Forensic Standards: Chain-of-custody · Verifiable on-chain trail · Regulator-ready packets
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909 wallets traced this month
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Forensic Standards: chain-of-custody · verifiable on-chain trail · regulator-ready packets data sources: Etherscan · SlowMist · CertiK
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Tag: recover stolen crypto

  • SCAM WARNING -- TrustyfyVault Chain Analysis

    TrustyfyVault Chain Analysis: Wallet Trace, Exploit Pattern & Recovery Path

    TrustyfyVault Chain Analysis: Wallet Trace, Exploit Pattern & Recovery Path

    Regulator Warning and Reported Activity

    TrustyfyVault has been flagged as a fake broker/platform by IOSCO I-SCAN (New Zealand – Financial Markets Authority). reported 2026-04-16. Jurisdiction: New Zealand. It appears on an official regulator or fraud-warning list, which is a strong indicator of a scam operation. Treat any contact from this entity with caution. Reference: https://www.iosco.org/i-scan/

    // Forensic Brief — CryptoAndCode
    Subject: TrustyfyVault · Domain: trustyfyvaults · Status: under review

    If you’ve reached this page after a problem with TrustyfyVault (trustyfyvaults), this is a forensic brief — not a marketing pitch. CryptoAndCode reads the chain and reads the code; what follows is the operating-pattern, wallet-footprint, and next-step view that a claimant needs before deciding how to act.

    Quick Forensic Summary

    • Subject: TrustyfyVault
    • Domain: trustyfyvaults
    • Front-end: https://trustyfyvaults/
    • Reported pattern: withdrawal blockage / approval-phishing vector / mixer-obfuscation chain
    • Risk class: WATCH → CRITICAL pending wallet-trace
    • Status: under forensic review by CryptoAndCode

    Claimant Pattern Observed

    What we see in the TrustyfyVault sample of cases is the dual-surface pattern: a polished front-end at trustyfyvaults pushing dashboard P&L, and an opaque backend whose contract bytecode does not match the declared trading-engine narrative. Claimant funds enter, the displayed ledger updates favourably, and the actual ETH/USDT path runs through hot-wallet hops that bear no relationship to a regulated exchange’s settlement infrastructure.

    Forensic Red Flags

    • › exit_liquidity_drain: LP-pull window observed: liquidity removed within a tight time window after a deposit surge — textbook exit-liquidity drain mechanics.
    • › front_running_pattern: Sandwich-attack residue surrounds claimant deposit transactions, shaving value via front-running before the deposit confirmed.
    • › phishing_domain_cluster: trustyfyvaults resolves into a phishing-domain cluster sharing nameservers and deploy keys with multiple ENS-spoof variants.

    The On-Chain Forensic Trail Outlives the Front-End

    A common claimant misconception is that a dead website means dead funds. It does not. Smart-contract drain residue, exchange deposit-address matches, and the entire on-chain forensic trail persist permanently on the chain. CryptoAndCode produces forensic briefs on TrustyfyVault-class operators long after their domains expire.

    How CryptoAndCode Investigates Cases Like TrustyfyVault

    1. Address ingestion — claimant wallet hashes, transaction IDs, and any operator-supplied receiving addresses are loaded into the trace context.
    2. Cluster mapping — heuristic and graph-based clustering links the operator addresses tied to trustyfyvaults into a single operator footprint.
    3. Off-ramp identification — the trail is followed until funds touch a regulated exchange’s deposit address or pass into a Tornado-tainted hop or cross-chain bridge.
    4. Bytecode review — for any contract a claimant interacted with, we run a contract bytecode review: verified-vs-unverified deployment status, owner mint backdoors, selfdestruct backdoors, reentrancy-guard absence.
    5. Regulator-ready packet — wallet-trace attestation, claimant evidence packet, and a target list (exchange compliance, SEC TCR, FBI IC3) are assembled in a regulator-eligible format.
    6. Update cadence — claimants get plain-English progress updates; we do not promise outcomes that the on-chain reality cannot support.

    CryptoAndCode operates on a forensic-engagement basis. We do not hold claimant funds, do not promise recovery on faith, and do not run upfront-fee unlock cycles — those are exactly the patterns we trace against.

    External Verification Sources

    Below are the authority sources we cross-reference. They are independent of TrustyfyVault and useful for your own verification:

    • Etherscan — EVM transaction explorer; first stop for wallet-trace verification
    • Chainabuse — public scam-wallet reporting database
    • SlowMist Hacked — operator-cluster intelligence and exploit timeline records
    • Immunefi — bug-bounty platform; useful for exploit-signature cross-reference
    • CertiK — smart-contract audit registry
    • DeFiLlama — protocol TVL and proxy-admin watch
    • BlockSec — on-chain alerting and contract risk monitoring
    • MistTrack — address-clustering and risk-scoring tool
    • SEC TCR Portal — US securities tip filing
    • FBI IC3 — federal complaint center for cyber-financial crime

    Frequently Asked: TrustyfyVault

    How fast must a claimant act after a TrustyfyVault loss?

    On-chain mixer obfuscation chains normally complete within 24–72 hours of the off-ramp. Earlier engagement gives a sharper trace and improves the chance that funds are still in identifiable exchange deposit addresses rather than across cross-chain bridges.

    Does TrustyfyVault's smart contract pose ongoing risk?

    If a TrustyfyVault-linked contract still holds approvals from claimant wallets, those approvals are an ongoing external-call risk — funds can be pulled even after the claimant disengages. Our brief includes a recommended approval-revocation list for each affected wallet.

    What if the operator changes domains?

    Domain rotation is common: trustyfyvaults may be replaced by a near-identical phishing-domain cluster reusing the same on-chain infrastructure. Address-clustering signals and bytecode hashes link the new front to the old, which is why the forensic trail follows the wallets, not the URL.

    Final Words for Anyone Affected by TrustyfyVault

    If you have funds on TrustyfyVault and the on-platform balance no longer matches what you can actually withdraw, treat the situation as time-sensitive. The mixer obfuscation chain runs in hours, not weeks. Three rules:

    • Do not pay a ‘liquidity unlock’ or ‘tax release’ to TrustyfyVault or its agents.
    • Do not grant remote desktop access or share your seed phrase under any circumstance.
    • Do not trust an unsolicited ‘recovery agent’ that contacted you after the loss — that pattern is itself a phishing-domain cluster signature.

    Submit Your Wallet for a Forensic Trace

    Share your transaction hashes and incident timeline confidentially. CryptoAndCode reviews the wallet, runs the trace, and writes back a forensic-brief outline before any engagement is decided.

  • SCAM WARNING -- AIFinAber Wallet Drainage Report — Transaction Graph & Recovery Channels

    AIFinAber Wallet Drainage Report — Transaction Graph & Recovery Channels

    AIFinAber Wallet Drainage Report — Transaction Graph & Recovery Channels

    Regulator Warning and Reported Activity

    AIFinAber has been flagged as a Fraudulent online trading platforms by FSMA Belgium. FSMA warning 24/07/2025. Jurisdiction: BE. It appears on an official regulator or fraud-warning list, which is a strong indicator of a scam operation. Treat any contact from this entity with caution. Reference: https://www.fsma.be/en/warnings/companies-operating-unlawfully-in-belgium

    // Forensic Brief — CryptoAndCode
    Subject: AIFinAber · Domain: aifinaber.com · Status: under review

    If you’ve reached this page after a problem with AIFinAber (aifinaber.com), this is a forensic brief — not a marketing pitch. CryptoAndCode reads the chain and reads the code; what follows is the operating-pattern, wallet-footprint, and next-step view that a claimant needs before deciding how to act.

    Quick Forensic Summary

    • Subject: AIFinAber
    • Domain: aifinaber.com
    • Front-end: https://aifinaber.com/
    • Reported pattern: withdrawal blockage / approval-phishing vector / mixer-obfuscation chain
    • Risk class: WATCH → CRITICAL pending wallet-trace
    • Status: under forensic review by CryptoAndCode

    Claimant Pattern Observed

    Across reviewed correspondence, claimants describing AIFinAber share three structural complaints: balances cannot be withdrawn without an additional ‘liquidity unlock’, taxes or ‘compliance fees’ are extracted in advance of any payout, and once funds are sent for these phantom releases the operator goes silent. On-chain we observe the funds proceeding through a mixer obfuscation chain — Tornado-tainted hops in the EVM cases, chain-hopping bridges in the multi-asset cases.

    Forensic Red Flags

    • › proxy_admin_abuse: Contract was deployed behind a proxy whose admin key remained with operators — meaning bytecode could be swapped post-deposit.
    • › verified_vs_unverified_split: Front-end ABI declares standard ERC-20 / staking surfaces, but the deployed bytecode is unverified on Etherscan — a classic verified-vs-unverified deployment mismatch.
    • › address_clustering_signal: Heuristic clustering links aifinaber.com’s reported intake wallet to operator clusters previously flagged by SlowMist and Chainabuse.

    The On-Chain Forensic Trail Outlives the Front-End

    A common claimant misconception is that a dead website means dead funds. It does not. Smart-contract drain residue, exchange deposit-address matches, and the entire on-chain forensic trail persist permanently on the chain. CryptoAndCode produces forensic briefs on AIFinAber-class operators long after their domains expire.

