Quick Pay Group, also known as Qpay, entered a pre-launch phase in April 2014, with a stated official launch date of July 1st. The company, which claims operations from Belize, named "Larry Jones" as its CEO and founder, offering a generic biography. This description mentioned only a decade of "corporate management" and helping people "realize their true potential."
The "Larry Jones" identity appears fabricated. Its vague details suggest an attempt to provide a Western face for the operation. The real work happens elsewhere.
Jasbir Singh Awapal, listed as Chief Operation Officer and IT Senior Adviser, works as a web designer in New Delhi, India. He built the Quick Pay Solutions website. A link to his own firm, Awapal Solutions, sits hidden in the site's source code. Awapal Solutions specializes in building "MLM softwares," specifically including "investment plan MLM software."
This pattern points to Awapal running the entire operation from India, likely with partners whose names remain undisclosed. The Quick Pay Group website domain was registered on October 14, 2014, under "Moise Thomas" of "Quick Group Ltd," with a Belize City address. Thomas's actual role, or if he is even a real person, is not known.
Quick Pay Group claims fifteen subsidiary businesses, including a penny auction called Quick Bid. These claims lack substance; the company has no actual products or services to sell.
The scheme operates by having affiliates buy "units" for $495 each. Company materials show examples of people purchasing three units for $1,485 or fifteen units for $7,425. Quick Pay Group says products are "attached" to these units, but at launch, it provided no specific information about what those products are.
This structure defines a Ponzi scheme. Money flows in from new recruits buying units. Early participants receive payments from this incoming cash, creating an illusion of legitimate returns. When recruitment inevitably slows, the entire structure collapses, and most participants lose their investments.
Quick Pay Group's design mirrors the Zeek Rewards scheme. The SEC shut down Zeek Rewards in 2012 for operating an illegal pyramid scheme that defrauded investors of over $600 million. Like Zeek, Quick Pay Group offers no real product, demands upfront investment, and focuses entirely on recruitment bonuses hidden within its compensation materials.
The use of shell companies, offshore jurisdictions, fabricated executives, and real operatives working from India all point to a sophisticated fraud. The timing of its launch, just as regulators began to tighten scrutiny on MLM schemes, suggests the operators understood the risks involved. Avoid any involvement with Quick Pay Group.
