Todd Disner, who faced a $2.07 million default judgment for his role in the $850 million Zeek Rewards Ponzi scheme, now appears as a top promoter for ABC Systems. This new investment platform promises participants a 200% return on "advertising packages" within 100 days.

ABC Systems operates without publicly disclosing its ownership. The website's registration in February 2019 remains private. A promoter named Doniel Tiggs claims the company is headquartered in Hong Kong under CEO Joseph Che-Woo. Tiggs also points to a training center located in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

Joseph Che-Woo, however, shows no online presence outside of Tiggs' marketing materials. No professional background, no LinkedIn profile, no verifiable public record exists for anyone by that name in a CEO capacity.

Tiggs himself has a documented history promoting known pyramid and Ponzi schemes. Before ABC Systems, his promotional efforts included OnPassive/GoFounders, Coinsinos, Crypto World Evolution, USI-Tech, World Global Network, and Skinny Body Care.

The ABC Systems website prominently features two individuals: Todd Disner and Felix "Phil" Piccolo. Disner holds the title of the company's first "Seven Star ABC Director." Tiggs has publicly praised Disner, calling him "the most honest, sincere, trustworthy and humble man you will ever meet."

This assessment directly contradicts Disner's past. He built his multi-level marketing career on two colossal fraud operations: Ad Surf Daily and Zeek Rewards.

Doniel Tiggs describes Ad Surf Daily as an innovative venture where people bought advertising packages for sums ranging from $10,000 to $50,000. He suggests its success was so rapid that government intervention seized its assets. Tiggs further claims Disner still believes Ad Surf Daily was "just ahead of its time."

Ad Surf Daily was a classic Ponzi scheme. Its owner, Andy Bowdoin, faced arrest in December 2010 on charges of wire and securities fraud. He later pleaded guilty. In August 2012, Bowdoin received a 78-month prison sentence. The concept of a Ponzi scheme dates back to the 1800s, rendering any claim of it being "ahead of its time" as factually incorrect.

Tiggs offers a similar narrative for Zeek Rewards. He states Disner initially invested a small amount in bids, shared the opportunity with friends, and held conference calls without "hype." From a dozen personal recruits, Disner's network allegedly grew to over a million people. Tiggs recounts how individuals lined up outside Zeek's former car dealership office, exchanging millions, and local banks observed customers depleting savings accounts and certificates of deposit to fund the operation. He claims the government then seized everything, and that owner Paul Burks, at 70 years old and with a wife battling cancer, "to this day does not know what he did wrong."

Zeek Rewards was an $850 million Ponzi scheme. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) shut it down in August 2012. Paul Burks faced indictment in October 2014. He went to trial and was found guilty on all four fraud counts in July 2016. Burks was sentenced to 14 years in prison in February 2017. Court records show Burks understood the nature of his illegal activities.

Disner emerged as a top net-winner in both the Ad Surf Daily and Zeek Rewards frauds. In the Zeek collapse, court documents identified him as an insider, accused of illicitly profiting by $1.8 million. He did not mount a defense in the civil proceedings. A default judgment for $2.07 million was entered against him in July 2014. Disner attempted to overturn this ruling, arguing he missed the deadline because co-defendants had not filed their pleadings. The court rejected this claim, noting Disner had been personally served with legal papers. His appeal was denied in December 2014, with the final judgment confirmed in 2016.

This legal obligation to repay stolen funds reportedly left Disner embittered. His subsequent denials of these schemes being Ponzis align with this sentiment.

Felix Piccolo, also known as Phil, is another documented Zeek net-winner. He misappropriated over $1 million from Zeek victims.

Both Disner and Piccolo reside in Florida. Given their history and prominent roles, they are almost certainly directing ABC Systems. The Hong Kong corporate story likely serves as a shell corporation for money laundering operations. Joseph Che-Woo, if he exists at all, would function as a figurehead.

ABC Systems offers no tangible products or services. Instead, it requires participants to "invest" in advertising packages with a stated promise of 200% return on investment within 100 days. Investment tiers range from a "1 Star" package for $500, promising $1,000 back, up to a "7 Star" package for $50,000, promising $100,000 back. Participants must purchase these packages sequentially, beginning at the $500 level.

The compensation structure relies heavily on recruitment. A 10% direct commission is paid for enrolling new investors. Residual commissions operate through a binary structure, where earnings depend on the investment volume generated by a participant's downline network. A participant's own investment tier dictates their maximum daily earning potential, which can reach $94,000 for "7 Star" affiliates. Full participation, requiring the purchase of all tiers, totals $94,000.

Disner has claimed ABC Systems is backed by an unnamed, publicly traded pharmaceutical company. He asserts the founders pledged publicly traded stock as collateral. This, he suggested, would protect investors if payouts failed, ensuring they would receive stock instead of losing their money entirely. Disner stated this mechanism would prevent a repeat of what occurred with Ad Surf Daily and Zeek.

No legitimate, profitable pharmaceutical company would fund passive investment opportunities promising 200% returns in 100 days. Such a business model is not how legitimate enterprises operate. ABC Systems provides no company name for this supposed backer, nor does it identify its true owners. The entire operation relies on the Hong Kong shell game and the involvement of two Florida-based individuals with documented histories of orchestrating Ponzi schemes.

Disner and Piccolo appear to occupy administrative positions at the top of the ABC Systems compensation plan. From these positions, they would collect the majority of invested funds. This structure, particularly the fixed returns and reliance on new money, closely mirrors the mechanics of Ad Surf Daily and Zeek Rewards. It represents the same fundamental scam: investors put in money, and the operators misappropriate it. A small number of early investors may see a profit, but Ponzi math guarantees most participants will lose everything they invest.

Even if one were to accept the improbable existence of a phantom pharmaceutical backer, the scheme still constitutes securities fraud. ABC Systems presents a passive investment opportunity, which qualifies as a security under federal law. Neither ABC Systems, Todd Disner, nor Felix Piccolo are registered with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Offering an unregistered security is illegal.

Investors will either lose their funds when ABC Systems inevitably collapses, or regulators will shut it down. Past operators like Andy Bowdoin and Paul Burks received prison sentences for similar frauds.

Consumers can verify SEC registration for investment professionals and firms through the EDGAR database at sec.gov/edgar.