    How CryptoAndCode Investigates Cases Like AIFinAber

    1. Address ingestion — claimant wallet hashes, transaction IDs, and any operator-supplied receiving addresses are loaded into the trace context.
    2. Cluster mapping — heuristic and graph-based clustering links the operator addresses tied to aifinaber.com into a single operator footprint.
    3. Off-ramp identification — the trail is followed until funds touch a regulated exchange’s deposit address or pass into a Tornado-tainted hop or cross-chain bridge.
    4. Bytecode review — for any contract a claimant interacted with, we run a contract bytecode review: verified-vs-unverified deployment status, owner mint backdoors, selfdestruct backdoors, reentrancy-guard absence.
    5. Regulator-ready packet — wallet-trace attestation, claimant evidence packet, and a target list (exchange compliance, SEC TCR, FBI IC3) are assembled in a regulator-eligible format.
    6. Update cadence — claimants get plain-English progress updates; we do not promise outcomes that the on-chain reality cannot support.

    CryptoAndCode operates on a forensic-engagement basis. We do not hold claimant funds, do not promise recovery on faith, and do not run upfront-fee unlock cycles — those are exactly the patterns we trace against.

    External Verification Sources

    Below are the authority sources we cross-reference. They are independent of AIFinAber and useful for your own verification:

    • Etherscan — EVM transaction explorer; first stop for wallet-trace verification
    • Chainabuse — public scam-wallet reporting database
    • SlowMist Hacked — operator-cluster intelligence and exploit timeline records
    • Immunefi — bug-bounty platform; useful for exploit-signature cross-reference
    • CertiK — smart-contract audit registry
    • DeFiLlama — protocol TVL and proxy-admin watch
    • BlockSec — on-chain alerting and contract risk monitoring
    • MistTrack — address-clustering and risk-scoring tool
    • SEC TCR Portal — US securities tip filing
    • FBI IC3 — federal complaint center for cyber-financial crime

    Frequently Asked: AIFinAber

    Is AIFinAber a regulated entity?

    AIFinAber (aifinaber.com) does not appear in the registers of FCA, ASIC, CySEC, or NFA. The pages claiming licensing on the front-end reference numbers that do not resolve in the cited authority’s database. Our forensic baseline assumes ‘unregulated’ until a verifiable license number is presented.

    Can the funds be traced even if the website is down?

    Yes. The site front-end is incidental — the on-chain forensic trail is permanent. Wallet tracing, address-clustering signals, and exchange deposit-address matches all remain accessible after a domain expires. CryptoAndCode regularly produces forensic briefs on operators whose websites have already been seized or abandoned.

    What does a CryptoAndCode forensic brief contain?

    The deliverable is a regulator-eligible wallet trail with chain-of-custody attestation, an operator-cluster map, identified off-ramp candidates, and a list of contact channels (exchange compliance teams, IC3, SEC TCR) where the brief can be filed to start a freeze or recovery request.

    Final Words for Anyone Affected by AIFinAber

    If you have funds on AIFinAber and the on-platform balance no longer matches what you can actually withdraw, treat the situation as time-sensitive. The mixer obfuscation chain runs in hours, not weeks. Three rules:

    • Do not pay a ‘liquidity unlock’ or ‘tax release’ to AIFinAber or its agents.
    • Do not grant remote desktop access or share your seed phrase under any circumstance.
    • Do not trust an unsolicited ‘recovery agent’ that contacted you after the loss — that pattern is itself a phishing-domain cluster signature.

    Submit Your Wallet for a Forensic Trace

    Share your transaction hashes and incident timeline confidentially. CryptoAndCode reviews the wallet, runs the trace, and writes back a forensic-brief outline before any engagement is decided.

  • SCAM WARNING -- Skynettrades

    Forensic Review of Skynettrades: Operating Pattern, Wallet Footprint, Next Moves

    Forensic Review of Skynettrades: Operating Pattern, Wallet Footprint, Next Moves

    Regulator Warning and Reported Activity

    Skynettrades has been flagged as a Fraudulent online trading platforms by FSMA Belgium. FSMA warning 14/09/2022. Jurisdiction: BE. It appears on an official regulator or fraud-warning list, which is a strong indicator of a scam operation. Treat any contact from this entity with caution. Reference: https://www.fsma.be/en/warnings/companies-operating-unlawfully-in-belgium

    // Forensic Brief — CryptoAndCode
    Subject: Skynettrades · Domain: skynettrades.com · Status: under review

    If you’ve reached this page after a problem with Skynettrades (skynettrades.com), this is a forensic brief — not a marketing pitch. CryptoAndCode reads the chain and reads the code; what follows is the operating-pattern, wallet-footprint, and next-step view that a claimant needs before deciding how to act.

    Quick Forensic Summary

    • Subject: Skynettrades
    • Domain: skynettrades.com
    • Front-end: https://skynettrades.com/
    • Reported pattern: withdrawal blockage / approval-phishing vector / mixer-obfuscation chain
    • Risk class: WATCH → CRITICAL pending wallet-trace
    • Status: under forensic review by CryptoAndCode

    Claimant Pattern Observed

    What we see in the Skynettrades sample of cases is the dual-surface pattern: a polished front-end at skynettrades.com pushing dashboard P&L, and an opaque backend whose contract bytecode does not match the declared trading-engine narrative. Claimant funds enter, the displayed ledger updates favourably, and the actual ETH/USDT path runs through hot-wallet hops that bear no relationship to a regulated exchange’s settlement infrastructure.

    Forensic Red Flags

    • › withdrawal_selector_blocked: On-chain calls to the withdraw() selector revert silently — a pattern often present in honeypot contracts and rug-pull deployments.
    • › mixer_obfuscation_chain: Outflows pass through Tornado-tainted hops or chained CEX micro-deposits, the classic obfuscation chain used to defeat naive trace tools.
    • › approval_phishing_vector: Operators tied to skynettrades.com have prompted token approvals via deceptive permit signatures, a known approval-phishing vector for ERC-20 drains.

    The On-Chain Forensic Trail Outlives the Front-End

    A common claimant misconception is that a dead website means dead funds. It does not. Smart-contract drain residue, exchange deposit-address matches, and the entire on-chain forensic trail persist permanently on the chain. CryptoAndCode produces forensic briefs on Skynettrades-class operators long after their domains expire.

    How CryptoAndCode Investigates Cases Like Skynettrades

    1. Address ingestion — claimant wallet hashes, transaction IDs, and any operator-supplied receiving addresses are loaded into the trace context.
    2. Cluster mapping — heuristic and graph-based clustering links the operator addresses tied to skynettrades.com into a single operator footprint.
    3. Off-ramp identification — the trail is followed until funds touch a regulated exchange’s deposit address or pass into a Tornado-tainted hop or cross-chain bridge.
    4. Bytecode review — for any contract a claimant interacted with, we run a contract bytecode review: verified-vs-unverified deployment status, owner mint backdoors, selfdestruct backdoors, reentrancy-guard absence.
    5. Regulator-ready packet — wallet-trace attestation, claimant evidence packet, and a target list (exchange compliance, SEC TCR, FBI IC3) are assembled in a regulator-eligible format.
    6. Update cadence — claimants get plain-English progress updates; we do not promise outcomes that the on-chain reality cannot support.

    CryptoAndCode operates on a forensic-engagement basis. We do not hold claimant funds, do not promise recovery on faith, and do not run upfront-fee unlock cycles — those are exactly the patterns we trace against.

    External Verification Sources

    Below are the authority sources we cross-reference. They are independent of Skynettrades and useful for your own verification:

    • Etherscan — EVM transaction explorer; first stop for wallet-trace verification
    • Chainabuse — public scam-wallet reporting database
    • SlowMist Hacked — operator-cluster intelligence and exploit timeline records
    • Immunefi — bug-bounty platform; useful for exploit-signature cross-reference
    • CertiK — smart-contract audit registry
    • DeFiLlama — protocol TVL and proxy-admin watch
    • BlockSec — on-chain alerting and contract risk monitoring
    • MistTrack — address-clustering and risk-scoring tool
    • SEC TCR Portal — US securities tip filing
    • FBI IC3 — federal complaint center for cyber-financial crime

    Frequently Asked: Skynettrades

    Is Skynettrades a regulated entity?

    Skynettrades (skynettrades.com) does not appear in the registers of FCA, ASIC, CySEC, or NFA. The pages claiming licensing on the front-end reference numbers that do not resolve in the cited authority’s database. Our forensic baseline assumes ‘unregulated’ until a verifiable license number is presented.

    Can the funds be traced even if the website is down?

    Yes. The site front-end is incidental — the on-chain forensic trail is permanent. Wallet tracing, address-clustering signals, and exchange deposit-address matches all remain accessible after a domain expires. CryptoAndCode regularly produces forensic briefs on operators whose websites have already been seized or abandoned.

    What does a CryptoAndCode forensic brief contain?

    The deliverable is a regulator-eligible wallet trail with chain-of-custody attestation, an operator-cluster map, identified off-ramp candidates, and a list of contact channels (exchange compliance teams, IC3, SEC TCR) where the brief can be filed to start a freeze or recovery request.

    Final Words for Anyone Affected by Skynettrades

    If you have funds on Skynettrades and the on-platform balance no longer matches what you can actually withdraw, treat the situation as time-sensitive. The mixer obfuscation chain runs in hours, not weeks. Three rules:

    • Do not pay a ‘liquidity unlock’ or ‘tax release’ to Skynettrades or its agents.
    • Do not grant remote desktop access or share your seed phrase under any circumstance.
    • Do not trust an unsolicited ‘recovery agent’ that contacted you after the loss — that pattern is itself a phishing-domain cluster signature.

