P2 Tron's Ponzi Shell Game Uses Fake Identities and Worthless Promises

A cryptocurrency scheme called P2 Tron is operating with hidden operators, fake personalities, and a compensation structure built entirely on taking money from new recruits.

The operation reveals nothing about who actually runs it. The website domain p2tron.com was privately registered on August 19, 2020—a deliberate tactic to hide ownership. Two names appear to manage the scheme: Shawn Kim administers the official Facebook group, and Frank Trenado moderates it.

Both men are ghosts. Kim's Facebook profile has been dormant for years, yet someone recently used it to promote other schemes including USI-Tech and Jeunesse. One of Kim's posts mentions "Richmond," allegedly a P2 Tron co-creator, but provides no further details. Whether Kim is even a real person remains unclear.

Trenado's profile hasn't been active since 2013. His YouTube channel contains just two videos: a 2015 Primerica marketing clip where he appears briefly, and a promotional video for Eyeline Trading, another documented Ponzi scheme. Both profiles claim a California base.

When operators hide behind dormant accounts and won't identify themselves, the message is simple: they know what they're doing is wrong.

P2 Tron makes money one way—by getting recruits to hand over cash. The scheme offers no actual products or services. Members buy in to market the membership itself, nothing else. For this privilege, recruits get access to a digital marketing library that has zero resale value.

The investment starts at $10 in TRON cryptocurrency and spirals upward through ten tiers reaching $2,560.

Here's how the con works. Five dollars of the initial buy-in goes into what P2 Tron calls "Xfactor," a 2×1 matrix cycler. The math is designed to look simple: fill two positions under you, pocket $5, and you've doubled your money. Repeat the cycle across all ten tiers.

Except it's impossible. In a 2×1 matrix, you need two people to fill under you for each position. That's exponential growth nobody can sustain. Eventually, the scheme collapses because there aren't enough new people paying in to satisfy the promises to earlier recruits. The money always flows from the bottom to the top.

P2 Tron layers on recruitment commissions through something it calls "Prime," a unilevel structure that pays commissions based on how many people you personally recruit and how many they recruit below them. This is the pyramid—money comes in from recruitment, period.

This is textbook Ponzi mechanics dressed up in cryptocurrency language. The scheme takes cash from recruits, promises returns through a cycler that can't mathematically work, and relies entirely on recruiting more people to fund earlier promises.

The hidden identities, the dormant accounts, the cryptocurrency veil, the nonexistent product—these aren't oversights. They're design features of a scheme built to extract money from people before regulators catch on.

Anyone considering P2 Tron should ask themselves one question: If this is legitimate, why are the people running it hiding?


🤖 Quick Answer

What is P2 Tron and how does it operate?
P2 Tron is a cryptocurrency scheme operating on the TRON blockchain with concealed operators using fake identities. It employs a Ponzi structure where compensation derives primarily from recruiting new participants rather than legitimate business activity, utilizing hidden domain registration and dormant social media accounts for promotion.

Who operates P2 Tron?
The actual operators remain undisclosed. Two names—Shawn Kim and Frank Trenado—appear as administrators of the official Facebook group, though both maintain dormant or inactive profiles. A third individual allegedly named Richmond is mentioned as co-creator but lacks verifiable documentation or public presence.

What deceptive practices does P2 Tron employ?
The scheme uses private domain registration to obscure ownership, repurposed social media accounts previously promoting other schemes like USI-Tech and Jeunesse


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