where present in the trail.
    • Off-ramp wallet — the named centralised-exchange endpoint.

    The annotation continues — off-ramp endpoint:

    • On the Coinvestor AI 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 Coinvestor AI is run against chain-analytics datasets and the Professor’s own compliance feeds.
    • A regulator-ready packet is delivered to the named counterparty — the Coinvestor AI casefile is built to the off-ramp’s compliance standard.
    • Where the off-ramp will not engage, Coinvestor AI escalates to IC3, state AG, and civil-discovery overlay.

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

    1. Read the Coinvestor AI submission — written go/no-go returned.
    2. Map the Coinvestor AI wallet trail — every hop captured with chain-of-custody hashes.
    3. Name the Coinvestor AI off-ramp — endpoint counterparty identified.
    4. Build and file the Coinvestor AI recovery packet — to IC3, state AG, off-ramp compliance, civil-discovery overlay.
    5. Stay on the Coinvestor AI file — until written next steps exist.

    What the casefile records — chains and counterparties:

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

    Lines the Professor will not cross:

    • Coinvestor AI policy — seed phrases are never requested.
    • Coinvestor AI policy — remote-access logins are never requested.
    • Coinvestor AI policy — no upfront cash retainer to scope.
    • Coinvestor AI policy — no guaranteed-recovery language. None.
    • Coinvestor AI policy — no unsolicited calls. The Professor responds in writing only.

    Open a free consultation

    Open a free first consultation — /contact-us/ — written response within one business day.

    Open a Free Case Consultation   Submit Wallet for Trace

  • Forex Crypto Payout — Annotated by the Professor

    // FROM THE CASEFILE — FOREX CRYPTO PAYOUT

    Funds you sent to Forex Crypto Payout (forexcryptopayout.com) 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.

    Wallet trace — what the Professor maps:

    • Initial deposit hashes to the Forex Crypto Payout receiving address at forexcryptopayout.com.
    • Hop-by-hop forwarding wallets across the deposit chain, captured with chain-of-custody hashes.
    • Cross-chain bridge events that move value into the chain where liquidity supports the eventual off-ramp.
    • Obfuscation events through mixer contracts and privacy services.
    • Centralised-exchange off-ramp wallets — the named counterparty that holds compliance leverage.

    The annotation continues — off-ramp endpoint:

    • Forex Crypto Payout’s off-ramp endpoint, in this casefile, is the centralised exchange that holds compliance leverage — typically named in the packet alongside the deposit address.
    • Chain-analytics datasets cross-reference the Forex Crypto Payout off-ramp wallet against historical laundering throughput.
    • The Forex Crypto Payout packet is delivered to the off-ramp compliance desk in a format the desk’s reviewers act on.
    • Escalation pathways for Forex Crypto Payout, where needed: IC3, the relevant state AG, and a civil-discovery overlay for KYC on the off-ramp wallet.

    How a Forex Crypto Payout casefile becomes a regulator-ready filing:

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

    Chains and off-ramps the Professor follows:

    • Deposit-side chains in Forex Crypto Payout casefiles — typically the major chains (BTC, ETH) and the high-throughput stablecoin chains (Tron USDT, BSC USDT) — with bridge crossings noted.
    • Off-ramps named in Forex Crypto Payout packets — centralised exchanges that accept regulator-grade compliance filings.
    • Filing options on Forex Crypto Payout — IC3 (US), state AG, off-ramp compliance desk, civil-discovery KYC where the dollar value warrants it.

    What the Professor will never do — by policy:

    • Forex Crypto Payout policy — seed phrases are never requested.
    • Forex Crypto Payout policy — remote-access logins are never requested.
    • Forex Crypto Payout policy — no upfront cash retainer to scope.
    • Forex Crypto Payout policy — no guaranteed-recovery language. None.
    • Forex Crypto Payout policy — no unsolicited calls. The Professor responds in writing only.

    Open a free consultation

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

    Open a Free Case Consultation   Submit Wallet for Trace

  • Professor’s Brief: SwitchFunds.pro

    // FROM THE CASEFILE — SWITCHFUNDS.PRO

    SwitchFunds.pro is a casefile under reading. The deposits to nerinemininghub.site sit on-chain, immutable; the wallet pathway is the primary source, and the off-ramp endpoint is the conclusion the Professor’s marginalia points toward.