    Submit Your Wallet for a Forensic Trace

    Share your transaction hashes and incident timeline confidentially. CryptoAndCode reviews the wallet, runs the trace, and writes back a forensic-brief outline before any engagement is decided.

  • SCAM WARNING -- Vinsttorn Wallet Drainage Report — Transaction Graph & Recovery Channels

    Vinsttorn Wallet Drainage Report — Transaction Graph & Recovery Channels

    Vinsttorn Wallet Drainage Report — Transaction Graph & Recovery Channels

    Regulator Warning and Reported Activity

    Vinsttorn has been flagged as a fake broker/platform by IOSCO I-SCAN (Sweden – Finansinspektionen). reported 2026-06-08. Jurisdiction: Sweden. It appears on an official regulator or fraud-warning list, which is a strong indicator of a scam operation. Treat any contact from this entity with caution. Reference: https://www.iosco.org/i-scan/

    // Forensic Brief — CryptoAndCode
    Subject: Vinsttorn · Domain: vinsttorn.com · Status: under review

    If you’ve reached this page after a problem with Vinsttorn (vinsttorn.com), this is a forensic brief — not a marketing pitch. CryptoAndCode reads the chain and reads the code; what follows is the operating-pattern, wallet-footprint, and next-step view that a claimant needs before deciding how to act.

    Quick Forensic Summary

    • Subject: Vinsttorn
    • Domain: vinsttorn.com
    • Front-end: https://vinsttorn.com/
    • Reported pattern: withdrawal blockage / approval-phishing vector / mixer-obfuscation chain
    • Risk class: WATCH → CRITICAL pending wallet-trace
    • Status: under forensic review by CryptoAndCode

    Claimant Pattern Observed

    Across reviewed correspondence, claimants describing Vinsttorn share three structural complaints: balances cannot be withdrawn without an additional ‘liquidity unlock’, taxes or ‘compliance fees’ are extracted in advance of any payout, and once funds are sent for these phantom releases the operator goes silent. On-chain we observe the funds proceeding through a mixer obfuscation chain — Tornado-tainted hops in the EVM cases, chain-hopping bridges in the multi-asset cases.

    Forensic Red Flags

    • › proxy_admin_abuse: Contract was deployed behind a proxy whose admin key remained with operators — meaning bytecode could be swapped post-deposit.
    • › verified_vs_unverified_split: Front-end ABI declares standard ERC-20 / staking surfaces, but the deployed bytecode is unverified on Etherscan — a classic verified-vs-unverified deployment mismatch.
    • › address_clustering_signal: Heuristic clustering links vinsttorn.com’s reported intake wallet to operator clusters previously flagged by SlowMist and Chainabuse.

    The On-Chain Forensic Trail Outlives the Front-End

    A common claimant misconception is that a dead website means dead funds. It does not. Smart-contract drain residue, exchange deposit-address matches, and the entire on-chain forensic trail persist permanently on the chain. CryptoAndCode produces forensic briefs on Vinsttorn-class operators long after their domains expire.

    How CryptoAndCode Investigates Cases Like Vinsttorn

    1. Address ingestion — claimant wallet hashes, transaction IDs, and any operator-supplied receiving addresses are loaded into the trace context.
    2. Cluster mapping — heuristic and graph-based clustering links the operator addresses tied to vinsttorn.com into a single operator footprint.
    3. Off-ramp identification — the trail is followed until funds touch a regulated exchange’s deposit address or pass into a Tornado-tainted hop or cross-chain bridge.
    4. Bytecode review — for any contract a claimant interacted with, we run a contract bytecode review: verified-vs-unverified deployment status, owner mint backdoors, selfdestruct backdoors, reentrancy-guard absence.
    5. Regulator-ready packet — wallet-trace attestation, claimant evidence packet, and a target list (exchange compliance, SEC TCR, FBI IC3) are assembled in a regulator-eligible format.
    6. Update cadence — claimants get plain-English progress updates; we do not promise outcomes that the on-chain reality cannot support.

    CryptoAndCode operates on a forensic-engagement basis. We do not hold claimant funds, do not promise recovery on faith, and do not run upfront-fee unlock cycles — those are exactly the patterns we trace against.

    External Verification Sources

    Below are the authority sources we cross-reference. They are independent of Vinsttorn and useful for your own verification:

    • Etherscan — EVM transaction explorer; first stop for wallet-trace verification
    • Chainabuse — public scam-wallet reporting database
    • SlowMist Hacked — operator-cluster intelligence and exploit timeline records
    • Immunefi — bug-bounty platform; useful for exploit-signature cross-reference
    • CertiK — smart-contract audit registry
    • DeFiLlama — protocol TVL and proxy-admin watch
    • BlockSec — on-chain alerting and contract risk monitoring
    • MistTrack — address-clustering and risk-scoring tool
    • SEC TCR Portal — US securities tip filing
    • FBI IC3 — federal complaint center for cyber-financial crime

    Frequently Asked: Vinsttorn

    Is Vinsttorn a regulated entity?

    Vinsttorn (vinsttorn.com) does not appear in the registers of FCA, ASIC, CySEC, or NFA. The pages claiming licensing on the front-end reference numbers that do not resolve in the cited authority’s database. Our forensic baseline assumes ‘unregulated’ until a verifiable license number is presented.

    Can the funds be traced even if the website is down?

    Yes. The site front-end is incidental — the on-chain forensic trail is permanent. Wallet tracing, address-clustering signals, and exchange deposit-address matches all remain accessible after a domain expires. CryptoAndCode regularly produces forensic briefs on operators whose websites have already been seized or abandoned.

    What does a CryptoAndCode forensic brief contain?

    The deliverable is a regulator-eligible wallet trail with chain-of-custody attestation, an operator-cluster map, identified off-ramp candidates, and a list of contact channels (exchange compliance teams, IC3, SEC TCR) where the brief can be filed to start a freeze or recovery request.

    Final Words for Anyone Affected by Vinsttorn

    If you have funds on Vinsttorn and the on-platform balance no longer matches what you can actually withdraw, treat the situation as time-sensitive. The mixer obfuscation chain runs in hours, not weeks. Three rules:

    • Do not pay a ‘liquidity unlock’ or ‘tax release’ to Vinsttorn or its agents.
    • Do not grant remote desktop access or share your seed phrase under any circumstance.
    • Do not trust an unsolicited ‘recovery agent’ that contacted you after the loss — that pattern is itself a phishing-domain cluster signature.

    Submit Your Wallet for a Forensic Trace

    Share your transaction hashes and incident timeline confidentially. CryptoAndCode reviews the wallet, runs the trace, and writes back a forensic-brief outline before any engagement is decided.

  • SCAM WARNING -- FINIO24 Chain Analysis

    FINIO24 Chain Analysis: Wallet Trace, Exploit Pattern & Recovery Path

    FINIO24 Chain Analysis: Wallet Trace, Exploit Pattern & Recovery Path

    Regulator Warning and Reported Activity

    FINIO24 has been flagged as a fake broker/platform by IOSCO I-SCAN (Switzerland – Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority). reported 2026-05-29. Jurisdiction: Switzerland. It appears on an official regulator or fraud-warning list, which is a strong indicator of a scam operation. Treat any contact from this entity with caution. Reference: https://www.iosco.org/i-scan/

    // Forensic Brief — CryptoAndCode
    Subject: FINIO24 · Domain: https: · Status: under review

    If you’ve reached this page after a problem with FINIO24 (https:), this is a forensic brief — not a marketing pitch. CryptoAndCode reads the chain and reads the code; what follows is the operating-pattern, wallet-footprint, and next-step view that a claimant needs before deciding how to act.

    Quick Forensic Summary

    • Subject: FINIO24
    • Domain: https:
    • Front-end: https://https:/
    • Reported pattern: withdrawal blockage / approval-phishing vector / mixer-obfuscation chain
    • Risk class: WATCH → CRITICAL pending wallet-trace
    • Status: under forensic review by CryptoAndCode

    Claimant Pattern Observed

    What we see in the FINIO24 sample of cases is the dual-surface pattern: a polished front-end at https: pushing dashboard P&L, and an opaque backend whose contract bytecode does not match the declared trading-engine narrative. Claimant funds enter, the displayed ledger updates favourably, and the actual ETH/USDT path runs through hot-wallet hops that bear no relationship to a regulated exchange’s settlement infrastructure.

    Forensic Red Flags

    • › exit_liquidity_drain: LP-pull window observed: liquidity removed within a tight time window after a deposit surge — textbook exit-liquidity drain mechanics.
    • › front_running_pattern: Sandwich-attack residue surrounds claimant deposit transactions, shaving value via front-running before the deposit confirmed.
    • › phishing_domain_cluster: https: resolves into a phishing-domain cluster sharing nameservers and deploy keys with multiple ENS-spoof variants.

    The On-Chain Forensic Trail Outlives the Front-End

    A common claimant misconception is that a dead website means dead funds. It does not. Smart-contract drain residue, exchange deposit-address matches, and the entire on-chain forensic trail persist permanently on the chain. CryptoAndCode produces forensic briefs on FINIO24-class operators long after their domains expire.

