What would cause a top-affiliate in an MLM company to start selling shares to their downline?

If you’re Daryl Kingston Djuan, it’s because you believed you had a verbal agreement from the company to do so.

Through his brands “All In” and “The Hub Hive”, Djuan (right) was purportedly soliciting investments from his downline.

Reads an undated “Contract Agreement Between Daryl D. Kingston (YG) & Michelle Riegel”:

Daryl is allowing Mr. & Mrs. Riegel to invest the sum total of $2,500.00 for share equity in his umbrella investment pool with company “Disrupt LLC”.

Once the company goes public Brett & Michelle Riegel will have the option to pull out or purchase more shares as a first option before anyone else on the outside.

At the time of publication, Disrupt Worldwide has made no public announcement of plans to go public. Neither is the company registered with the SEC, meaning an offering of shares either internally or to the general public is obviously an offering of unregistered securities.

How Disrupt were made aware of Kingston’s share offerings to his downline is unclear but, in response to Kingston’s actions being made public, Disrupt has opted to terminate Kingston’s affiliate membership.

Wrote Disrupt CEO Jason Elrod on the 8th of September (Facebook):

We have been informed that a former Disrupt affiliate had apparently been soliciting people to give him money in exchange for a purported “share equity” investment in Disrupt.

Our investigation proved that the allegations were accurate and the affiliate was immediately terminated.

Disrupt is not selling any ownership interest or stock and has not authorized the resale of any ownership interest by this former affiliate or any others. Disrupt did not receive one red cent of investment money from this individual.

Disrupt takes all regulations seriously, and if our legal and compliance staff feel this action is grounds for regulatory discipline we will file a complaint against the former affiliate with the appropriate authorities, in our home state, the affiliate’s home state as well as with federal regulators.

If you are solicited by anyone purporting to represent Disrupt for investment purposes, immediately report any person

who claims to be selling an investment or ownership interest in Disrupt to the the following: (Disrupt Corporate Compliance email address)

Now it seems pretty straight forward. Disrupt affiliate goes rogue, company finds out and terminates his affiliate position.

Compliance job well-done, let’s all move on.

Kingston however is not going down quietly, and it’s his response to the termination that has raised eyebrows.

In an undated written response to Troy Dooly, Kingston wrote:

When Jason decided to continue in the MLM industry after the closing of WUN (WakeUpNow), he contacted a few people, I was one of them.

We all worked hard to bring a different MLM company for those of like mind.

From WUN through Disrupt, Jason and I friendship and business relationship


🤖 Quick Answer

Did Disrupt offer unregistered shares to founder affiliates?
According to documentation, top affiliate Daryl Kingston Djuan allegedly solicited investments from his downline through "All In" and "The Hub Hive" brands, offering share equity in a Disrupt LLC investment pool. A contract indicated investors would receive preferential purchase rights upon public listing. Disrupt Worldwide had not publicly disclosed such offerings at publication time.

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