Partners Pay, a company with an opaque ownership structure, registered its partnerspay.com domain in March 2013 under the name "Adela Wex." This name appears to be a fabrication.
The actual owner's identity began to emerge with a previous scheme, DailyPaidProfit, which launched two months later on May 10, 2013. Payment receipts from that operation named "Adela Rivis" as owner. This individual registered DailyPaidProfit at the same St. Clair address in Alabama now used by Partners Pay. The St. Clair Road address in Moody, Alabama, is incomplete or bogus.
DailyPaidProfit promised affiliate investors daily returns of 1.5 to 2 percent. The scheme lasted only two weeks. By May 24, 2013, the website had gone dark.
Before DailyPaidProfit, Ads Visit Network (AVN) began in March 2013 under an anonymous registration. It offered 2 to 3 percent daily returns over 60 to 70 days. An undated announcement on the AVN site stated: "Transfer AVN To DPP !!!!!! Transfer AVN to Daily Paid Profit has been Completed."
The same operator appears to be behind all three schemes. Whether using the name Adela Wex, Adela Rivis, or another alias, the individual ran AVN until its collapse. They then rebranded it as DailyPaidProfit. When that scheme failed in days, the operator disappeared. Now, they have resurfaced as Partners Pay.
Partners Pay's compensation structure relies on redistributing money from new recruits to earlier members. The company calls this a "revenue-sharing model." Its mechanics precisely mirror those of the previous failed operations.
Affiliates join at four levels: Bronze, Silver, Gold, or Diamond. They receive "VIP points" based on their membership level, for example, 10 for Silver, 50 for Gold, or 100 for Diamond. Individuals can also buy these points separately for a dollar each. The company then pays out a daily percentage return to members, funded by incoming affiliate fees and investment levels.
The scheme includes two-level recruitment commissions on money invested by downline members. Partners Pay offers advertising credits as a superficial pretense of legitimacy. But there is no actual product or service being sold. Members simply pay in for the chance to earn returns from other members' payments.
This marks the third iteration of what appears to be the same operation. The operator follows a clear routine: launch under a new name, promise unsustainable returns, collapse when new money stops flowing, wait for affiliates to move on, then repeat the cycle. Domain registrations, addresses, announced partnerships, and the timeline all point to one person cycling through schemes and aliases.
The history of these operations serves as a direct warning for anyone considering Partners Pay.