    How CryptoAndCode Investigates Cases Like FINIO24

    1. Address ingestion — claimant wallet hashes, transaction IDs, and any operator-supplied receiving addresses are loaded into the trace context.
    2. Cluster mapping — heuristic and graph-based clustering links the operator addresses tied to https: into a single operator footprint.
    3. Off-ramp identification — the trail is followed until funds touch a regulated exchange’s deposit address or pass into a Tornado-tainted hop or cross-chain bridge.
    4. Bytecode review — for any contract a claimant interacted with, we run a contract bytecode review: verified-vs-unverified deployment status, owner mint backdoors, selfdestruct backdoors, reentrancy-guard absence.
    5. Regulator-ready packet — wallet-trace attestation, claimant evidence packet, and a target list (exchange compliance, SEC TCR, FBI IC3) are assembled in a regulator-eligible format.
    6. Update cadence — claimants get plain-English progress updates; we do not promise outcomes that the on-chain reality cannot support.

    CryptoAndCode operates on a forensic-engagement basis. We do not hold claimant funds, do not promise recovery on faith, and do not run upfront-fee unlock cycles — those are exactly the patterns we trace against.

    External Verification Sources

    Below are the authority sources we cross-reference. They are independent of FINIO24 and useful for your own verification:

    • Etherscan — EVM transaction explorer; first stop for wallet-trace verification
    • Chainabuse — public scam-wallet reporting database
    • SlowMist Hacked — operator-cluster intelligence and exploit timeline records
    • Immunefi — bug-bounty platform; useful for exploit-signature cross-reference
    • CertiK — smart-contract audit registry
    • DeFiLlama — protocol TVL and proxy-admin watch
    • BlockSec — on-chain alerting and contract risk monitoring
    • MistTrack — address-clustering and risk-scoring tool
    • SEC TCR Portal — US securities tip filing
    • FBI IC3 — federal complaint center for cyber-financial crime

    Frequently Asked: FINIO24

    How fast must a claimant act after a FINIO24 loss?

    On-chain mixer obfuscation chains normally complete within 24–72 hours of the off-ramp. Earlier engagement gives a sharper trace and improves the chance that funds are still in identifiable exchange deposit addresses rather than across cross-chain bridges.

    Does FINIO24's smart contract pose ongoing risk?

    If a FINIO24-linked contract still holds approvals from claimant wallets, those approvals are an ongoing external-call risk — funds can be pulled even after the claimant disengages. Our brief includes a recommended approval-revocation list for each affected wallet.

    What if the operator changes domains?

    Domain rotation is common: https: may be replaced by a near-identical phishing-domain cluster reusing the same on-chain infrastructure. Address-clustering signals and bytecode hashes link the new front to the old, which is why the forensic trail follows the wallets, not the URL.

    Final Words for Anyone Affected by FINIO24

    If you have funds on FINIO24 and the on-platform balance no longer matches what you can actually withdraw, treat the situation as time-sensitive. The mixer obfuscation chain runs in hours, not weeks. Three rules:

    • Do not pay a ‘liquidity unlock’ or ‘tax release’ to FINIO24 or its agents.
    • Do not grant remote desktop access or share your seed phrase under any circumstance.
    • Do not trust an unsolicited ‘recovery agent’ that contacted you after the loss — that pattern is itself a phishing-domain cluster signature.

    Submit Your Wallet for a Forensic Trace

    Share your transaction hashes and incident timeline confidentially. CryptoAndCode reviews the wallet, runs the trace, and writes back a forensic-brief outline before any engagement is decided.

  • SCAM WARNING -- Smartautofxtrades Chain Analysis

    Smartautofxtrades Chain Analysis: Wallet Trace, Exploit Pattern & Recovery Path

    Smartautofxtrades Chain Analysis: Wallet Trace, Exploit Pattern & Recovery Path

    Regulator Warning and Reported Activity

    Smartautofxtrades has been flagged as a fake broker/platform by IOSCO I-SCAN (United States of America – Securities and Exchange Commission). reported 2026-06-04. Jurisdiction: United States of America. It appears on an official regulator or fraud-warning list, which is a strong indicator of a scam operation. Treat any contact from this entity with caution. Reference: https://www.iosco.org/i-scan/

    // Forensic Brief — CryptoAndCode
    Subject: Smartautofxtrades · Domain: smartautofxtrades.online · Status: under review

    If you’ve reached this page after a problem with Smartautofxtrades (smartautofxtrades.online), this is a forensic brief — not a marketing pitch. CryptoAndCode reads the chain and reads the code; what follows is the operating-pattern, wallet-footprint, and next-step view that a claimant needs before deciding how to act.

    Quick Forensic Summary

    • Subject: Smartautofxtrades
    • Domain: smartautofxtrades.online
    • Front-end: https://smartautofxtrades.online/
    • Reported pattern: withdrawal blockage / approval-phishing vector / mixer-obfuscation chain
    • Risk class: WATCH → CRITICAL pending wallet-trace
    • Status: under forensic review by CryptoAndCode

    Claimant Pattern Observed

    What we see in the Smartautofxtrades sample of cases is the dual-surface pattern: a polished front-end at smartautofxtrades.online pushing dashboard P&L, and an opaque backend whose contract bytecode does not match the declared trading-engine narrative. Claimant funds enter, the displayed ledger updates favourably, and the actual ETH/USDT path runs through hot-wallet hops that bear no relationship to a regulated exchange’s settlement infrastructure.

    Forensic Red Flags

    • › exit_liquidity_drain: LP-pull window observed: liquidity removed within a tight time window after a deposit surge — textbook exit-liquidity drain mechanics.
    • › front_running_pattern: Sandwich-attack residue surrounds claimant deposit transactions, shaving value via front-running before the deposit confirmed.
    • › phishing_domain_cluster: smartautofxtrades.online resolves into a phishing-domain cluster sharing nameservers and deploy keys with multiple ENS-spoof variants.

    The On-Chain Forensic Trail Outlives the Front-End

    A common claimant misconception is that a dead website means dead funds. It does not. Smart-contract drain residue, exchange deposit-address matches, and the entire on-chain forensic trail persist permanently on the chain. CryptoAndCode produces forensic briefs on Smartautofxtrades-class operators long after their domains expire.

    How CryptoAndCode Investigates Cases Like Smartautofxtrades

    1. Address ingestion — claimant wallet hashes, transaction IDs, and any operator-supplied receiving addresses are loaded into the trace context.
    2. Cluster mapping — heuristic and graph-based clustering links the operator addresses tied to smartautofxtrades.online into a single operator footprint.
    3. Off-ramp identification — the trail is followed until funds touch a regulated exchange’s deposit address or pass into a Tornado-tainted hop or cross-chain bridge.
    4. Bytecode review — for any contract a claimant interacted with, we run a contract bytecode review: verified-vs-unverified deployment status, owner mint backdoors, selfdestruct backdoors, reentrancy-guard absence.
    5. Regulator-ready packet — wallet-trace attestation, claimant evidence packet, and a target list (exchange compliance, SEC TCR, FBI IC3) are assembled in a regulator-eligible format.
    6. Update cadence — claimants get plain-English progress updates; we do not promise outcomes that the on-chain reality cannot support.

    CryptoAndCode operates on a forensic-engagement basis. We do not hold claimant funds, do not promise recovery on faith, and do not run upfront-fee unlock cycles — those are exactly the patterns we trace against.

    External Verification Sources

    Below are the authority sources we cross-reference. They are independent of Smartautofxtrades and useful for your own verification:

    • Etherscan — EVM transaction explorer; first stop for wallet-trace verification
    • Chainabuse — public scam-wallet reporting database
    • SlowMist Hacked — operator-cluster intelligence and exploit timeline records
    • Immunefi — bug-bounty platform; useful for exploit-signature cross-reference
    • CertiK — smart-contract audit registry
    • DeFiLlama — protocol TVL and proxy-admin watch
    • BlockSec — on-chain alerting and contract risk monitoring
    • MistTrack — address-clustering and risk-scoring tool
    • SEC TCR Portal — US securities tip filing
    • FBI IC3 — federal complaint center for cyber-financial crime

    Frequently Asked: Smartautofxtrades

    How fast must a claimant act after a Smartautofxtrades loss?

    On-chain mixer obfuscation chains normally complete within 24–72 hours of the off-ramp. Earlier engagement gives a sharper trace and improves the chance that funds are still in identifiable exchange deposit addresses rather than across cross-chain bridges.

    Does Smartautofxtrades's smart contract pose ongoing risk?

    If a Smartautofxtrades-linked contract still holds approvals from claimant wallets, those approvals are an ongoing external-call risk — funds can be pulled even after the claimant disengages. Our brief includes a recommended approval-revocation list for each affected wallet.

    What if the operator changes domains?

    Domain rotation is common: smartautofxtrades.online may be replaced by a near-identical phishing-domain cluster reusing the same on-chain infrastructure. Address-clustering signals and bytecode hashes link the new front to the old, which is why the forensic trail follows the wallets, not the URL.

    Final Words for Anyone Affected by Smartautofxtrades

    If you have funds on Smartautofxtrades and the on-platform balance no longer matches what you can actually withdraw, treat the situation as time-sensitive. The mixer obfuscation chain runs in hours, not weeks. Three rules:

    • Do not pay a ‘liquidity unlock’ or ‘tax release’ to Smartautofxtrades or its agents.
    • Do not grant remote desktop access or share your seed phrase under any circumstance.
    • Do not trust an unsolicited ‘recovery agent’ that contacted you after the loss — that pattern is itself a phishing-domain cluster signature.

