A Con Man's Playbook: How Villamor Sagadraca Keeps Launching Identical Ponzi Schemes

Villamor Sagadraca has a pattern. He launches a fraudulent investment scheme, watches it collapse under its own math, then launches another one almost identical to the last.

PaidAdZone is his latest operation. The website domain registered May 18, 2015, lists Sagadraca as owner with an incomplete address in Nonthaburi, Thailand. The scheme promises $15 for every $10 investors deposit—money paid out "just in few days." That's a 50% return in days. Sagadraca promises it through daily payouts, provided affiliates watch company-supplied ads each day to "qualify."

This is the same playbook he's run twice before.

In 2012, Sagadraca launched Satisfaction Bux, paying affiliates 1 cent for every new recruit. The scheme was small but unmistakably fraudulent. Last March, he launched RevHitz with nearly identical mechanics: $5 invested, $8 promised back. Same structure. Same math problem. The RevHitz site still operates, drawing traffic from Russia (32.4%) and Poland (17.4%). But Sagadraca already sensed the endgame approaching. That's why PaidAdZone appeared.

PaidAdZone and RevHitz are mirror images dressed up differently. Both require cash investment with no actual products or services to sell. Both dangle "advertising credits" as cover—window dressing to make the operation look legitimate. Affiliates invest money and supposedly earn returns while their ads supposedly run on the company website. The "ads" are theater. The credits mean nothing.

The real mechanics are pure Ponzi. Money from new investors gets shuffled to earlier investors as promised returns. When new investment slows—as it inevitably does—the scheme implodes.

PaidAdZone's compensation plan follows the same Ponzi mathematics as RevHitz. The company pays 5% commissions down three recruitment levels for bringing in new investors, with small cuts at each level (5% down to 3% to 2%). This recruiter focus isn't accidental. Ponzi schemes survive by pushing recruitment over everything else. New money is everything.

Free membership exists but means nothing. Real participation requires at least a $10 investment. Sagadraca needs cash flowing in from day one.

The fundamental problem remains unchanged from RevHitz to PaidAdZone: you cannot sustainably pay out more money than comes in. A $10 investment that pays $15 removes $5 from the company's pocket immediately. Scale that across thousands of investors and the mathematics becomes clear. The system collapses when recruitment stops.

Sagadraca knows this. He's watched it happen with his previous schemes. Yet he keeps launching them anyway, each time with slight variations on the same con. Different names. Different commission structures. Same fraud.

The RevHitz domain still operates, meaning Sagadraca is likely milking the last remaining cash from that operation while PaidAdZone recruits the next wave of victims. Once RevHitz can no longer sustain payouts, it quietly dies. PaidAdZone continues until the same moment arrives.

Then he'll launch scheme number four.


🤖 Quick Answer

Who is Villamor Sagadraca and what is his connection to PaidAdZone?
Villamor Sagadraca is identified as the owner of PaidAdZone, a scheme registered in Thailand in May 2015. He has a documented history of launching fraudulent investment operations with similar structures, including Satisfaction Bux in 2012.

What returns does PaidAdZone promise to investors?
PaidAdZone promises a 50% return on investments within days, offering $15 for every $10 deposited. Payments are allegedly distributed daily to affiliates who view company-supplied advertisements to maintain qualification.

What pattern characterizes Sagadraca's fraudulent schemes?
Sagadraca repeatedly launches mathematically unsustainable investment schemes that collapse, then launches nearly identical operations. His schemes typically involve recruitment-based models and promised daily


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