Profits on Screen, Fees at the Door: Recovering a CentraFXPro CFD Loss
CentraFXPro showed a Phoenix nurse a trading dashboard that climbed every week. The trouble started only when she tried to withdraw: first a release fee, then a tax, then a compliance deposit. Each fee was the scam — the dashboard never held a real position.
IntakeHow the subject made contact
She signed up after a free “wealth webinar” and a follow-up call from a CentraFXPro “account manager.” Her first deposit went on a card; as the displayed balance climbed, she was steered toward USDT top-ups to “unlock larger positions.”
The platform itself — already on the GEInvestigator ledger as a subject of inquiry — looked the part: live charts, a portfolio screen, a responsive chat. None of it sat on a real market.
Point of compromiseWhere control was lost
When she requested a withdrawal, the dashboard demanded a “release fee.” Then a “withdrawal tax.” Then a “compliance deposit.” Each fee was the actual product; the positions behind the rising balance never existed.
Her card deposits had gone to a payment processor; the crypto top-ups went straight to an operator consolidation wallet and onward to a single exchange. Two trails, two different recovery routes.
“The account manager was kind and patient — right up until I asked for my own money back.”Claimant statement · Case GEI-2026-0411
Evidence chainHow the recovery was built
Separated the two money trails
Split the loss into card-processor deposits and on-chain crypto top-ups, because each has a different recovery route.
Built the chargeback file
Documented the card deposits, the fictitious dashboard, and the escalating-fee pattern for the bank dispute.
Traced the crypto top-ups
Followed the USDT to an operator consolidation wallet and on to a single exchange deposit.
Filed the exchange freeze
Submitted the on-chain trace to the receiving exchange before the consolidated balance could cash out.
Ran both tracks to settlement
The bank reversed the qualifying card deposits and the exchange released the frozen crypto leg.
DispositionWhat came back
$39,600 of $61,800 came back — card chargebacks on the qualifying deposits plus the frozen exchange leg. Fresh card deposits inside the dispute window and a crypto trail caught before cash-out made this a solid result. We never charged a fee to recover it.
IndicatorsFraud signals on this file
- A platform that lets you deposit instantly but invents new fees the moment you withdraw.
- “Release fees,” “withdrawal tax,” or “compliance deposits” payable only in crypto.
- A personal “account manager” who is always available and always encouraging bigger deposits.
- A balance that only ever rises, with no way to verify a single real position.
Seeing the same pattern in your own case?
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