A trio of promoters promised nearly 25,000 investors their money back. Then they changed their minds.

Blaine Williams, Mark Campese, and Jim Anderson launched Noble 8 Revolution as a Ponzi scheme designed to trap cash from people burned by its predecessor, Noble 7 Crowdfunding. They dangled a simple carrot: a $50 refund to cover losses from the earlier scam. It worked. About 4,000 people paid up.

Last month, Williams, Campese, and Anderson abruptly reversed course. No refunds coming, they announced. No explanation either—just vague talk about a "confidential settlement agreement" that somehow prevented Noble 8 from receiving any money.

The three men had run Noble 7 Crowdfunding after another Ponzi scheme called Waszupp Global collapsed. Williams and Campese held top positions in both failed ventures. Anderson joined the team for the Noble 8 push. They knew exactly how these matrix cyclers work: money flows in from new recruits, gets funneled to people at the top, and newer investors get nothing.

When the promised refunds evaporated, furious investors demanded answers. A "Moving Forward" call was scheduled for March 23rd to explain what happened.

Instead of owning their involvement, Williams and Campese claimed they'd only handled "primary marketing and training" for Noble 7. They said the operation couldn't build the platform it promised. After a few days of collecting $50 payments, it became clear the people running it lacked the competence to handle the growth. So they shut down registration.

That's when Williams and Campese bailed. They said they formally disengaged from the operation—a decision field leaders supposedly encouraged.

The explanation conveniently ignored one crucial detail: both men had already pocketed money from the scheme. In typical fashion for operators of these frauds, they now claim they never saw a dime. Not from the $200,000 collected from those 4,000 early investors. Not one dollar in personal salary. Noble 8 never received the funds either, they insist.

No one in law enforcement has shut this operation down yet. The scheme continues to recruit, targeting people who've already lost money in previous iterations. Williams, Campese, and Anderson have built a playbook: create urgency, offer false hope through promised refunds, take the money, disappear into the next venture when pressure mounts.

Nearly 25,000 people have been drawn into Noble 8 Revolution so far. Most will learn the hard way what Ponzi cycler participants always discover too late: in a zero-sum game, the house always wins—and the house belongs to Williams, Campese, and Anderson.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is the Noble 8 Revolution scheme?
Noble 8 Revolution is a Ponzi scheme launched by promoters Blaine Williams, Mark Campese, and Jim Anderson targeting approximately 25,000 investors. Initially, they promised $50 refunds to compensate victims of the earlier Noble 7 Crowdfunding scam, attracting about 4,000 participants before reversing the offer without explanation.

Why did the promoters cancel the refund promise?
The three promoters abruptly reversed their refund commitment, citing a "confidential settlement agreement" that allegedly prevented Noble 8 from receiving funds. No detailed explanation was provided to investors regarding this sudden policy change or the specifics of the settlement agreement.

What is the connection to previous scams?
Williams and Campese previously operated Noble 7 Crowdfunding, which succeeded another Ponzi scheme called


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