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cac-forensics ~ trace –case CAC-2026-048 –chain tron –rails prepaid

Case File // CAC-2026-048 // Operator: AssetImperial

The Second Theft: How AssetImperial Targeted a Man Who Had Already Been Scammed

A retiree in Phoenix had already lost money to a fake trading platform when AssetImperial called, claiming to be a recovery firm that could get it all back — for an upfront fee. He paid $31,900 chasing the first loss. We were brought in to unwind the second fraud, and to say plainly what a real recovery process never does.

VectorRecovery-scam / double fraud
InstrumentUpfront “recovery” fees + “release tax”
ChainUSDT (Tron) + prepaid cards
Reported loss$31,900 (second fraud)
Exposure window4 weeks
Recovered58% ($18,502)

The Entry Point

Victims of one scam are sold to the next. AssetImperial contacted him by name, referenced the platform that had already taken his money, and claimed a “blockchain recovery team” could return it once he covered processing costs.

Over four weeks he paid in stages — USDT on Tron and reloadable prepaid cards — for “legal fees,” a “liquidity bond,” and finally a “release tax.” Each payment unlocked only a demand for the next.

Where It Broke

No funds were ever being recovered. AssetImperial is the textbook recovery scam: it monetises hope by charging advance fees against money it never controlled. The structure is identical to the original fraud — a balance or a promise that exists only to justify the next payment.

The encouraging part, forensically, is that the second fraud was recent. The trails were days old, not months, when he reached us.

They knew exactly what I’d lost and exactly what to say. I wanted so badly for it to be real that I paid to get robbed twice.

The Trace

  1. Documented the advance-fee structure

    We catalogued each AssetImperial payment and the “reason” attached to it — clear evidence of an advance-fee recovery scam.

  2. Split the prepaid and crypto rails

    Prepaid-card loads and USDT-TRC20 transfers were traced separately, each with its own recovery route.

  3. Clawed back the card loads

    Several prepaid loads were recent enough to challenge through the issuers with a documented fraud pack.

  4. Froze the reachable USDT

    One consolidation wallet deposited to a compliant exchange; a documented trace restrained that balance.

  5. Closed the loop honestly

    We confirmed, in writing, that no legitimate recovery firm — including us — charges upfront crypto fees to release funds.

Outcome

58% recovered

$18,502 of the $31,900 second loss was recovered through prepaid-card challenges and the frozen USDT. We could not recover the original scam from this engagement, and we were clear about that boundary. The most important outcome was structural: he will never pay an upfront “recovery” fee again.

Red Flags in the Code

  • Anyone who contacts you promising to recover a previous loss — especially if they know its details.
  • Upfront fees, “bonds,” or a “release tax” demanded before any funds are returned.
  • Payment requested in crypto or reloadable prepaid cards.
  • Claims of a “government” or “blockchain” recovery team with special access.
  • A legitimate tracer is paid for the work — never with a deposit to “unlock” your money.

Recognise this pattern?

If your loss looks like this one, send us the transactions and the platform. We’ll tell you honestly whether the chain still holds a trail worth following.

Request a Forensic Review