
Two professional scam call-center operations depended on affiliate marketing firms to supply them with contact details of people who had clicked on ads for phony investment platforms. The marketers were only paid if the victims — some of whom went on to lose their life savings — were ensnared.
It was Tuesday, and that meant payday. Logging into a series of chat groups on encrypted messenger app Telegram, Ben — not his real name, but an alias — reminded the marketers he was helping to oversee that it was time to claim their earnings, reported by Occrp.
“Share invoice plz,” he wrote in one group.
“Please do it as fast as possible,” he wrote in another. “We need to send u money.”
As invoices poured in, Ben posted an animated GIF from the 1970s Disney cartoon movie Robin Hood, showing the title character dressed as a beggar, asking for a few coins.
The invoices were for leads that the marketers had provided to Ben and his colleagues. In marketing, the term ‘lead’ usually refers to a potential client. But these leads were much more sinister. These were potential victims.
A screenshot showing "Ben"’s chat with the affiliate marketers he manages.
Ben and his colleagues worked for a group of call centers running a massive scam operation. The agents who worked there spent their days hoodwinking victims into believing they would make great returns if they invested in cryptocurrencies or other financial products on their platforms. This was a smokescreen — in reality, in the vast majority of cases reviewed by reporters, their money would simply vanish.
In order to keep the con going, the scammers needed a steadily incoming stream of potential victims.
An unprecedented leak from the heart of a merciless investment scam industry that stretches across the globe reveals how they get them: An ecosystem of marketing companies, known as affiliate marketers, serves up contact details in return for lucrative commissions.
The 1.9-terabyte leak that forms the basis of this investigation was obtained by Swedish Television (SVT) and shared with OCCRP and 30 international media outlets. It reveals the inner workings of two groups of call centers: One based in Georgia, and another much larger operation with at least seven offices in Israel, Bulgaria, Ukraine, Spain, and Cyprus.
The leaked records show that the marketers that supplied these scammers with leads were richly rewarded. Every lead who ended up making a deposit with the scammers was worth between $200 and $2,350, depending on which country they were from. Victims from wealthier nations like the Netherlands, Sweden, or Belgium were worth more.
Records found in the leak show that, in the first seven months of 2024, affiliate marketers working with Ben’s operation — the Israeli/European group — were paid at least $7.3 million for leads. Over the same time period in 2023, they earned more than $10.3 million.
About the ’Scam Empire’ Investigation
Södergård fell into a deep depression, unable to eat or look after himself, but is recovering now with the help of his family. He reported his case to Finnish police, but they dropped the investigation saying that the technical methods involved in such crimes made it “very unlikely that the criminal’s identity could be found.”
(Former Finnish Prime Minister Marin said she does not endorse any investment platform, had not authorized the use of her image in the ad, and had not been aware of it. A secretary for former Finnish President Niinistö’s said they were aware of cases in which his image had been “unlawfully used” and had reported them to the platforms involved. “Such frauds are difficult to trace,” they added.)
Recordings of phone calls between victims and call center agents, text chats, and other leaked files show that fake endorsements by Elon Musk appear to be a particularly popular tool for catching potential victims.
In one recording, a victim tells a call center worker he’d clicked on a purportedly Musk-backed Facebook advertisement for something called “Quantum AI.” In another, a victim says, “That’s what I want to be part of…the quantum algorithm thing that Elon Musk has advertised on Facebook and YouTube.”
Fake Elon Musk’s ‘Quantum Algorithm Thing’
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