Scott Huss just landed on BehindMLM's DMCA Wall of Shame after filing a bogus takedown notice against the site—and the backstory gets weirder from there.

Until recently, Huss barely registered on BehindMLM's radar. The site cited a social media post from him last October linking him to Mavie Global's Dubai office, where he was operating as a former iGenius promoter. At the time, the post served as evidence that the Ponzi scheme was harboring fugitive John Barksdale. That's where Huss stayed in the coverage—a footnote.

Then he popped up again last month in a far more damning context. Documents seized by the Department of Justice from fraudster Rodney Burton showed Huss, signing as Scott Lee Huss, had witnessed testimony affirming Burton's identity. This was part of Burton's pathetic attempt to shield himself from criminal charges by surrounding himself with fake legal documents. Huss, apparently a sovereign citizen true believer himself, played along in Burton's delusional fantasy that paperwork could put him above the law.

This time around, BehindMLM dug deeper and connected Huss to Wealth Generators, iMarkets Live, and Beyond.

That's when Huss snapped. On August 11th, he fired off a hostile email demanding immediate removal of all personal information—every variation of his name: Scott Huss, Huss, Scottyy, Scotty Huss. He threatened federal lawsuits and legal action if the site didn't comply immediately.

BehindMLM's response was straightforward: Request denied. The site's publisher explained plainly that no permission is needed to report news. When Huss insisted otherwise, the publisher sent him a link to Wikipedia's fair use entry. Case closed, as far as the publisher was concerned.

Huss didn't accept the answer. Instead, he filed a DMCA takedown notice on August 11th—the same day as his initial email threat.

There's a problem with that move. Anyone filing a DMCA takedown must be a copyright owner and must swear under penalty of perjury that they have a valid claim. Filing one knowing the claim lacks merit is illegal. BehindMLM's policy spells this out clearly: third-party images and logos are used only to represent specific companies or individuals being covered, which falls squarely within fair use protections.

Huss either doesn't understand copyright law or doesn't care. Filing a DMCA you know is baseless—knowing fair use applies—is bad faith abuse of federal law. It's exactly why BehindMLM maintains its Wall of Shame, documenting operators and associates who weaponize copyright claims instead of engaging with criticism.

For a guy involved with multiple sketchy ventures and caught up in sovereign citizen conspiracy thinking, Huss's next move was predictable. When the facts worked against him, he reached for legal threats. When those failed, he reached for a weapon that had nothing to do with actual copyright—just another desperate attempt to silence reporting on his activities.


🤖 Quick Answer

Who is Scott Huss and why was he added to BehindMLM's DMCA Wall of Shame?
Scott Huss is a former iGenius promoter linked to Mavie Global's Dubai operations. He was added to BehindMLM's DMCA Wall of Shame after filing a reportedly baseless DMCA takedown notice against the site, which had referenced him in coverage of Ponzi scheme activities and fugitive harboring allegations.

What is BehindMLM's DMCA Wall of Shame?
BehindMLM's DMCA Wall of Shame is a public listing maintained by the MLM watchdog site documenting individuals who have filed allegedly fraudulent or unfounded DMCA takedown notices in attempts to suppress legitimate editorial coverage and investigative reporting published on the platform.

**What connection does Scott Huss have to Mavie Global and iGe


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