    Trace summary — funds that left nerinemininghub.site:

    • Deposit transaction hashes from the claimant wallet to the SwitchFunds.pro 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 reading — exchange counterparty for SwitchFunds.pro:

    • SwitchFunds.pro off-ramps consistently to centralised exchanges — Coinbase, Kraken, and Gemini appear less often than the offshore venues; the casefile names the actual endpoint.
    • The SwitchFunds.pro 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 SwitchFunds.pro — the packet meets the off-ramp’s published compliance standard.
    • When the SwitchFunds.pro off-ramp does not respond, escalation runs through IC3 (for US claimants), state AG, and (above a dollar threshold) civil-discovery overlay.

    The Professor’s recovery note for SwitchFunds.pro:

    1. Triage on SwitchFunds.pro — submission read against a no-go checklist, written go/no-go returned to the claimant inside one business day.
    2. Trace on SwitchFunds.pro — deposit pathway mapped across chains, captured with chain-of-custody hashes.
    3. Identify on SwitchFunds.pro — off-ramp endpoint matched to a named exchange counterparty.
    4. File the SwitchFunds.pro 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 SwitchFunds.pro — the Professor stays on the casefile until a documented next step exists.

    What we read in a SwitchFunds.pro casefile:

    • Deposit + forwarding chains for SwitchFunds.pro — Bitcoin, Ethereum, Tron USDT-TRC20, plus the smart-contract chains (BSC, Polygon, Avalanche, Arbitrum, Optimism) that cross via bridges.
    • Off-ramps the SwitchFunds.pro casefile may resolve to — centralised exchanges that respond to compliance filings.
    • Filing pathways on SwitchFunds.pro — IC3, state AG, off-ramp compliance, and civil-discovery overlay.

    Lines we never cross — by published policy:

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

    Open a free consultation

    The Professor reads claims at no charge to begin — open a consultation at /contact-us/.

    Open a Free Case Consultation   Submit Wallet for Trace

  • Office Hours on GoldenSphereAgency

    // FROM THE CASEFILE — GOLDENSPHEREAGENCY

    GoldenSphereAgency is a casefile under reading. The deposits to goldensphereagency.com sit on-chain, immutable; the wallet pathway is the primary source, and the off-ramp endpoint is the conclusion the Professor’s marginalia points toward.

    On-chain reading — wallet flow for GoldenSphereAgency:

    • Claimant deposit hashes — provided in the case submission and verified against the public ledger for GoldenSphereAgency.
    • 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.

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

    • GoldenSphereAgency off-ramps consistently to centralised exchanges — Coinbase, Kraken, and Gemini appear less often than the offshore venues; the casefile names the actual endpoint.
    • The GoldenSphereAgency 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 GoldenSphereAgency — the packet meets the off-ramp’s published compliance standard.
    • When the GoldenSphereAgency off-ramp does not respond, escalation runs through IC3 (for US claimants), state AG, and (above a dollar threshold) civil-discovery overlay.

    The Professor’s recovery note for GoldenSphereAgency:

    1. Triage on GoldenSphereAgency — submission read against a no-go checklist, written go/no-go returned to the claimant inside one business day.
    2. Trace on GoldenSphereAgency — deposit pathway mapped across chains, captured with chain-of-custody hashes.
    3. Identify on GoldenSphereAgency — off-ramp endpoint matched to a named exchange counterparty.
    4. File the GoldenSphereAgency 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 GoldenSphereAgency — the Professor stays on the casefile until a documented next step exists.

    Chains and off-ramps the Professor follows:

    • Chains tracked on GoldenSphereAgency — Bitcoin and Ethereum at the deposit side; Tron USDT-TRC20 and BSC at the consolidation side; bridges crossed where the operator chases liquidity.
    • Off-ramps tracked on GoldenSphereAgency — named exchange counterparties with public compliance contacts.
    • Filings supported on GoldenSphereAgency — IC3, state AG, off-ramp compliance, civil discovery — selected by the dollar value and the off-ramp’s responsiveness.

    Recovery scammers do these things; the Professor never does:

    • Hard line on GoldenSphereAgency — no seed-phrase requests, period.
    • Hard line on GoldenSphereAgency — no remote logins requested.
    • Hard line on GoldenSphereAgency — no upfront cash retainer.
    • Hard line on GoldenSphereAgency — no guarantee language.
    • Hard line on GoldenSphereAgency — no unsolicited phone outreach.

    Open a free consultation

    Open a free first consultation — /contact-us/ — written response within one business day.

    Open a Free Case Consultation   Submit Wallet for Trace

  • Reading the Chain: BTCoinGroup

    // FROM THE CASEFILE — BTCOINGROUP

    BTCoinGroup is a casefile under reading. The deposits to btcoingroup.com sit on-chain, immutable; the wallet pathway is the primary source, and the off-ramp endpoint is the conclusion the Professor’s marginalia points toward.

