The Con Runs Deep
Blaine Williams and Mark Campese have perfected the playbook: drain one scheme, rebrand, and move the victims to the next one.
Noble 8 Revolution launched in January 2018 with three founders. Jim Anderson grabbed his cut and disappeared within months, leaving Williams and Campese to run what they'd built: a 3×5 matrix cycler Ponzi scheme dressed up as a business opportunity. Members paid monthly fees for months before seeing a single commission payment. When commissions finally arrived in February 2019, they lasted exactly one month. The rest of the money vanished into the operation—some of it funneling to Campese and Williams' personal expenses, including Williams' medical bills.
By March 2020, it was time for "wave 2." Williams and Campese sent an email to their members promising to move them into Pyur Global, a struggling MLM that had launched in 2016 under CEO Bob Bremner. Pyur Global sold nutritional supplements and a heart pulse device with an app. The company had collapsed by the time Williams and Campese came knocking, its website now begging visitors to "excuse our dust" while it prepared an "Elite Founders Club Launch."
The pitch to Noble 8 Revolution members was pure salesmanship: "Show Me The Money," the subject line promised. They offered "Big Quick Money," "serious overrides," and "long term residual income." There were trips, events, lifestyle bonuses. Williams and Campese recorded an "inaugural launch call" featuring Pyur Global's scientific board members and founders to seal the deal.
The victims they were targeting had already lost everything. Footage from Noble 8 Revolution events shows the membership was predominantly elderly. These weren't sophisticated investors. They were retirees who'd been sold a dream at their most vulnerable. Williams and Campese knew exactly who they were preying on—they even weaponized religion, scheduling "prayer calls" to deepen the emotional hook.
Now came the final move. These same elderly victims, having paid monthly fees for twelve months and received one month of commissions, were being asked to invest more money into Pyur Global's reboot. Williams and Campese would pocket commissions on every single recruit from their old scheme.
It's a machine built on extraction. Pull money out of one scheme, repackage the victims, push them into the next. The victims stay the same. The operators stay the same. Only the name on the door changes.
🤖 Quick Answer
What was the structure of Noble 8 Revolution?Noble 8 Revolution, launched in January 2018, operated as a 3×5 matrix cycler Ponzi scheme. Members paid monthly fees before receiving commission payments. Founded by Blaine Williams, Mark Campese, and Jim Anderson, the scheme collected funds from participants with promises of returns through a hierarchical matrix structure.
How did the scheme collapse?
Commission payments began in February 2019 but lasted only one month. Subsequent funds disappeared into operational costs and personal expenses of operators Williams and Campese, including medical bills. By March 2020, the scheme transitioned to a new iteration called "wave 2."
What role did Williams and Campese play post-collapse?
After Noble 8 Revolution's financial deterioration, Williams and Campese redirected their existing victim base toward Pyur Global. This strategic reposit
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