MulaUp: The Third Coming of a Collapsed Ponzi Scheme
Hanli Lombard has perfected the art of reinvention. Each time one of her schemes implodes, she launches another almost identical one under a different name. MulaUp is her third iteration, and the pattern is unmistakable.
The trail starts with Mula Network in early 2021. When that collapsed by year's end, Lombard rebranded it as Mula-4-Wifi. That name itself reveals the desperation—a pivot so transparent it barely qualifies as a rebrand. When Mula-4-Wifi inevitably fell apart, MulaUp emerged, first on a South African domain before migrating to mulaup.com on May 26, 2022.
Each collapse follows the same script. Mula 4 You affiliates got funneled into Jonathan Sifuentes' Xifra Lifestyle scheme, another Ponzi that collapsed within months. The victims weren't moving to something new—they were being recycled into the next fraud.
Lombard's entire playbook was forged in previous schemes. She built her reputation as South Africa's top promoter of Crowd1, a Ponzi operation. In May 2020, she bragged about stealing 14 million South African rand through the scheme—roughly $860,000. Authorities took notice. By December 2020, Crowd1's CEO Johan Stael von Holstein cashed out and disappeared. The scheme officially imploded.
Lombard didn't miss a beat. Within weeks, she launched Mula Network. When that tanked, she created Dial-A-Mula. In February 2022, she registered another company called UmVuzo, claiming Dial-A-Mula was merely a "product" underneath it. The restructuring appears designed to obscure money flows and dodge taxes rather than provide any legitimate service.
Her criminal history extends further back. In July 2007, a magistrate found her guilty of theft from an employer. The judge's words stung: "What stands out in this case is the relationship you had with your previous employer. She was kind to you, and treated you as if you were her own daughter. To put it bluntly, it is unforgivable for you to steal from her like you did." Lombard was also accused of fabricating fake deals to defraud the same employer, though she was acquitted on those charges.
That 2007 conviction wasn't anomalous. It was a preview.
MulaUp operates with stunning simplicity. The company has no actual products or services to sell. Affiliates pay 200 ZAR monthly and promote membership itself—the definition of a matrix scheme. SimilarWeb data confirms that 100% of website traffic originates from South Africa, suggesting Lombard is still working her domestic base.
Every piece of evidence points to the same operation recycled three times. The names change. The domain registrations shift. The corporate structures get reshuffled. The fraud machinery remains identical. Lombard has turned the collapse-and-rebrand into a business model, betting that new recruits won't dig into the history of the person taking their money.
🤖 Quick Answer
What is MulaUp and its connection to previous schemes?MulaUp represents the third iteration of schemes operated by Hanli Lombard, following the collapse of Mula Network in 2021 and Mula-4-Wifi thereafter. Launched on mulaup.com in May 2022, it follows an identical operational pattern to its predecessors, which were characterized as Ponzi schemes that systematized participant losses and redistributed assets through affiliated ventures.
How did previous MulaUp iterations collapse?
Mula Network ceased operations by late 2021, subsequently rebranded as Mula-4-Wifi, which also failed. Upon each collapse, participants were systematically directed toward alternative schemes, including Jonathan Sifuentes' Xifra Lifestyle program, which similarly operated as a Ponzi structure and collapsed within months of receiving transferred participants.
**What evidence
🔗 Related Articles
- FFST Group Review: “Placing orders” click-a-button Ponzi
- KOK Play Review: KOK token 200% ROI Ponzi scheme
- Daniel Filho criminal case moved back to Massachusetts
- DexCar Ponzi scheme shut down by Italian authorities
- Alex Reinhardt trying to reboot collapsed Ponzi as Ultima