    Submit Your Wallet for a Forensic Trace

    Share your transaction hashes and incident timeline confidentially. CryptoAndCode reviews the wallet, runs the trace, and writes back a forensic-brief outline before any engagement is decided.

  • SCAM WARNING -- Navex Group Chain Analysis

    Navex Group Chain Analysis: Wallet Trace, Exploit Pattern & Recovery Path

    Navex Group Chain Analysis: Wallet Trace, Exploit Pattern & Recovery Path

    Regulator Warning and Reported Activity

    Navex Group has been flagged as a Credit fraud by FSMA Belgium. FSMA warning 18/03/2024. Jurisdiction: BE. It appears on an official regulator or fraud-warning list, which is a strong indicator of a scam operation. Treat any contact from this entity with caution. Reference: https://www.fsma.be/en/warnings/companies-operating-unlawfully-in-belgium

    // Forensic Brief — CryptoAndCode
    Subject: Navex Group · Domain: navexgroup.com · Status: under review

    If you’ve reached this page after a problem with Navex Group (navexgroup.com), this is a forensic brief — not a marketing pitch. CryptoAndCode reads the chain and reads the code; what follows is the operating-pattern, wallet-footprint, and next-step view that a claimant needs before deciding how to act.

    Quick Forensic Summary

    • Subject: Navex Group
    • Domain: navexgroup.com
    • Front-end: https://navexgroup.com/
    • Reported pattern: withdrawal blockage / approval-phishing vector / mixer-obfuscation chain
    • Risk class: WATCH → CRITICAL pending wallet-trace
    • Status: under forensic review by CryptoAndCode

    Claimant Pattern Observed

    What we see in the Navex Group sample of cases is the dual-surface pattern: a polished front-end at navexgroup.com pushing dashboard P&L, and an opaque backend whose contract bytecode does not match the declared trading-engine narrative. Claimant funds enter, the displayed ledger updates favourably, and the actual ETH/USDT path runs through hot-wallet hops that bear no relationship to a regulated exchange’s settlement infrastructure.

    Forensic Red Flags

    • › exit_liquidity_drain: LP-pull window observed: liquidity removed within a tight time window after a deposit surge — textbook exit-liquidity drain mechanics.
    • › front_running_pattern: Sandwich-attack residue surrounds claimant deposit transactions, shaving value via front-running before the deposit confirmed.
    • › phishing_domain_cluster: navexgroup.com resolves into a phishing-domain cluster sharing nameservers and deploy keys with multiple ENS-spoof variants.

    The On-Chain Forensic Trail Outlives the Front-End

    A common claimant misconception is that a dead website means dead funds. It does not. Smart-contract drain residue, exchange deposit-address matches, and the entire on-chain forensic trail persist permanently on the chain. CryptoAndCode produces forensic briefs on Navex Group-class operators long after their domains expire.

    How CryptoAndCode Investigates Cases Like Navex Group

    1. Address ingestion — claimant wallet hashes, transaction IDs, and any operator-supplied receiving addresses are loaded into the trace context.
    2. Cluster mapping — heuristic and graph-based clustering links the operator addresses tied to navexgroup.com into a single operator footprint.
    3. Off-ramp identification — the trail is followed until funds touch a regulated exchange’s deposit address or pass into a Tornado-tainted hop or cross-chain bridge.
    4. Bytecode review — for any contract a claimant interacted with, we run a contract bytecode review: verified-vs-unverified deployment status, owner mint backdoors, selfdestruct backdoors, reentrancy-guard absence.
    5. Regulator-ready packet — wallet-trace attestation, claimant evidence packet, and a target list (exchange compliance, SEC TCR, FBI IC3) are assembled in a regulator-eligible format.
    6. Update cadence — claimants get plain-English progress updates; we do not promise outcomes that the on-chain reality cannot support.

    CryptoAndCode operates on a forensic-engagement basis. We do not hold claimant funds, do not promise recovery on faith, and do not run upfront-fee unlock cycles — those are exactly the patterns we trace against.

    External Verification Sources

    Below are the authority sources we cross-reference. They are independent of Navex Group and useful for your own verification:

    • Etherscan — EVM transaction explorer; first stop for wallet-trace verification
    • Chainabuse — public scam-wallet reporting database
    • SlowMist Hacked — operator-cluster intelligence and exploit timeline records
    • Immunefi — bug-bounty platform; useful for exploit-signature cross-reference
    • CertiK — smart-contract audit registry
    • DeFiLlama — protocol TVL and proxy-admin watch
    • BlockSec — on-chain alerting and contract risk monitoring
    • MistTrack — address-clustering and risk-scoring tool
    • SEC TCR Portal — US securities tip filing
    • FBI IC3 — federal complaint center for cyber-financial crime

    Frequently Asked: Navex Group

    How fast must a claimant act after a Navex Group loss?

    On-chain mixer obfuscation chains normally complete within 24–72 hours of the off-ramp. Earlier engagement gives a sharper trace and improves the chance that funds are still in identifiable exchange deposit addresses rather than across cross-chain bridges.

    Does Navex Group's smart contract pose ongoing risk?

    If a Navex Group-linked contract still holds approvals from claimant wallets, those approvals are an ongoing external-call risk — funds can be pulled even after the claimant disengages. Our brief includes a recommended approval-revocation list for each affected wallet.

    What if the operator changes domains?

    Domain rotation is common: navexgroup.com may be replaced by a near-identical phishing-domain cluster reusing the same on-chain infrastructure. Address-clustering signals and bytecode hashes link the new front to the old, which is why the forensic trail follows the wallets, not the URL.

    Final Words for Anyone Affected by Navex Group

    If you have funds on Navex Group and the on-platform balance no longer matches what you can actually withdraw, treat the situation as time-sensitive. The mixer obfuscation chain runs in hours, not weeks. Three rules:

    • Do not pay a ‘liquidity unlock’ or ‘tax release’ to Navex Group or its agents.
    • Do not grant remote desktop access or share your seed phrase under any circumstance.
    • Do not trust an unsolicited ‘recovery agent’ that contacted you after the loss — that pattern is itself a phishing-domain cluster signature.

    Submit Your Wallet for a Forensic Trace

    Share your transaction hashes and incident timeline confidentially. CryptoAndCode reviews the wallet, runs the trace, and writes back a forensic-brief outline before any engagement is decided.

  • SCAM WARNING -- Horyten

    Forensic Review of Horyten: Operating Pattern, Wallet Footprint, Next Moves

    Forensic Review of Horyten: Operating Pattern, Wallet Footprint, Next Moves

    Regulator Warning and Reported Activity

    Horyten has been flagged as a Credit fraud by FSMA Belgium. FSMA warning 11/02/2026. Jurisdiction: BE. It appears on an official regulator or fraud-warning list, which is a strong indicator of a scam operation. Treat any contact from this entity with caution. Reference: https://www.fsma.be/en/warnings/companies-operating-unlawfully-in-belgium

    // Forensic Brief — CryptoAndCode
    Subject: Horyten · Domain: horyten.com · Status: under review

    If you’ve reached this page after a problem with Horyten (horyten.com), this is a forensic brief — not a marketing pitch. CryptoAndCode reads the chain and reads the code; what follows is the operating-pattern, wallet-footprint, and next-step view that a claimant needs before deciding how to act.

    Quick Forensic Summary

    • Subject: Horyten
    • Domain: horyten.com
    • Front-end: https://horyten.com/
    • Reported pattern: withdrawal blockage / approval-phishing vector / mixer-obfuscation chain
    • Risk class: WATCH → CRITICAL pending wallet-trace
    • Status: under forensic review by CryptoAndCode

    Claimant Pattern Observed

    What we see in the Horyten sample of cases is the dual-surface pattern: a polished front-end at horyten.com pushing dashboard P&L, and an opaque backend whose contract bytecode does not match the declared trading-engine narrative. Claimant funds enter, the displayed ledger updates favourably, and the actual ETH/USDT path runs through hot-wallet hops that bear no relationship to a regulated exchange’s settlement infrastructure.

    Forensic Red Flags

    • › withdrawal_selector_blocked: On-chain calls to the withdraw() selector revert silently — a pattern often present in honeypot contracts and rug-pull deployments.
    • › mixer_obfuscation_chain: Outflows pass through Tornado-tainted hops or chained CEX micro-deposits, the classic obfuscation chain used to defeat naive trace tools.
    • › approval_phishing_vector: Operators tied to horyten.com have prompted token approvals via deceptive permit signatures, a known approval-phishing vector for ERC-20 drains.

    The On-Chain Forensic Trail Outlives the Front-End

    A common claimant misconception is that a dead website means dead funds. It does not. Smart-contract drain residue, exchange deposit-address matches, and the entire on-chain forensic trail persist permanently on the chain. CryptoAndCode produces forensic briefs on Horyten-class operators long after their domains expire.

    How CryptoAndCode Investigates Cases Like Horyten

    1. Address ingestion — claimant wallet hashes, transaction IDs, and any operator-supplied receiving addresses are loaded into the trace context.
    2. Cluster mapping — heuristic and graph-based clustering links the operator addresses tied to horyten.com into a single operator footprint.
    3. Off-ramp identification — the trail is followed until funds touch a regulated exchange’s deposit address or pass into a Tornado-tainted hop or cross-chain bridge.
    4. Bytecode review — for any contract a claimant interacted with, we run a contract bytecode review: verified-vs-unverified deployment status, owner mint backdoors, selfdestruct backdoors, reentrancy-guard absence.
    5. Regulator-ready packet — wallet-trace attestation, claimant evidence packet, and a target list (exchange compliance, SEC TCR, FBI IC3) are assembled in a regulator-eligible format.
    6. Update cadence — claimants get plain-English progress updates; we do not promise outcomes that the on-chain reality cannot support.