    From the marginalia — the deposit pathway:

    • Claimant-to-platform deposit transactions on the deposit chain used by BTCoinGroup.
    • Operator-controlled forwarding wallets where deposits consolidate ahead of laundering or off-ramping.
    • Cross-chain bridge events to chains with deeper exchange liquidity.
    • Privacy-service interactions, where present in the trail.
    • Off-ramp wallet — the named centralised-exchange endpoint.

    The Professor’s off-ramp note:

    • BTCoinGroup casefiles end at a centralised exchange — Bybit, KuCoin, OKX, or Gate.io are common; the casefile names the actual deposit address that received the consolidated funds.
    • Off-ramp wallet for BTCoinGroup is matched against compliance and chain-analytics datasets the Professor reads daily.
    • Compliance leverage applied to the named off-ramp for BTCoinGroup — the packet is delivered in compliance-desk format.
    • Non-cooperative off-ramps trigger IC3 + state-AG + civil-discovery escalation on the BTCoinGroup casefile.

    Recovery pathway — how this casefile moves toward filing:

    1. Submission triage — BTCoinGroup casefile reviewed against the no-go list, written reply within one business day.
    2. Pathway trace — BTCoinGroup deposit and forwarding wallets captured.
    3. Endpoint identification — BTCoinGroup off-ramp wallet named.
    4. Filing — BTCoinGroup packet delivered to IC3, state AG, off-ramp compliance, civil discovery as needed.
    5. Ongoing follow — BTCoinGroup stays on file until a documented next step is reached.

    What the casefile records — chains and counterparties:

    • Chains the BTCoinGroup 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 BTCoinGroup — the major venues including OKX, Bybit, Binance and KuCoin, plus the regional venues operators rotate through under regulatory stress.
    • Filings the BTCoinGroup packet supports — IC3, the appropriate state attorney general, the off-ramp’s compliance desk, and a civil-discovery overlay where dollar value justifies it.

    Lines the Professor will not cross:

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

    Open a free consultation

    The Professor reads claims at no charge to begin — open a consultation at /contact-us/.

    Open a Free Case Consultation   Submit Wallet for Trace

  • Reading the Chain: BLOCKWAVE EXCHANGE

    // FROM THE CASEFILE — BLOCKWAVE EXCHANGE

    Funds you sent to BLOCKWAVE EXCHANGE (blockwave-exchange.com) 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 BLOCKWAVE EXCHANGE:

    • Deposit-side hashes from claimant wallets into BLOCKWAVE EXCHANGE’s receiving addresses.
    • Operator forwarding wallets — deposit consolidation documented to chain-of-custody standards.
    • Inter-chain bridge transactions when value moves toward off-ramp liquidity.
    • Mixer/obfuscation events the operator routed through, where present.
    • Final off-ramp endpoint and named counterparty exchange.

    The annotation continues — off-ramp endpoint:

    • Endpoint counterparty in the BLOCKWAVE EXCHANGE casefile is named — typically a major venue such as OKX or Bybit, sometimes Gate.io or KuCoin, occasionally Binance or Huobi when liquidity allows.
    • BLOCKWAVE EXCHANGE’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 BLOCKWAVE EXCHANGE packet is assembled to a standard the off-ramp’s compliance desk reads and acts on.
    • If the BLOCKWAVE EXCHANGE 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.

    Recovery pathway — how this casefile moves toward filing:

    1. First read on BLOCKWAVE EXCHANGE — incoming submission is reviewed against the no-go list and a written go/no-go is returned in writing.
    2. Wallet trace on BLOCKWAVE EXCHANGE — deposit-to-off-ramp pathway is mapped across chains with verifiable hashes.
    3. Counterparty identification — the off-ramp endpoint for BLOCKWAVE EXCHANGE is named to a centralised exchange wallet.
    4. Packet filing on BLOCKWAVE EXCHANGE — IC3, state AG, off-ramp compliance desk; civil discovery if dollar value justifies it.
    5. Casefile follow-through — the Professor stays with BLOCKWAVE EXCHANGE until a documented outcome or escalation step is on file.

    What the on-chain reading covers:

    • Deposit + forwarding chains for BLOCKWAVE EXCHANGE — Bitcoin, Ethereum, Tron USDT-TRC20, plus the smart-contract chains (BSC, Polygon, Avalanche, Arbitrum, Optimism) that cross via bridges.
    • Off-ramps the BLOCKWAVE EXCHANGE casefile may resolve to — centralised exchanges that respond to compliance filings.
    • Filing pathways on BLOCKWAVE EXCHANGE — IC3, state AG, off-ramp compliance, and civil-discovery overlay.

