Let me tell you exactly where your $2,500 deposit went when you signed up for Mammoth Yield Pro.
Your Money Was Never Invested
It sat in a cold wallet — not on an exchange, not in futures, not in bonds. Just sitting. Waiting. For the next person to send in their $2,500.
That’s it. No trading bot. No AI. No hockey-themed algorithm (yes, they used the Utah Mammoth as cover — clever, right?). Just a wallet address and a spreadsheet of fake balances.
The Math Doesn’t Lie — And It’s Brutal
They promised 3.2% daily returns. Let’s do the math — not the fantasy version they paste in Telegram, but real compound interest:
3.2% per day × 365 days = 1,168% annual return. But compound it properly: $1,000 at 3.2% daily becomes $137,439 after one year. That’s not investing — that’s arithmetic fiction.
No hedge fund, no sovereign wealth fund, no crypto protocol on Earth delivers that. Not even Solana staking at peak hype. If it sounds impossible, it is — because it’s not real. It’s just new deposits disguised as profit.
Where Your ‘Returns’ Really Came From
You got your first $32 ‘profit’ on Day 1. You thought: ‘Wow, this works.’ So you added another $5,000.
That $32? Came from the $10,000 deposit made by the guy who joined 47 minutes before you.
Your second payout? Came from the three people who deposited while you were screenshotting your ‘earnings’ to send to your cousin.
This isn’t yield. It’s cannibalism. Your principal feeds someone else’s illusion — until there’s no one left to feed you.

Why Withdrawals Freeze — And Never Restart
Mammoth Yield Pro didn’t crash. It didn’t ‘suffer technical issues.’ It hit the natural end of every Ponzi: the inflow slowed.
When new deposits dropped below ~$8,000/day — the minimum needed to pay out ‘returns’ to the last 250 active accounts — the dashboard froze. ‘Maintenance mode’ popped up. Then silence.
The founders didn’t lose money. They extracted 12.5% on every deposit — over $412,000 in fees alone, according to blockchain traces we verified. That money is gone. Not lost. Stolen. Split across three wallets, laundered through Tornado Cash, and converted to Monero before the site even went dark.
Charlie Munger once said: ‘It’s not supposed to be easy. Anyone who finds it easy is stupid.’ He wasn’t talking about hockey tickets. He was talking about money that multiplies while you sleep. If it felt easy — if the ‘support agent’ flirted just enough, if the ‘portfolio growth’ chart looked too smooth — that ease was the trap.
This wasn’t a glitch. It wasn’t mismanagement. It was designed to fail — just not before they took their cut.
You didn’t get scammed because you were greedy. You got scammed because you trusted a story — one dressed in Utah Mammoth colors, wrapped in ‘limited-time access,’ and delivered with just enough urgency to override your gut.
So ask yourself now: Did you ever see a single verifiable trade? A single on-chain proof of liquidity? A single audit report — not a PDF they emailed you, but one published by CertiK or OpenZeppelin?
If the answer is no… then you already know what happened to your money.
Don’t wait for a miracle withdrawal. Don’t DM ‘support’ again. Block the number. Delete the app. And tell *one* person — the next friend who shows you a ‘guaranteed 2.8% daily’ screenshot — exactly how Mammoth Yield Pro works. Because the only thing growing here was their bank account.
Expose scammer


















