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Frauds
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Key Events
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Our Mission
Documenting the frauds that shaped finance
From Charles Ponzi's postal-coupon scheme to FTX's vanished billions, every fraud has a story of ambition, deception, and collapse. The Fraud Archive preserves these cautionary histories — the masterminds, the victims, the unraveling, and the lessons that still echo through markets today.
5 Chapters Per Story
Origins, The Scheme, Mechanics of Deception, The Unraveling, Aftermath & Legacy.
Key Figures
Detailed profiles of the masterminds, accomplices, enablers, and whistleblowers behind each scheme. Explore the networks of people behind each scheme.
Key Events
Pivotal moments in each scheme's arc — the founding decisions, the warning signs ignored, the moment of collapse.
The Documentary Format
How Each Story Unfolds
Origins & The Setup
How the scheme began — the players, the conditions, and the early veneer of legitimacy
The Scheme Takes Shape
How trust was engineered and returns were manufactured
Mechanics of Deception
Inside the operation — the structures, cover stories, and architecture of the fraud
The Unraveling
Investigations, whistleblowers, and the moment the facade cracks
Aftermath & Legacy
The reckoning — prosecutions, the toll on victims, and what the case taught markets
Philosophy
Why Fraud Matters
Behind every boom, every bull market, every promise of impossible returns lies a fraud — stories of charm and deception that reveal how trust is built, exploited, and ultimately broken.
Understanding how fraud emerges, scales, and is uncovered reveals the patterns that repeat across markets, eras, and economic systems.
Latest Additions
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Herbalife: The Billion-Dollar Pyramid That Survived
Herbalife survived the legal and market assault. In 2016, the company entered a settlement with the FTC, paid $200 million, and changed parts of its U.S. business model, but it was not shut down or criminally convicted as a pyramid scheme.
A nutritional-supplement empire sold itself as a path to health and wealth, then became the subject of a billion-dollar short, a celebrity-financier feud, and a federal crackdown that punished the architects without ever ending the machine.
Home-Stake Production: The Oil Fraud That Fooled Hollywood
Home-Stake Production Co. collapsed in 1973–1974 after regulators and auditors found that key production figures had been falsified. Criminal and civil actions followed, and while some responsible parties were prosecuted or sanctioned, the losses were largely unrecovered and the fraud became a lasting case study in celebrity-driven trust and deceptive reporting.
In Oklahoma’s oil fields, Home-Stake Production sold not just reserves but certainty — and when the numbers finally stopped behaving, Hollywood learned that the wells were real, but the reports were fiction.
HyperFund / HyperVerse: The Membership Scheme That Kept Renaming Itself
As of the latest public record, the HyperFund/HyperVerse story remains a cross-border enforcement case with major civil and criminal fallout, but not a neatly closed one. Sam Lee has faced arrest and charges in connection with the scheme; the corporate web has been disrupted, while victims have recovered little and many losses remain unrecovered.
A crypto membership empire kept shedding its skin just as regulators drew near—HyperFund became HyperCapital, then HyperVerse, and each rename bought the scheme a little more time.
The IcomTech Fraud: Latin America's Crypto Pyramid
IcomTech’s founders were prosecuted in U.S. federal court, and the scheme was publicly exposed as a fraud built on recruitment rather than trading. Public records show convictions and guilty pleas among key figures, while victim recovery has been limited and the broader losses remain only partially repaired.
IcomTech sold itself as a doorway into crypto wealth, but behind the referral banners and daily payouts was a machine that depended on a simple rule: new money had to keep arriving, or the promise collapsed.
Hana Beshara and Infigg: When Immigration Dreams Fund Fraud
The principal operators tied to Infigg were charged in federal court in the Northern District of California, and the SEC separately pursued civil enforcement over the EB-5 offering. The broader record shows some investor money was frozen or recovered through litigation and receivership, but the case also exposed how easily immigration dreams can be monetized before regulators arrive.
For thousands of immigrants, the green card was supposed to be the reward for faith and sacrifice. In the EB-5 world, that hope could also become the product.
IndyMac: The Bank That Backdated Capital to Qualify
IndyMac Bank was seized by the Office of Thrift Supervision and placed into FDIC receivership on July 11, 2008. Subsequent scrutiny centered less on a criminal conviction than on a regulatory failure: public records show the bank's capital position was managed through a disputed backdated infusion, and the broader legacy became a case study in supervisory capture and the fragility of bank accounting in the 2008 crisis.
IndyMac did not simply fail in the summer of 2008; according to regulators and investigators, it was allowed to paint itself healthy with an $18 million capital infusion that was backdated into the previous quarter, just long enough to pass as "well capitalized" before the market forced the truth into daylight.
Sample
A Taste of the Archive
From Bernard Madoff: The Biggest Lie on Wall Street
Bernard Madoff began not as a myth but as a neighborhood operator, the kind of man who understood the city’s nervous habits before he understood how to exploit them. He was born in Queens in 1938, the son of a plumber, and the public record shows a young man who moved from the outer boroughs into the machinery of postwar Wall Street with a gambler’s sense of timing and a technician’s patience. He did not start by promising impossible riches. He started by learning how orders moved, how prices were displayed, how credibility was manufactured in a system that often mistook polish for proof.
The setup took shape in the 1960s, when the securities business was still looser, faster, and less electronically transparent than the one later generations would inherit. Madoff founded Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities in 1960, according to corporate histories and later court filings. The firm was small, but it had a particular kind of access: it was connected to the market’s plumbing. It made markets in stocks and, later, became prominent in the over-the-counter world. That mattered because the deeper a man sits inside the daily mechanics of trading, the easier it is to claim expertise while controlling what others can verify.
Start Exploring
From Charles Ponzi's postal-coupon scheme to FTX's vanished billions, every fraud has a story of ambition, deception, and collapse. The Fraud Archive preserves these cautionary histories — the masterminds, the victims, the unraveling, and the lessons that still echo through markets today.
