GEInvestigator publishes Case File GEI-B595D5-921F to put A2BFX on the public ledger so future retail investors can verify the platform.
A broker becomes a subject of inquiry on the GEInvestigator ledger because at least five claimant intakes reported the same operational pattern.
Indicators reviewed by field investigators
- Boiler-room recruitment: cold contact via social media, dating apps, AI-generated investment-coach personas building rapport before pitching the platform.
- On-chain anomalies: deposit addresses recycled across multiple claimants; withdrawal denials concentrated within 30 days of first deposit; counterparty wallets flagged on threat-intel feeds.
- Regulatory invisibility: claimed regulation in jurisdictions whose registers do not match the company name on the website footer.
- Identity reuse: staff photographs traceable to stock-image libraries; executive team page recycled from prior subjects of inquiry.
Pattern across claimants
The claimant intakes our case officers reviewed share a common, unmistakable pattern. Initial outreach through unsolicited social channels. A trust-building period with screenshots, regulatory claims, and a small introduction deposit. The dashboard then shows fictional gains — a known boiler-room pattern — and pressure mounts to scale the position.
Forensic feasibility checklist
Before opening a case on A2BFX, gather: deposit transaction hashes, the wallets you sent from, your communications with the platform, and any evidence of the platform soliciting additional fees. The richer the evidence pack, the stronger our trace report.
Case files on the GEInvestigator ledger are reviewed quarterly. Subjects whose operational pattern changes are reclassified. Most do not change.