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

  • TradeCrowd — Annotated by the Professor

    // FROM THE CASEFILE — TRADECROWD

    The Professor opens the file on TradeCrowd 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 tradecrowd.com:

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

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

    How a TradeCrowd casefile becomes a regulator-ready filing:

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

    What we read in a TradeCrowd casefile:

    • Chains tracked on TradeCrowd — 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 TradeCrowd — named exchange counterparties with public compliance contacts.
    • Filings supported on TradeCrowd — 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:

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

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