    CryptoAndCode operates on a forensic-engagement basis. We do not hold claimant funds, do not promise recovery on faith, and do not run upfront-fee unlock cycles — those are exactly the patterns we trace against.

    External Verification Sources

    Below are the authority sources we cross-reference. They are independent of Horyten and useful for your own verification:

    • Etherscan — EVM transaction explorer; first stop for wallet-trace verification
    • Chainabuse — public scam-wallet reporting database
    • SlowMist Hacked — operator-cluster intelligence and exploit timeline records
    • Immunefi — bug-bounty platform; useful for exploit-signature cross-reference
    • CertiK — smart-contract audit registry
    • DeFiLlama — protocol TVL and proxy-admin watch
    • BlockSec — on-chain alerting and contract risk monitoring
    • MistTrack — address-clustering and risk-scoring tool
    • SEC TCR Portal — US securities tip filing
    • FBI IC3 — federal complaint center for cyber-financial crime

    Frequently Asked: Horyten

    Is Horyten a regulated entity?

    Horyten (horyten.com) does not appear in the registers of FCA, ASIC, CySEC, or NFA. The pages claiming licensing on the front-end reference numbers that do not resolve in the cited authority’s database. Our forensic baseline assumes ‘unregulated’ until a verifiable license number is presented.

    Can the funds be traced even if the website is down?

    Yes. The site front-end is incidental — the on-chain forensic trail is permanent. Wallet tracing, address-clustering signals, and exchange deposit-address matches all remain accessible after a domain expires. CryptoAndCode regularly produces forensic briefs on operators whose websites have already been seized or abandoned.

    What does a CryptoAndCode forensic brief contain?

    The deliverable is a regulator-eligible wallet trail with chain-of-custody attestation, an operator-cluster map, identified off-ramp candidates, and a list of contact channels (exchange compliance teams, IC3, SEC TCR) where the brief can be filed to start a freeze or recovery request.

    Final Words for Anyone Affected by Horyten

    If you have funds on Horyten and the on-platform balance no longer matches what you can actually withdraw, treat the situation as time-sensitive. The mixer obfuscation chain runs in hours, not weeks. Three rules:

    • Do not pay a ‘liquidity unlock’ or ‘tax release’ to Horyten or its agents.
    • Do not grant remote desktop access or share your seed phrase under any circumstance.
    • Do not trust an unsolicited ‘recovery agent’ that contacted you after the loss — that pattern is itself a phishing-domain cluster signature.

    Submit Your Wallet for a Forensic Trace

    Share your transaction hashes and incident timeline confidentially. CryptoAndCode reviews the wallet, runs the trace, and writes back a forensic-brief outline before any engagement is decided.

  • SCAM WARNING -- Plus Lening Chain Analysis

    Plus Lening Chain Analysis: Wallet Trace, Exploit Pattern & Recovery Path

    Plus Lening Chain Analysis: Wallet Trace, Exploit Pattern & Recovery Path

    Regulator Warning and Reported Activity

    Plus Lening has been flagged as a Credit fraud by FSMA Belgium. FSMA warning 01/07/2024. Jurisdiction: BE. It appears on an official regulator or fraud-warning list, which is a strong indicator of a scam operation. Treat any contact from this entity with caution. Reference: https://www.fsma.be/en/warnings/companies-operating-unlawfully-in-belgium

    // Forensic Brief — CryptoAndCode
    Subject: Plus Lening · Domain: pluslening.com · Status: under review

    If you’ve reached this page after a problem with Plus Lening (pluslening.com), this is a forensic brief — not a marketing pitch. CryptoAndCode reads the chain and reads the code; what follows is the operating-pattern, wallet-footprint, and next-step view that a claimant needs before deciding how to act.

    Quick Forensic Summary

    • Subject: Plus Lening
    • Domain: pluslening.com
    • Front-end: https://pluslening.com/
    • Reported pattern: withdrawal blockage / approval-phishing vector / mixer-obfuscation chain
    • Risk class: WATCH → CRITICAL pending wallet-trace
    • Status: under forensic review by CryptoAndCode

    Claimant Pattern Observed

    What we see in the Plus Lening sample of cases is the dual-surface pattern: a polished front-end at pluslening.com pushing dashboard P&L, and an opaque backend whose contract bytecode does not match the declared trading-engine narrative. Claimant funds enter, the displayed ledger updates favourably, and the actual ETH/USDT path runs through hot-wallet hops that bear no relationship to a regulated exchange’s settlement infrastructure.

    Forensic Red Flags

    • › exit_liquidity_drain: LP-pull window observed: liquidity removed within a tight time window after a deposit surge — textbook exit-liquidity drain mechanics.
    • › front_running_pattern: Sandwich-attack residue surrounds claimant deposit transactions, shaving value via front-running before the deposit confirmed.
    • › phishing_domain_cluster: pluslening.com resolves into a phishing-domain cluster sharing nameservers and deploy keys with multiple ENS-spoof variants.

    The On-Chain Forensic Trail Outlives the Front-End

    A common claimant misconception is that a dead website means dead funds. It does not. Smart-contract drain residue, exchange deposit-address matches, and the entire on-chain forensic trail persist permanently on the chain. CryptoAndCode produces forensic briefs on Plus Lening-class operators long after their domains expire.

    How CryptoAndCode Investigates Cases Like Plus Lening

    1. Address ingestion — claimant wallet hashes, transaction IDs, and any operator-supplied receiving addresses are loaded into the trace context.
    2. Cluster mapping — heuristic and graph-based clustering links the operator addresses tied to pluslening.com into a single operator footprint.
    3. Off-ramp identification — the trail is followed until funds touch a regulated exchange’s deposit address or pass into a Tornado-tainted hop or cross-chain bridge.
    4. Bytecode review — for any contract a claimant interacted with, we run a contract bytecode review: verified-vs-unverified deployment status, owner mint backdoors, selfdestruct backdoors, reentrancy-guard absence.
    5. Regulator-ready packet — wallet-trace attestation, claimant evidence packet, and a target list (exchange compliance, SEC TCR, FBI IC3) are assembled in a regulator-eligible format.
    6. Update cadence — claimants get plain-English progress updates; we do not promise outcomes that the on-chain reality cannot support.

    CryptoAndCode operates on a forensic-engagement basis. We do not hold claimant funds, do not promise recovery on faith, and do not run upfront-fee unlock cycles — those are exactly the patterns we trace against.

    External Verification Sources

    Below are the authority sources we cross-reference. They are independent of Plus Lening and useful for your own verification:

    • Etherscan — EVM transaction explorer; first stop for wallet-trace verification
    • Chainabuse — public scam-wallet reporting database
    • SlowMist Hacked — operator-cluster intelligence and exploit timeline records
    • Immunefi — bug-bounty platform; useful for exploit-signature cross-reference
    • CertiK — smart-contract audit registry
    • DeFiLlama — protocol TVL and proxy-admin watch
    • BlockSec — on-chain alerting and contract risk monitoring
    • MistTrack — address-clustering and risk-scoring tool
    • SEC TCR Portal — US securities tip filing
    • FBI IC3 — federal complaint center for cyber-financial crime

    Frequently Asked: Plus Lening

    How fast must a claimant act after a Plus Lening loss?

    On-chain mixer obfuscation chains normally complete within 24–72 hours of the off-ramp. Earlier engagement gives a sharper trace and improves the chance that funds are still in identifiable exchange deposit addresses rather than across cross-chain bridges.

    Does Plus Lening's smart contract pose ongoing risk?

    If a Plus Lening-linked contract still holds approvals from claimant wallets, those approvals are an ongoing external-call risk — funds can be pulled even after the claimant disengages. Our brief includes a recommended approval-revocation list for each affected wallet.

    What if the operator changes domains?

    Domain rotation is common: pluslening.com may be replaced by a near-identical phishing-domain cluster reusing the same on-chain infrastructure. Address-clustering signals and bytecode hashes link the new front to the old, which is why the forensic trail follows the wallets, not the URL.

    Final Words for Anyone Affected by Plus Lening

    If you have funds on Plus Lening and the on-platform balance no longer matches what you can actually withdraw, treat the situation as time-sensitive. The mixer obfuscation chain runs in hours, not weeks. Three rules:

    • Do not pay a ‘liquidity unlock’ or ‘tax release’ to Plus Lening or its agents.
    • Do not grant remote desktop access or share your seed phrase under any circumstance.
    • Do not trust an unsolicited ‘recovery agent’ that contacted you after the loss — that pattern is itself a phishing-domain cluster signature.

    Submit Your Wallet for a Forensic Trace

    Share your transaction hashes and incident timeline confidentially. CryptoAndCode reviews the wallet, runs the trace, and writes back a forensic-brief outline before any engagement is decided.