    What the Professor will never do — by policy:

    • Recovery scammers do these things on BLOCKWAVE EXCHANGE; the Professor never does — request seed phrases.
    • Recovery scammers do these things on BLOCKWAVE EXCHANGE; the Professor never does — request remote logins.
    • Recovery scammers do these things on BLOCKWAVE EXCHANGE; the Professor never does — demand upfront cash.
    • Recovery scammers do these things on BLOCKWAVE EXCHANGE; the Professor never does — guarantee a recovery.
    • Recovery scammers do these things on BLOCKWAVE EXCHANGE; the Professor never does — call you unsolicited.

    Open a free consultation

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

    Open a Free Case Consultation   Submit Wallet for Trace

  • Office Hours on Stellar Fx

    // FROM THE CASEFILE — STELLAR FX

    When deposits to Stellar Fx via stellarfx.io go quiet, the on-chain record stays loud. The Professor’s reading begins where the platform’s silence does — with the wallet that received the funds and the path it took afterward.

    The annotation reads — wallet trace:

    • Deposit transaction hashes from the claimant wallet to the Stellar Fx 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.

    From the lectern — off-ramp identification:

    • Stellar Fx off-ramps consistently to centralised exchanges — Coinbase, Kraken, and Gemini appear less often than the offshore venues; the casefile names the actual endpoint.
    • The Stellar Fx 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 Stellar Fx — the packet meets the off-ramp’s published compliance standard.
    • When the Stellar Fx off-ramp does not respond, escalation runs through IC3 (for US claimants), state AG, and (above a dollar threshold) civil-discovery overlay.

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

    1. Read the Stellar Fx submission — written go/no-go returned.
    2. Map the Stellar Fx wallet trail — every hop captured with chain-of-custody hashes.
    3. Name the Stellar Fx off-ramp — endpoint counterparty identified.
    4. Build and file the Stellar Fx recovery packet — to IC3, state AG, off-ramp compliance, civil-discovery overlay.
    5. Stay on the Stellar Fx file — until written next steps exist.

    What the on-chain reading covers:

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

    Lines the Professor will not cross:

    • Recovery scammers do these things on Stellar Fx; the Professor never does — request seed phrases.
    • Recovery scammers do these things on Stellar Fx; the Professor never does — request remote logins.
    • Recovery scammers do these things on Stellar Fx; the Professor never does — demand upfront cash.
    • Recovery scammers do these things on Stellar Fx; the Professor never does — guarantee a recovery.
    • Recovery scammers do these things on Stellar Fx; the Professor never does — call you unsolicited.

    Open a free consultation

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

    Open a Free Case Consultation   Submit Wallet for Trace

  • JNY Markets — Annotated by the Professor

    // FROM THE CASEFILE — JNY MARKETS

    Funds you sent to JNY Markets (jnymarkets.com) 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.

    Trace summary — funds that left jnymarkets.com:

    • Initial deposit hashes to the JNY Markets receiving address at jnymarkets.com.
    • Hop-by-hop forwarding wallets across the deposit chain, captured with chain-of-custody hashes.
    • Cross-chain bridge events that move value into the chain where liquidity supports the eventual off-ramp.
    • Obfuscation events through mixer contracts and privacy services.
    • Centralised-exchange off-ramp wallets — the named counterparty that holds compliance leverage.

    Off-ramp reading — exchange counterparty for JNY Markets:

    • Endpoint counterparty in the JNY Markets casefile is named — typically a major venue such as OKX or Bybit, sometimes Gate.io or KuCoin, occasionally Binance or Huobi when liquidity allows.
    • JNY Markets’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 JNY Markets packet is assembled to a standard the off-ramp’s compliance desk reads and acts on.
    • If the JNY Markets 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.

    The Professor’s recovery note for JNY Markets:

    1. Triage on JNY Markets — submission read against a no-go checklist, written go/no-go returned to the claimant inside one business day.
    2. Trace on JNY Markets — deposit pathway mapped across chains, captured with chain-of-custody hashes.
    3. Identify on JNY Markets — off-ramp endpoint matched to a named exchange counterparty.
    4. File the JNY Markets 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 JNY Markets — the Professor stays on the casefile until a documented next step exists.

    What the Professor tracks across JNY Markets casefiles:

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

    Lines the Professor will not cross:

    • Boundary on JNY Markets — seed phrases are off-limits.
    • Boundary on JNY Markets — remote logins are off-limits.
    • Boundary on JNY Markets — upfront cash retainers are off-limits.
    • Boundary on JNY Markets — guaranteed-recovery promises are off-limits.
    • Boundary on JNY Markets — unsolicited outbound contact is off-limits.

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