Mega Profit Cycler: The Four-Tier Scheme with No One at the Helm
A website promising profits through queue cycling offers no information about who actually runs it, and the one person publicly associated with the operation has ties to a $3 million Ponzi scheme the SEC shut down last year.
Megaprofitcycler.com launched on May 6, 2016, with the domain registration locked as private. The official Facebook group admin, Margaret Oddy, posted recently that Richard Cooper and Virginia Addy own the company. Cooper claims in a post to be the main admin residing in Canada alongside co-admin Addy. Yet neither of them appear on the Mega Profit Cycler Facebook member list. Neither could be found anywhere else online. Oddy, it turns out, is the sole face of the operation.
Until recently, Oddy's Facebook profile listed her as a Team Vinh affiliate. Team Vinh was a $3 million Ponzi scheme dismantled by the SEC late last year. It's unclear whether Cooper and Addy invested in that scheme as well.
The structure itself screams trouble. Mega Profit Cycler has no actual products or services. Affiliates pay to buy queue positions and recruit others to do the same. Each position comes bundled with advertising credits users can supposedly display on the website.
The compensation plan runs through four straight-line queues. Here's how it works: when three new positions sell in a queue, the person at the front receives a commission and moves to the next tier. Everyone else advances one spot, and the cycle restarts.
The Starter Line costs $2 per position and pays $1 commissions before cycling members into the Basic Line. The Basic Line charges $4 and pays $4 commissions. The Pro Line costs $6 and pays $6. The Expert Line costs $8 and pays $14.
But here's the catch: a portion of every payment gets locked into a "purchase wallet" that participants must use to buy more queue positions. Starter Line players get $1 locked away. Basic Line participants get $2. Pro Line members get $4. Expert Line members get $10 taken out of circulation.
Referral commissions trigger whenever recruited affiliates buy positions, layered across a unilevel structure.
The math doesn't work. New money constantly needs to flow in to pay commissions and advance existing members. Once recruitment slows—and it always does—the whole thing collapses. The people at the top cash out. Everyone else loses.
A scheme with anonymous ownership, a front person tied to a previous fraud, no real product, and a four-tier queue structure designed to funnel money upward hits every red flag on the SEC's list.
🤖 Quick Answer
What is Mega Profit Cycler and how does it operate?Mega Profit Cycler is a website launched in May 2016 claiming to generate profits through queue cycling mechanisms. The platform operates a four-tier scheme structure, though the organization lacks transparent leadership disclosure and regulatory oversight, raising significant concerns about its legitimacy and operational transparency.
Who are the alleged operators of Mega Profit Cycler?
Margaret Oddy serves as the primary public face of Mega Profit Cycler, acting as Facebook group administrator. Richard Cooper and Virginia Addy are claimed as company owners, though neither appears on official member lists or maintains verifiable online presence separate from the operation itself.
What regulatory concerns surround Mega Profit Cycler?
The scheme's anonymous domain registration, lack of transparent ownership documentation, and association with individuals connected to previous SEC-shut down Ponzi schemes totaling $3
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