A newer and increasingly common form of investment fraud involves platforms that present themselves as hybrid stock-and-crypto trading venues. You deposit Bitcoin or USDT, they show you a portfolio of Apple, Tesla, or Amazon shares rising in value — then refuse all withdrawals. This is an organised financial crime. We know exactly how to dismantle it legally.
Hybrid crypto-stock platform fraud experts.
This fraud category blends the legitimacy of real stock markets with the speed and irreversibility of cryptocurrency — creating an incredibly effective trap for sophisticated investors who would normally be cautious.
You're asked to deposit Bitcoin or USDT. The platform then claims to convert your crypto into "stock positions" on NASDAQ, NYSE, or the London Stock Exchange. In reality, no real stocks are purchased — ever. Your crypto goes directly to the fraudsters.
The platform's interface looks identical to legitimate brokers like eToro or IBKR — complete with live price feeds pulled from real market data. Your "portfolio" shows authentic stock ticker movements, but the positions are phantom. No real trades exist.
When you attempt to withdraw your supposed gains, the platform demands payment of "capital gains tax," "broker compliance fees," or a "regulatory clearance deposit" — calculated as a percentage of your total portfolio value. This is theft, not tax.
This fraud sophisticatedly targets investors who are already familiar with stock markets and have accumulated savings. Victims commonly include:
If the platform allows you to withdraw small amounts (e.g. $500) to "prove it works" before asking for large top-ups, this is a deliberate tactic. The small payouts are sourced from other victims' funds — not real profits.
Every cryptocurrency deposit to these platforms is recorded on the public blockchain ledger. Our forensic AI tools trace the path of your deposited Bitcoin or USDT through every wallet address, OTC desk, and exchange endpoint — creating a legal evidence chain that enables court-ordered recovery proceedings in the jurisdictions where the funds ultimately rested.