In the wake of Beurax’s collapse and widespread investor losses, two prominent ringleaders have tried to make sense of it.

The result is a hilarious stream of excuses and contradictory denials.

Silvio Fortunato (below) runs MSI Masters, a collective he pushes scams onto.

A quick Google search reveals Fortunato’s involvement in
GetEasy
, a Portuguese Ponzi scheme launched in 2014. No doubt there are plenty more.

Current scams Fortunato is pushing through MSI Masters include
Forsage
and
Fortron
.

Fortunato claims to have “26 six years experience in this”. By “this” we assume Fortunato is referring to scamming people.

Fortunato’s latest squeeze is Beurax.

Beurax
is a Russian Ponzi scheme
fronted by actors
. It
collapsed
a few days ago.

The reason Beurax was fronted by actors is because the scammers running it wanted to create as much distance between themselves and their investors.

It’s much easier to slip away when your victims don’t who you are.

As simple as that explanation is, here’s Fortunato dancing around the obvious;

The CEO of the company and the CMO of the company, they are actors.

There is two ways of seeing this;

First in the beginning when I see some blogs that says that the owner of the company is an actor and so on. Well, I don’t know if he’s an actor or not. OK.

But later there was people that really really investigated … and they proved, I think, they can prove very fairly that these two persons are actors.

The first way (to see this) is they prepare this from the beginning, to run away with the money. And uh, to rob us. (Ozedit: 
ding ding ding!
).

That’s one way.

The second way is that if we really think about it (Ozedit: 
ruhroh…
), if I was in their shoes maybe I will do the same thing.

Because this type of business, nowadays technology evolves so much, crypto, and all these kind of things are so fast … that it’s really difficult for all the governments in the world to keep up.

While it is true regulators are painfully slow when it comes to enforcement, the law on Ponzi schemes like Beurax is clear the world over; they are illegal.

The technology, the business models are running so fast, it’s really impossible for all the governments and legislations.

So imagine guys like these ones, that make and circulate millions and millions of dollars, to have this structure all over the world.

Even if they try to do everything by every country’s laws, it will be completely impossible to put this in place.

So they get a risk to run this business and some crazy Judge in some crazy country can start doing something, you know what I mean?

I
do
know what you mean Fortunato. How dare authorities shut down Ponzi scammers laundering millions and millions from across the world.

Who do they think they are?

So they have to be protected. Because this is not a local business. You know what I mean?

Not really.

So I think the intention that they done, to have not showing their faces – I can easily give the benefit of


🤖 Quick Answer

What is Beurax and what happened to it?
Beurax is a Russian Ponzi scheme that collapsed days ago. It was fronted by actors rather than legitimate operators, a common deceptive practice in fraudulent investment schemes designed to obscure the true identities of orchestrators and increase perceived credibility among potential investors.

Who is Silvio Fortunato and what role does he play in scams?
Silvio Fortunato operates MSI Masters, a collective through which he promotes fraudulent schemes. His involvement includes previous participation in GetEasy, a Portuguese Ponzi scheme from 2014, and current promotion of schemes like Forsage, Fortron, and Beurax through his collective operation.

How have Beurax scammers responded to accusations?
Following Beurax's collapse and significant investor losses, prominent ringleaders have issued contradictory den


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