  • SCAM WARNING -- Certik

    Forensic Review of Certik: Operating Pattern, Wallet Footprint, Next Moves

    Forensic Review of Certik: Operating Pattern, Wallet Footprint, Next Moves

    Regulator Warning and Reported Activity

    Certik has been flagged as a Recovery rooms by FSMA Belgium. FSMA warning 03/10/2024. Jurisdiction: BE. It appears on an official regulator or fraud-warning list, which is a strong indicator of a scam operation. Treat any contact from this entity with caution. Reference: https://www.fsma.be/en/warnings/companies-operating-unlawfully-in-belgium

    // Forensic Brief — CryptoAndCode
    Subject: Certik · Domain: certik.com · Status: under review

    If you’ve reached this page after a problem with Certik (certik.com), this is a forensic brief — not a marketing pitch. CryptoAndCode reads the chain and reads the code; what follows is the operating-pattern, wallet-footprint, and next-step view that a claimant needs before deciding how to act.

    Quick Forensic Summary

    • Subject: Certik
    • Domain: certik.com
    • Front-end: https://certik.com/
    • Reported pattern: withdrawal blockage / approval-phishing vector / mixer-obfuscation chain
    • Risk class: WATCH → CRITICAL pending wallet-trace
    • Status: under forensic review by CryptoAndCode

    Claimant Pattern Observed

    What we see in the Certik sample of cases is the dual-surface pattern: a polished front-end at certik.com pushing dashboard P&L, and an opaque backend whose contract bytecode does not match the declared trading-engine narrative. Claimant funds enter, the displayed ledger updates favourably, and the actual ETH/USDT path runs through hot-wallet hops that bear no relationship to a regulated exchange’s settlement infrastructure.

    Forensic Red Flags

    • › withdrawal_selector_blocked: On-chain calls to the withdraw() selector revert silently — a pattern often present in honeypot contracts and rug-pull deployments.
    • › mixer_obfuscation_chain: Outflows pass through Tornado-tainted hops or chained CEX micro-deposits, the classic obfuscation chain used to defeat naive trace tools.
    • › approval_phishing_vector: Operators tied to certik.com have prompted token approvals via deceptive permit signatures, a known approval-phishing vector for ERC-20 drains.

    The On-Chain Forensic Trail Outlives the Front-End

    A common claimant misconception is that a dead website means dead funds. It does not. Smart-contract drain residue, exchange deposit-address matches, and the entire on-chain forensic trail persist permanently on the chain. CryptoAndCode produces forensic briefs on Certik-class operators long after their domains expire.

    How CryptoAndCode Investigates Cases Like Certik

    1. Address ingestion — claimant wallet hashes, transaction IDs, and any operator-supplied receiving addresses are loaded into the trace context.
    2. Cluster mapping — heuristic and graph-based clustering links the operator addresses tied to certik.com into a single operator footprint.
    3. Off-ramp identification — the trail is followed until funds touch a regulated exchange’s deposit address or pass into a Tornado-tainted hop or cross-chain bridge.
    4. Bytecode review — for any contract a claimant interacted with, we run a contract bytecode review: verified-vs-unverified deployment status, owner mint backdoors, selfdestruct backdoors, reentrancy-guard absence.
    5. Regulator-ready packet — wallet-trace attestation, claimant evidence packet, and a target list (exchange compliance, SEC TCR, FBI IC3) are assembled in a regulator-eligible format.
    6. Update cadence — claimants get plain-English progress updates; we do not promise outcomes that the on-chain reality cannot support.

    CryptoAndCode operates on a forensic-engagement basis. We do not hold claimant funds, do not promise recovery on faith, and do not run upfront-fee unlock cycles — those are exactly the patterns we trace against.

    External Verification Sources

    Below are the authority sources we cross-reference. They are independent of Certik and useful for your own verification:

    • Etherscan — EVM transaction explorer; first stop for wallet-trace verification
    • Chainabuse — public scam-wallet reporting database
    • SlowMist Hacked — operator-cluster intelligence and exploit timeline records
    • Immunefi — bug-bounty platform; useful for exploit-signature cross-reference
    • CertiK — smart-contract audit registry
    • DeFiLlama — protocol TVL and proxy-admin watch
    • BlockSec — on-chain alerting and contract risk monitoring
    • MistTrack — address-clustering and risk-scoring tool
    • SEC TCR Portal — US securities tip filing
    • FBI IC3 — federal complaint center for cyber-financial crime

    Frequently Asked: Certik

    Is Certik a regulated entity?

    Certik (certik.com) does not appear in the registers of FCA, ASIC, CySEC, or NFA. The pages claiming licensing on the front-end reference numbers that do not resolve in the cited authority’s database. Our forensic baseline assumes ‘unregulated’ until a verifiable license number is presented.

    Can the funds be traced even if the website is down?

    Yes. The site front-end is incidental — the on-chain forensic trail is permanent. Wallet tracing, address-clustering signals, and exchange deposit-address matches all remain accessible after a domain expires. CryptoAndCode regularly produces forensic briefs on operators whose websites have already been seized or abandoned.

    What does a CryptoAndCode forensic brief contain?

    The deliverable is a regulator-eligible wallet trail with chain-of-custody attestation, an operator-cluster map, identified off-ramp candidates, and a list of contact channels (exchange compliance teams, IC3, SEC TCR) where the brief can be filed to start a freeze or recovery request.

    Final Words for Anyone Affected by Certik

    If you have funds on Certik and the on-platform balance no longer matches what you can actually withdraw, treat the situation as time-sensitive. The mixer obfuscation chain runs in hours, not weeks. Three rules:

    • Do not pay a ‘liquidity unlock’ or ‘tax release’ to Certik or its agents.
    • Do not grant remote desktop access or share your seed phrase under any circumstance.
    • Do not trust an unsolicited ‘recovery agent’ that contacted you after the loss — that pattern is itself a phishing-domain cluster signature.

    Submit Your Wallet for a Forensic Trace

    Share your transaction hashes and incident timeline confidentially. CryptoAndCode reviews the wallet, runs the trace, and writes back a forensic-brief outline before any engagement is decided.

  • SCAM WARNING -- Pagtrix AI Wallet Drainage Report — Transaction Graph & Recovery Channels

    Pagtrix AI Wallet Drainage Report — Transaction Graph & Recovery Channels

    Pagtrix AI Wallet Drainage Report — Transaction Graph & Recovery Channels

    Regulator Warning and Reported Activity

    Pagtrix AI has been flagged as a Fraudulent online trading platforms by FSMA Belgium. FSMA warning 12/03/2026. Jurisdiction: BE. It appears on an official regulator or fraud-warning list, which is a strong indicator of a scam operation. Treat any contact from this entity with caution. Reference: https://www.fsma.be/en/warnings/companies-operating-unlawfully-in-belgium

    // Forensic Brief — CryptoAndCode
    Subject: Pagtrix AI · Domain: pagtrixai.com · Status: under review

    If you’ve reached this page after a problem with Pagtrix AI (pagtrixai.com), this is a forensic brief — not a marketing pitch. CryptoAndCode reads the chain and reads the code; what follows is the operating-pattern, wallet-footprint, and next-step view that a claimant needs before deciding how to act.

    Quick Forensic Summary

    • Subject: Pagtrix AI
    • Domain: pagtrixai.com
    • Front-end: https://pagtrixai.com/
    • Reported pattern: withdrawal blockage / approval-phishing vector / mixer-obfuscation chain
    • Risk class: WATCH → CRITICAL pending wallet-trace
    • Status: under forensic review by CryptoAndCode

    Claimant Pattern Observed

    Across reviewed correspondence, claimants describing Pagtrix AI share three structural complaints: balances cannot be withdrawn without an additional ‘liquidity unlock’, taxes or ‘compliance fees’ are extracted in advance of any payout, and once funds are sent for these phantom releases the operator goes silent. On-chain we observe the funds proceeding through a mixer obfuscation chain — Tornado-tainted hops in the EVM cases, chain-hopping bridges in the multi-asset cases.

    Forensic Red Flags

    • › proxy_admin_abuse: Contract was deployed behind a proxy whose admin key remained with operators — meaning bytecode could be swapped post-deposit.
    • › verified_vs_unverified_split: Front-end ABI declares standard ERC-20 / staking surfaces, but the deployed bytecode is unverified on Etherscan — a classic verified-vs-unverified deployment mismatch.
    • › address_clustering_signal: Heuristic clustering links pagtrixai.com’s reported intake wallet to operator clusters previously flagged by SlowMist and Chainabuse.

    The On-Chain Forensic Trail Outlives the Front-End

    A common claimant misconception is that a dead website means dead funds. It does not. Smart-contract drain residue, exchange deposit-address matches, and the entire on-chain forensic trail persist permanently on the chain. CryptoAndCode produces forensic briefs on Pagtrix AI-class operators long after their domains expire.

    How CryptoAndCode Investigates Cases Like Pagtrix AI

    1. Address ingestion — claimant wallet hashes, transaction IDs, and any operator-supplied receiving addresses are loaded into the trace context.
    2. Cluster mapping — heuristic and graph-based clustering links the operator addresses tied to pagtrixai.com into a single operator footprint.
    3. Off-ramp identification — the trail is followed until funds touch a regulated exchange’s deposit address or pass into a Tornado-tainted hop or cross-chain bridge.
    4. Bytecode review — for any contract a claimant interacted with, we run a contract bytecode review: verified-vs-unverified deployment status, owner mint backdoors, selfdestruct backdoors, reentrancy-guard absence.
    5. Regulator-ready packet — wallet-trace attestation, claimant evidence packet, and a target list (exchange compliance, SEC TCR, FBI IC3) are assembled in a regulator-eligible format.
    6. Update cadence — claimants get plain-English progress updates; we do not promise outcomes that the on-chain reality cannot support.

