The Digital Vault Fraud Behind Nui's Leadership

A Nui co-founder appears to be running a separate financial scheme that his own company just tried to bury.

In March, Nui issued a memo to its affiliates denying any connection to something called The Digital Vault. The timing was deliberate. The company was trying to distance itself from a project that makes promises no legitimate financial institution would make.

What Nui executives don't want their members discussing publicly is this: The Digital Vault is being sold as a real bank account with full banking features. Affiliates recruit others through separate referral links, creating their own downline outside Nui's structure. They're then sold RevvCard, a debit card that promises to load "all of their cards, accounts, and so on" onto a single platform. RevvCard supposedly works with both regular money and Nui's Kala cryptocurrency.

The sales pitch is where things get extreme. Digital Vault marketers claimed the service would become "the largest Digital Bank and Crypto Exchange on the planet." They promised 3-second transfers between accounts—faster than Venmo or PayPal. They claimed $1.5 billion was already under management. They said the encryption used the same technology as the Pentagon and took four years to develop. They promised funds would be "guaranteed by overnight treasuries and by Lloyds of London."

They also promised FDIC insurance protecting accounts fully.

The FDIC website shows no registration for either The Digital Vault or RevvCard.

A search of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation's database turns up nothing. No Digital Vault. No RevvCard. No legitimate banking entity operating under either name.

Nui's March 11th statement was crystal clear about who stands behind this scheme. CEO Darren Olayan, President Reid Tanaka, and Keystone Leaders Jim Pare and Casey Combden are not affiliated with Digital Vault, the company claimed. But the statement itself suggests otherwise—why issue such a forceful denial unless senior leadership had a reason to worry about the connection?

Nui made clear that any affiliate promoting Digital Vault through Nui channels faced "compliance violations and subject to corporate action." The message was simple: stop talking about this or face consequences. It worked. Finding reliable information about The Digital Vault is now nearly impossible online.

What remains documented are the claims that got made before Nui's scrubbing campaign began. RevvCard was supposed to have a 1.73-inch OLED touch screen, dynamic EMV chip, and biometric fingerprint authentication. The Vault would offer checking accounts, bill pay, loans, mortgages—the full suite of banking services.

None of these services appear to exist in any regulated form. No bank charter. No FDIC backing. No legitimate financial infrastructure.

Yet members of Nui have been recruited into this system, told their money is safe, promised returns on a service that doesn't legally exist. Someone built The Digital Vault. Someone is taking money. And Nui's leadership knows exactly who that someone is.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is The Digital Vault and its connection to Nui?
The Digital Vault is a financial service marketed as a legitimate bank account offering comprehensive banking features. According to reports, it operates through affiliate recruitment networks separate from Nui's official structure, with members earning through referral links and downline commissions while promoting associated products like RevvCard.

What is RevvCard in relation to The Digital Vault?
RevvCard is a debit card product promoted alongside The Digital Vault. It claims to consolidate multiple financial accounts and cards onto a single platform. The card is distributed through the same affiliate recruitment network that markets The Digital Vault, creating parallel income streams outside standard company channels.

Why did Nui distance itself from The Digital Vault?
In March, Nui issued an official memo to affiliates denying any organizational connection to The Digital Vault. The company's disassociation suggests concern


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