Connecting the Dots

Behind the Scam: How Fraud Rings Steal Millions

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Modern scammers aren’t lone wolves — they’re global operations backed by shell companies, software, and social media ads.

Source: Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project

A new investigation by OCCRP reveals the architecture behind two major international scams — and the businesses powering them.

Why it matters

Fraud is no longer just a crime — it’s an industry.
Scammers rely on marketing pros, tech platforms, shell firms, and unregulated payment systems to siphon billions from victims around the world — and often go unpunished.

️ The Scam Blueprint

Fraud follows a 3-step pipeline — each powered by a network of legitimate-looking service providers:

1. Catching Victims

Scammers use slick digital marketing to lure victims:

  • Affiliate marketers create fake ads with phony celebrity endorsements.
  • Ad platforms like Meta, Google, and Taboola profit by running the ads.
  • Goal: Capture personal info from “leads” — then sell them to call centers.

Notable marketers involved:
MGA Team, Sierra Media, Oray Ads, CRYP

2. Running the Scam

Once leads are in, call centers act fast:

  • CRM software tracks every interaction and deposit.
  • VoIP tools spoof international numbers.
  • Admin firms hide the true operators.

Tech & Services Used:
Getlinked.io, PumaTS, AnyDesk
VoIP: Coperato, Squaretalk
Admin: Za Traiding, Maximateam, Clear IT

3. Getting the Money

Scammers guide victims through transferring funds:

  • Payment service providers use fake documents and shell firms to move funds.
  • Shell companies obscure the final destination of money.

Financial enablers named:
Revolut, Wise, Santander, BBVA
Payment networks: Bankio, Britain Local
Shell firms: Selterico SL, Greencode, Purplesun

The Takeaway

This isn’t petty crime — it’s infrastructure-enabled fraud.

“Billions are stolen through an industrialized pipeline of deception,” OCCRP reports.

Each piece — the ad, the call, the fake platform, the fake company — builds the illusion.
⚠️ And the same systems that enable startups and remote work also power global crime rings.

️ What’s next?

Governments are behind the curve.
Enforcement lags while scams scale up.
Without accountability for tech platforms and tighter oversight on shell firms, these scams won’t stop — they’ll grow smarter.

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