A Ukrainian actor playing a fictional founder is the face of Pluritec, a cryptocurrency investment scheme that collapsed and relaunched under a new web address within months.

The company markets itself as an AI trading bot platform but operates as a multilevel marketing scam with no actual products. Pluritec's website refuses to name its real owners or executives. Instead, it credits "Miroslav Jogevic" as founder. That man doesn't exist.

In his place stands Ivan Podkalyuzin, a Ukrainian singer and instrumentalist who previously performed for Singwell, a singing school. Before Pluritec hired Podkalyuzin to pose as Jogevic, the company's marketing videos featured robodubbed AI avatars. The shift to using a real actor appears designed to lend credibility to what is essentially a Ponzi scheme operating under the Boris CEO fraud template—a scam typically run by Russians.

Pluritec's domain "pluritec.co" was privately registered on June 18, 2023. By November, the scheme had collapsed and relaunched under "pluritec.ltd," registered November 10, 2023. The company maintains a shell corporation certificate for "Pluritec Limited," supposedly incorporated in the UK on June 23, 2023. These certificates mean nothing. Scammers obtain them routinely with fabricated information.

The operation has no legitimate products or services. Affiliates can only market Pluritec membership itself—pure recruitment.

Money flows in cryptocurrency. Investors deposit funds with promises of daily passive returns based on investment tier. A $25 to $499 investment yields 1.5% daily for 20 days. At the highest level, investors putting in $25 to $1 million receive 3% daily for 200 days. The math guarantees collapse. Those returns are mathematically impossible without constant new investment flooding in.

The MLM compensation structure pays affiliates for recruiting other investors into the scheme. Pluritec ranks members through ten tiers—Sapphire through Black Diamond—based on downline investment volume. Moving from Sapphire requires generating $50,000 in investments from people below you. Ruby demands $100,000. Diamond requires $500,000. Blue Diamond needs $1 million. The structure incentivizes relentless recruitment over any legitimate business activity.

A staged promotional event video uploaded August 23 purports to show a London gathering. Podkalyuzin, playing Jogevic, wasn't actually present. Instead, Pluritec hired a cast of eastern European and London-based actors to create the appearance of a legitimate business conference.

This is the playbook: hide real ownership, create a fictional founder, use actors to perform legitimacy, promise impossible returns, and structure everything around recruiting new money. The scheme works until it doesn't—until the collapse comes and the operators move to a new domain and repeat.

Anyone considering joining should understand the basic reality: if leadership won't identify itself publicly, you're funding a scam, not a business.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is Pluritec and how does it operate?
Pluritec is a cryptocurrency investment platform marketed as an AI trading bot service. However, investigations reveal it functions as a multilevel marketing scheme with no legitimate products, operating as a Ponzi structure that collapsed and relaunched under different web addresses within months.

Who is the founder of Pluritec?
Pluritec credits "Miroslav Jogevic" as its founder, a fictional identity. The actual face of the company is Ivan Podkalyuzin, a Ukrainian singer and instrumentalist formerly associated with Singwell singing school, hired to portray the non-existent founder.

Why did Pluritec switch from AI avatars to a real actor?
The company initially used robodubbed AI avatars in marketing videos but transitioned to employing actual actor Ivan Podkalyuzin. This shift appears strateg


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