A $100 cash gifting scheme called Infinity100 collapsed in early 2014. Its operator, Peter Wolfing, didn't let that stop him. Within months, he relaunched the same operation under a new name: National Wealth Center.

Wolfing started National Wealth Center on July 7th, 2014, marketing it to existing Infinity100 members as "Infinity Downline 2.0"—a supposedly improved version of what had just failed. His affiliates parroted the pitch in their own marketing materials, acknowledging the relaunch while downplaying the obvious: this was the same scheme dressed up in fresh branding.

Wolfing has a track record with these kinds of operations. He first caught the attention of BehindMLM in 2012 as the admin of Turbo Cycler, a matrix-based Ponzi scheme that cycled money between $200 and $1000. He's since launched two more similar ventures—Business ToolBox and Ultimate Cycler—both matrix cycler Ponzi schemes started in October 2014. Of all his schemes, National Wealth Center became the most widespread.

The structure tells you everything. National Wealth Center has no actual products or services. Affiliates simply market affiliate membership to others. Once recruited, new members buy into compensation tiers ranging from $25 to $3500 across six levels, though the lower three tiers—at $25, $50, and $100—form the core operation. Bundled with each purchase is marketing material about internet marketing, finance, business development, self-development, and fitness. These materials serve as window dressing for what is fundamentally a money-passing scheme.

The compensation plan works like this: at the $25, $50, and $100 levels, affiliates gift 100 percent of their initial payment to whoever recruited them. They then pass their 2nd and 4th subsequent payments up the chain to their recruiter, while keeping everything after that. This creates a cascading system where payments flow up unlimited depths of the recruitment chain.

Each tier operates independently, with payments distributed monthly. To qualify for commissions, an affiliate must maintain at least four personally recruited fee-paying members.

The math doesn't work. In any gifting scheme, money flows exclusively from new recruits to existing members. Once recruitment slows—which it always does—the structure collapses. Those at the bottom lose their money. Those who got in early profit.

Wolfing's move from Infinity100 to National Wealth Center wasn't an evolution or improvement. It was damage control. When one scheme crashes, rebrand it, recruit the same people again, and restart the cycle. The compensation structure remained virtually identical. The money-passing mechanics stayed the same. Only the name changed.

This is how persistent operators work. They don't abandon their model when regulators catch on or their scheme implodes. They simply reset and begin again, banking on the fact that some people will always be desperate enough to believe the next pitch is different from the last one.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is National Wealth Center and its connection to Infinity100?
National Wealth Center is a cash gifting scheme launched by Peter Wolfing in July 2014, following the collapse of his previous operation, Infinity100, in early 2014. Wolfing marketed it to existing members as "Infinity Downline 2.0," essentially relaunching the same business model under new branding after the original scheme failed.

Who is Peter Wolfing and what is his background?
Peter Wolfing is an operator associated with multiple schemes. He first gained attention in 2012 as administrator of Turbo Cycler, a matrix-based Ponzi scheme involving $200 to $1000 cycles. His pattern involves relaunching failed operations under different names with minimal structural changes.

How did National Wealth Center market itself to members?
National Wealth Center was marketed specifically to


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