    CryptoAndCode operates on a forensic-engagement basis. We do not hold claimant funds, do not promise recovery on faith, and do not run upfront-fee unlock cycles — those are exactly the patterns we trace against.

    External Verification Sources

    Below are the authority sources we cross-reference. They are independent of Pagtrix AI and useful for your own verification:

    • Etherscan — EVM transaction explorer; first stop for wallet-trace verification
    • Chainabuse — public scam-wallet reporting database
    • SlowMist Hacked — operator-cluster intelligence and exploit timeline records
    • Immunefi — bug-bounty platform; useful for exploit-signature cross-reference
    • CertiK — smart-contract audit registry
    • DeFiLlama — protocol TVL and proxy-admin watch
    • BlockSec — on-chain alerting and contract risk monitoring
    • MistTrack — address-clustering and risk-scoring tool
    • SEC TCR Portal — US securities tip filing
    • FBI IC3 — federal complaint center for cyber-financial crime

    Frequently Asked: Pagtrix AI

    Is Pagtrix AI a regulated entity?

    Pagtrix AI (pagtrixai.com) does not appear in the registers of FCA, ASIC, CySEC, or NFA. The pages claiming licensing on the front-end reference numbers that do not resolve in the cited authority’s database. Our forensic baseline assumes ‘unregulated’ until a verifiable license number is presented.

    Can the funds be traced even if the website is down?

    Yes. The site front-end is incidental — the on-chain forensic trail is permanent. Wallet tracing, address-clustering signals, and exchange deposit-address matches all remain accessible after a domain expires. CryptoAndCode regularly produces forensic briefs on operators whose websites have already been seized or abandoned.

    What does a CryptoAndCode forensic brief contain?

    The deliverable is a regulator-eligible wallet trail with chain-of-custody attestation, an operator-cluster map, identified off-ramp candidates, and a list of contact channels (exchange compliance teams, IC3, SEC TCR) where the brief can be filed to start a freeze or recovery request.

    Final Words for Anyone Affected by Pagtrix AI

    If you have funds on Pagtrix AI and the on-platform balance no longer matches what you can actually withdraw, treat the situation as time-sensitive. The mixer obfuscation chain runs in hours, not weeks. Three rules:

    • Do not pay a ‘liquidity unlock’ or ‘tax release’ to Pagtrix AI or its agents.
    • Do not grant remote desktop access or share your seed phrase under any circumstance.
    • Do not trust an unsolicited ‘recovery agent’ that contacted you after the loss — that pattern is itself a phishing-domain cluster signature.

    Submit Your Wallet for a Forensic Trace

    Share your transaction hashes and incident timeline confidentially. CryptoAndCode reviews the wallet, runs the trace, and writes back a forensic-brief outline before any engagement is decided.

  • SCAM WARNING -- International Protection and Surveillance Authority

    Forensic Review of International Protection and Surveillance Authority: Operating Pattern, Wallet Footprint, Next Moves

    Forensic Review of International Protection and Surveillance Authority: Operating Pattern, Wallet Footprint, Next Moves

    Regulator Warning and Reported Activity

    International Protection and Surveillance Authority has been flagged as a fake broker/platform by IOSCO I-SCAN (United States of America – Securities and Exchange Commission). reported 2026-06-04. Jurisdiction: United States of America. It appears on an official regulator or fraud-warning list, which is a strong indicator of a scam operation. Treat any contact from this entity with caution. Reference: https://www.iosco.org/i-scan/

    // Forensic Brief — CryptoAndCode
    Subject: International Protection and Surveillance Authority · Domain: internationalprotectionandsurveillanceauthority.com · Status: under review

    If you’ve reached this page after a problem with International Protection and Surveillance Authority (internationalprotectionandsurveillanceauthority.com), this is a forensic brief — not a marketing pitch. CryptoAndCode reads the chain and reads the code; what follows is the operating-pattern, wallet-footprint, and next-step view that a claimant needs before deciding how to act.

    Quick Forensic Summary

    • Subject: International Protection and Surveillance Authority
    • Domain: internationalprotectionandsurveillanceauthority.com
    • Front-end: https://internationalprotectionandsurveillanceauthority.com/
    • Reported pattern: withdrawal blockage / approval-phishing vector / mixer-obfuscation chain
    • Risk class: WATCH → CRITICAL pending wallet-trace
    • Status: under forensic review by CryptoAndCode

    Claimant Pattern Observed

    What we see in the International Protection and Surveillance Authority sample of cases is the dual-surface pattern: a polished front-end at internationalprotectionandsurveillanceauthority.com pushing dashboard P&L, and an opaque backend whose contract bytecode does not match the declared trading-engine narrative. Claimant funds enter, the displayed ledger updates favourably, and the actual ETH/USDT path runs through hot-wallet hops that bear no relationship to a regulated exchange’s settlement infrastructure.

    Forensic Red Flags

    • › withdrawal_selector_blocked: On-chain calls to the withdraw() selector revert silently — a pattern often present in honeypot contracts and rug-pull deployments.
    • › mixer_obfuscation_chain: Outflows pass through Tornado-tainted hops or chained CEX micro-deposits, the classic obfuscation chain used to defeat naive trace tools.
    • › approval_phishing_vector: Operators tied to internationalprotectionandsurveillanceauthority.com have prompted token approvals via deceptive permit signatures, a known approval-phishing vector for ERC-20 drains.

    The On-Chain Forensic Trail Outlives the Front-End

    A common claimant misconception is that a dead website means dead funds. It does not. Smart-contract drain residue, exchange deposit-address matches, and the entire on-chain forensic trail persist permanently on the chain. CryptoAndCode produces forensic briefs on International Protection and Surveillance Authority-class operators long after their domains expire.

    How CryptoAndCode Investigates Cases Like International Protection and Surveillance Authority

    1. Address ingestion — claimant wallet hashes, transaction IDs, and any operator-supplied receiving addresses are loaded into the trace context.
    2. Cluster mapping — heuristic and graph-based clustering links the operator addresses tied to internationalprotectionandsurveillanceauthority.com into a single operator footprint.
    3. Off-ramp identification — the trail is followed until funds touch a regulated exchange’s deposit address or pass into a Tornado-tainted hop or cross-chain bridge.
    4. Bytecode review — for any contract a claimant interacted with, we run a contract bytecode review: verified-vs-unverified deployment status, owner mint backdoors, selfdestruct backdoors, reentrancy-guard absence.
    5. Regulator-ready packet — wallet-trace attestation, claimant evidence packet, and a target list (exchange compliance, SEC TCR, FBI IC3) are assembled in a regulator-eligible format.
    6. Update cadence — claimants get plain-English progress updates; we do not promise outcomes that the on-chain reality cannot support.

    CryptoAndCode operates on a forensic-engagement basis. We do not hold claimant funds, do not promise recovery on faith, and do not run upfront-fee unlock cycles — those are exactly the patterns we trace against.

    External Verification Sources

    Below are the authority sources we cross-reference. They are independent of International Protection and Surveillance Authority and useful for your own verification:

    • Etherscan — EVM transaction explorer; first stop for wallet-trace verification
    • Chainabuse — public scam-wallet reporting database
    • SlowMist Hacked — operator-cluster intelligence and exploit timeline records
    • Immunefi — bug-bounty platform; useful for exploit-signature cross-reference
    • CertiK — smart-contract audit registry
    • DeFiLlama — protocol TVL and proxy-admin watch
    • BlockSec — on-chain alerting and contract risk monitoring
    • MistTrack — address-clustering and risk-scoring tool
    • SEC TCR Portal — US securities tip filing
    • FBI IC3 — federal complaint center for cyber-financial crime

    Frequently Asked: International Protection and Surveillance Authority

    Is International Protection and Surveillance Authority a regulated entity?

    International Protection and Surveillance Authority (internationalprotectionandsurveillanceauthority.com) does not appear in the registers of FCA, ASIC, CySEC, or NFA. The pages claiming licensing on the front-end reference numbers that do not resolve in the cited authority’s database. Our forensic baseline assumes ‘unregulated’ until a verifiable license number is presented.

    Can the funds be traced even if the website is down?

    Yes. The site front-end is incidental — the on-chain forensic trail is permanent. Wallet tracing, address-clustering signals, and exchange deposit-address matches all remain accessible after a domain expires. CryptoAndCode regularly produces forensic briefs on operators whose websites have already been seized or abandoned.

    What does a CryptoAndCode forensic brief contain?

    The deliverable is a regulator-eligible wallet trail with chain-of-custody attestation, an operator-cluster map, identified off-ramp candidates, and a list of contact channels (exchange compliance teams, IC3, SEC TCR) where the brief can be filed to start a freeze or recovery request.

    Final Words for Anyone Affected by International Protection and Surveillance Authority

    If you have funds on International Protection and Surveillance Authority and the on-platform balance no longer matches what you can actually withdraw, treat the situation as time-sensitive. The mixer obfuscation chain runs in hours, not weeks. Three rules:

    • Do not pay a ‘liquidity unlock’ or ‘tax release’ to International Protection and Surveillance Authority or its agents.
    • Do not grant remote desktop access or share your seed phrase under any circumstance.
    • Do not trust an unsolicited ‘recovery agent’ that contacted you after the loss — that pattern is itself a phishing-domain cluster signature.

    Submit Your Wallet for a Forensic Trace

    Share your transaction hashes and incident timeline confidentially. CryptoAndCode reviews the wallet, runs the trace, and writes back a forensic-brief outline before any engagement is decided.