Let me tell you exactly how it happened — not to some stranger online, but to my cousin Ayesha. She was newly divorced, working two jobs, and scrolling TikTok one night when a guy named ‘Arham’ slid into her DMs. He liked her comment on a drama clip. Said he loved Rehmat too — the show, not the scam. That’s how they started talking. And that’s how Rehmat Crypto got its first real victim.
It Was Never About the Show
The name ‘Rehmat’ wasn’t random. It was bait. A soft, familiar hook — a daily soap she already watched, full of emotional tension and slow-burn trust. Just like the scam itself. Arham didn’t pitch crypto on Day 1. He asked about her mom’s health. Remembered she hated cilantro. Sent voice notes laughing at the same dumb joke in Episode 14. By Week 3, he’d ‘accidentally’ screenshotted his Rehmat Crypto dashboard — $3,842 profit in 11 days. ‘Just a side thing,’ he said. ‘You should try it. I’ll help.’
The First Deposit Was ‘Risk-Free’ — That’s the Lie
She put in $250. Got $312 back in 72 hours. Not because the platform worked — but because it’s programmed to let small withdrawals clear. That’s Stage 4 of the playbook: build proof *you* can see. Then came the nudge: ‘My sister just withdrew $9,200. The window for the 12% weekly bonus closes Friday.’ She deposited $4,500. Then $7,900 — after he ‘helped’ her fill out a ‘KYC verification form’ that asked for her bank login (she gave it). Within 48 hours, her balance showed $12,400. But the withdrawal button? Greyed out. ‘Tax clearance fee required: $1,180.’ She paid. Then: ‘Regulatory lock-in fee: $890.’ She paid. Then silence. No replies. No support ticket updates. Just a dashboard that still says $12,400 — and a bank account with $0.
Here’s the Math That Proves It’s Fake
Rehmat Crypto promises ‘12% weekly returns’. Let’s do the math — no jargon, just reality:
12% per week = 624% per year (12 × 52).
But compound that: $1,000 becomes $1,120 in Week 1… $1,254 in Week 2… and by Week 12? $3,896.
By Week 26? $18,725.
By Week 52? Over $131,000 — from $1,000.
No exchange, no fund, no AI bot — nothing on Earth sustains that. Not even Warren Buffett averages 20% annually. This isn’t investing. It’s arithmetic theater designed to make your brain shut off and your wallet open.
‘It’s Not Supposed to Be Easy’
Charlie Munger said it best: ‘It’s not supposed to be easy. Anyone who finds it easy is stupid.’ If someone you’ve never met in person — someone who ‘just happens’ to share your taste in Pakistani dramas — tells you money is easy, they’re not offering opportunity. They’re offering a role in their script. You’re not the investor. You’re the mark. And the most dangerous part? You don’t feel scammed until the last message goes unanswered — because up until then, it felt like care. Like connection. Like hope.

Someone who genuinely cares about you does NOT ask for your banking credentials. Does NOT pressure you to send money ‘before the bonus expires’. Does NOT disappear the second you ask, ‘Can I speak to your manager?’
Rehmat Crypto isn’t listed on any regulator’s website. No SEC filing. No FCA registration. No physical address — just a Telegram bot and a domain registered 37 days ago in Seychelles. Their ‘support’ is a bot that replies ‘Please wait 24–48 hours’ — then ghosts you forever.
If you’ve sent money: stop sending more. Screenshot everything. File a report with your local cybercrime unit — not because you’ll get your cash back (you likely won’t), but because every report slows them down. Every screenshot shared with a real financial advisor or family member breaks the isolation they depend on.
You are not gullible. You were targeted. And the fact that you trusted someone who mirrored your loneliness doesn’t make you weak — it makes you human. But your next move? Choose skepticism over sentiment. Every. Single. Time.
Expose scammer



















