Following the collapse of its original TAS Vault scheme, Auratus has rebooted with Zai Cards.

Details of Auratus’ new Zai Card investment scheme were revealed on a secret August 5th webinar hosted by Annie Starky.

Starky, an Australian Auratus promoter, is part of Martene Wallace’s “leadership” group.

Starky was actually filling in for Wallace and using her Zoom account, owing to Wallace and other Auratus promoters being summoned to a secret meeting with Josip Heit in Croatia.

Josip Heit owns GSB Gold Standard Corporation, through which he directly and indirectly has run and runs multiple fraudulent investment schemes. These include GSPartners, Swiss Valorem Bank, GSPro, Billionico and Auratus.

Heit is originally from Croatia and is believed to hold a Croatian passport. Like many countries, Croatia does not extradite passport holders.

After blabbing on about world economies and gold for twenty minutes (note Auratus doesn’t have anything to do with actual gold), Annie Starky gets into Auratus’ new Zai Card investment scheme.

Note that from here on out anything in a green box is quoted from Starky directly.

The underlying premise of Auratus’ Zai Card investment scheme is the same as its collapsed TAS Vault scheme.

This company takes the gold and puts it into a decentralized space. It’s actually physical gold held on a digital platform.

Auratus investors are led to believe they’re investing in gold, which of course they never see and no verifiable proof it exists is provided.

What Auratus investors are in fact investing in are “gold points”, created out of thin air and completely worthless outside of Auratus itself.

This happens through Auratus’ relatively new Zai Cards.

[You] buy something called a Zai Card, which is a smart-contract.

Buy a Zai Card and then store [and] earn more gold, as a result of storing it on that Zai Card.

Note that although they’re depicted as physical cards, Auratus’ Zai Cards don’t actually exist. They’re nothing more than a marker to track how much an Auratus investor can invest.

Before we get further into Auratus’ new Zai Card investment scheme, there’s a few things going on here I want to tie to together.

The whole invest in fake gold ruse is essentially a reboot of
Karatbars International
, a collapsed pyramid turned crypto Ponzi that Josip Heit was closely involved in.

Zai Cards and the smart contracts purportedly attached to them are a rebranding of
GSPartners’ fraudulent metacertificates (aka metaportfolios) investment scheme
.

In a nutshell, investors invest cryptocurrency on the promise of returns paid out over a set period of time.

As GSPartners’ ROI liabilities spiralled further and further out of control, a “Victorious” certificate saw GSPartners promise 17.6 million USDT off a 100,000 USDT investment.

This was part of GSPartners’ final “success series” certificates, details of which you can see below (click to enlarge):

GSPartners’ certificates scheme has received over a dozen regulator


🤖 Quick Answer

What is Auratus' new investment scheme following the collapse of TAS Vault?
Auratus relaunched its operations through Zai Cards and a "gold points" system. Details were disclosed during a private webinar held on August 5th, hosted by Australian promoter Annie Starky, who substituted for Martene Wallace while Wallace attended a confidential meeting with Josip Heit in Croatia.

Who is Josip Heit and what is his connection to Auratus?
Josip Heit is the owner of GSB Gold Standard Corporation, through which he has directly and indirectly operated multiple alleged fraudulent investment schemes. These include GSPartners, Swiss Valorem Bank, GSPro, Billionico, and Auratus. Heit is originally from Croatia and is believed to hold a Croatian passport.

**Who are the key promoters involved in


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