A man who made money off one of the world's biggest gold-selling Ponzi schemes is now running a new network that looks suspiciously like the last one.
Adrian Jacuzzi built his fortune in EmGoldex, a scheme that collapsed under regulatory pressure worldwide. When that dried up around 2015, EmGoldex simply rebranded as Global InterGold and kept operating. Jacuzzi stuck with it for roughly two more years before jumping ship.
By the time he abandoned Global InterGold, Jacuzzi had already moved on to his next ventures: Pool Miners and Infinitum Flame. Both were Ponzi schemes. Infinitum Flame started crashing in October 2017. Jacuzzi registered the domain for Mize Network that same month and launched the operation in early 2018.
The timing is no accident. When one scheme collapses, people like Jacuzzi simply rebrand and start over.
Mize Network's website says nothing about who owns or operates the business. But Jacuzzi doesn't hide from it—his Facebook and LinkedIn profiles openly list him as CEO. He runs the operation from Portugal.
Unlike legitimate companies, Mize Network sells nothing. There are no products. There are no services. Affiliates can only recruit other affiliates and collect commissions from their investments. That's the entire business model.
The compensation structure reveals exactly what this is. Mize Network pays commissions exclusively for recruitment, distributed across five levels of a unilevel team. Personally recruit someone and you get 10% of their investment. Get them to recruit someone else, and that goes on level 2—you pocket 0.5%. Level 3 pays 1%, level 4 pays 1.5%, level 5 pays 2%.
The scheme pushes recruitment aggressively. New affiliates who move €2,500 in downline investments within their first 48 hours get a €250 bonus. Hit €5,000 in two days and pocket €450. €10,000 gets €800. €25,000 gets €1,750.
These bonuses aren't rewards for selling products—they're incentives to recruit fast. The 48-hour window creates urgency. The escalating bonuses reward speed over substance. It's designed to move money quickly before anyone realizes the structure cannot sustain itself.
This is the hallmark of every Ponzi scheme Jacuzzi has touched. EmGoldex promised returns through gold sales. It paid early investors with money from new recruits. Global InterGold did the same thing with a new name. Pool Miners and Infinitum Flame followed the identical playbook.
Mize Network follows it again.
The scheme works until it doesn't. Markets saturate. Recruitment slows. The money stops flowing to the bottom. Those who got in early cash out. Everyone else loses. Then the operator moves to the next scheme with a fresh domain name and the cycle repeats.
Jacuzzi has cycled through five major schemes across a decade. Each time regulators closed one down, he launched another. He's built a career on it. Until authorities actually prosecute him and seize his assets, there's nothing stopping him from doing it again.
🤖 Quick Answer
Who is Adrian Jacuzzi and what is his background in network marketing?Adrian Jacuzzi is an entrepreneur who accumulated wealth through EmGoldex, a gold-selling scheme that collapsed due to regulatory scrutiny worldwide. Following EmGoldex's dissolution around 2015, the operation rebranded as Global InterGold, where Jacuzzi remained involved for approximately two additional years before pursuing subsequent ventures.
What schemes has Adrian Jacuzzi been associated with?
Jacuzzi has been linked to multiple network operations including Pool Miners and Infinitum Flame, both characterized as Ponzi schemes. Infinitum Flame experienced significant difficulties beginning in October 2017, prompting Jacuzzi's transition to establishing Mize Network during the same period.
When was Mize Network established and under what circumstances?
Mize Network's domain was registered in October 2
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