Amos Brazan launched NWC Living on June 22, 2016, a scheme designed to funnel new participants into National Wealth Center, a collapsing cash gifting operation. Brazan’s name does not appear on the NWC Living website, though his Tennessee address is listed in domain records. His history reveals a pattern of operating feeder schemes.

Brazan previously ran The Rush Opportunity, a feeder for All In One Profits, identified as a cash gifting scam. That website is now suspended by its hosting provider. Earlier, Brazan was an affiliate with World Team Builder, a downline builder that directed people into multi-level marketing schemes.

NWC Living offers no discernable products or services. Affiliates purchase and sell memberships to one another. They also buy $2.50 positions within a compensation plan. Each position includes advertising credits displayed on the NWC Living site, credits that possess no real market value.

The operational model is simple. An affiliate pays $2.50 to join. This payment allows them to receive four $2.50 payments from other affiliates they recruit or who join after them. Upon collecting $10, they pay another $2.50 to remain active and pursue the next $10. This cycle repeats until the scheme fails.

The financial mathematics of NWC Living are unsustainable. To distribute $10 to a participant, four new participants must purchase positions at the bottom. As recruitment inevitably slows, the waiting list for payouts grows. Participants then wait longer for their $10, and eventually, new recruits stop joining altogether.

Brazan's primary objective with NWC Living is not the scheme itself but its function as a feeder operation. Marketing materials openly state that NWC Living exists to direct members into National Wealth Center, a larger cash gifting scheme initiated by Peter Wolfing. Traffic data indicates National Wealth Center has seen a significant decline since October. It is a failing scheme, and Brazan is actively recruiting individuals for it.

This strategy is not new for Brazan. He employed identical tactics with The Rush Opportunity, which also directed recruits into a failing scheme. Brazan has established a niche: identifying struggling cash gifting operations and building smaller schemes specifically to supply them with new victims.

Individuals who invest in NWC Living are not engaging in legitimate business. They are essentially gifting money to their recruiter, anticipating four other people will gift money to them before the entire structure collapses. Statistically, most participants will lose their initial investment and never receive the promised four payments. The only individuals who profit are those at the top during the initial rapid growth phase, a phase that ends quickly in such schemes.

Cash gifting is illegal in most jurisdictions due to its inherent unsustainability. NWC Living operates in a legally ambiguous area, claiming to sell advertising credits and memberships rather than explicitly identifying itself as a cash gifting scheme. The outcome, however, remains consistent: money flows upward, aspirations are dashed, and Brazan continues to employ the same failed methodology.

Victims of such schemes can report them to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) at ReportFraud.ftc.gov.