Let’s cut through the noise.
Why would anyone need you to make money?
If Prince Group really had a working crypto ‘investment engine’ — one that somehow turned $10,000 into $15 billion across accounts — why were they cold-messaging people on Tinder? Why were they posing as lonely professionals in love? Why were they begging for $500, $1,000, $5,000 deposits with promises of ‘guaranteed daily returns’?
Because real profit doesn’t recruit. Real profit doesn’t flirt. Real profit doesn’t vanish when you ask for a withdrawal.
The math doesn’t lie — and it screams fraud
They didn’t say *how much* they promised daily — but let’s be generous. Say they told victims just 1.2% per day. Sounds small? Let’s run it.
$10,000 × 1.012365 = $10,000 × 79.4 = $794,000 in one year.
Do that with $1 million? That’s $79.4 million — before taxes, before fees, before ‘KYC delays.’
No exchange, no miner, no hedge fund, no sovereign wealth fund does this. Not even close. The S&P 500 averages ~10% per year. Prince Group wasn’t offering 10%. They were promising 438% annualized return — and then some — just for showing up with your life savings.
That $15 billion seizure? It tells the whole story
The U.S. Justice Department seized $15 billion in bitcoin from Prince Group — a Cambodia-based operation tied to human trafficking and mass crypto theft. Let that sink in: $15,000,000,000. That’s not revenue. That’s stolen deposits — layered, laundered, and funneled through shell wallets while victims waited for ‘the next payout.’

And yet — attorneys report the government is rejecting victim claims. Evidence is allegedly mishandled. Some victims say their own devices were hacked — not by Prince Group, but by investigators trying to ‘verify’ claims. That’s not transparency. That’s obstruction.
Warren Buffett said it best
“Someone is sitting in the shade today because someone planted a tree a long time ago. There are no shortcuts.”
Prince Group sold shortcuts. They sold fairy tales dressed in blockchain jargon and fake trading dashboards. They sold urgency — ‘This window closes tonight!’ — because urgency kills thinking. They sold romance — ‘I want us to build something real’ — because love clouds judgment faster than any scammer could hope.
You don’t get rich planting seeds in someone else’s garden and being told the harvest is ‘coming next week.’ You get rich by planting your own tree — slowly, patiently, with compound interest earned over decades — not days.
Prince Group didn’t build a business. They built a funnel. Your money went in. Their money — and the money of thousands before you — went out. To offshore accounts. To traffickers. To silence.
This wasn’t investment. It was extraction.
If you sent money to Prince Group: file a claim. Demand transparency. But do not wait for a miracle payout. The $15 billion isn’t yours — not yet, not without a fight. And the people who took your money aren’t hiding in a server farm. They’re hiding behind legal delays, jurisdictional loopholes, and the simple, brutal fact that most victims never speak up twice.
So speak up. Now. Not for a refund — though you deserve one — but so the next person scrolling Tinder doesn’t get handed a fake portfolio, a sob story, and a link to a dashboard that updates only when new money arrives.
Expose scammer




















