Residual Income In A Box (RIIAB), a platform owned by Randy Garrard, funnels participants into a variety of dubious multi-level marketing ventures. The core premise involves RIIAB members collectively promoting a single website while simultaneously being encouraged to join multiple recommended programs for a minimal upfront cost.
The RIIAB website lists numerous schemes, including recruitment operations like Decide Your Path and 4 Corners Alliance Group, cycler Ponzis such as Super 2×7, and cash gifting systems like All In One Profits, Paradise Payments, and iMarketing Fast Track. It also promotes Ponzi investment schemes like CashBotClub and Magnetic Gratitude, alongside recruitment-focused matrix programs like Five Dollar Funnel and Lead Lightning. Garrard himself has previously been involved in Paul Darby’s YouGetPaidFast, a $28 gifting scheme.
The newly launched RIIAB Feeder Matrix is designed to generate funds for affiliates to join these various advertised schemes. The platform offers no retailable products or services; affiliates can only market RIIAB Feeder Matrix memberships. Its compensation plan relies on recruiting new affiliates through three independent 2×3 matrices, each functioning as a cycler.
In a 2×3 matrix, an affiliate sits at the top with two positions beneath them. The next level generates eight positions, and the third level creates fourteen positions in total. Commissions are paid out once all fourteen positions are filled. The Phase 1 matrix costs $5.50 to enter, with participants paying fees to unlock levels and receiving payments as positions fill. Phase 2 requires a $57 investment, and Phase 3 costs $570.
Affiliate membership in RIIAB Feeder Matrix is free, but participation in the income opportunity requires purchasing matrix positions ranging from $5.50 to $570. Given Garrard’s history, RIIAB Feeder Matrix operates as a straightforward three-tier gifting scheme. Participants pay between $5.50 and $570 to qualify for payments from new recruits.
These payments constitute 100% of the funds entering the scheme, defining RIIAB Feeder Matrix as a cash gifting operation. Such schemes inevitably collapse when new participant recruitment slows, causing payments to stall and eventually cease. At this point, the scheme collapses, and Garrard is presumed to retain any remaining trapped funds. Garrard’s prior involvement in similar schemes suggests he understands the mechanics of these operations, potentially profiting from both RIIAB Feeder Matrix and the subsequent third-party programs he promotes.
