Scott Miller is still running schemes despite a federal freeze on his assets—and he's bragging about it in emails.

A court slapped Miller with a preliminary injunction on February 14th, 2016, after he cashed in as a top investor in the TelexFree Ponzi scheme, which bilked victims out of $3 billion. The order was supposed to lock down everything he owns: money, stocks, bonds, jewelry, vehicles, real estate. All of it frozen while civil litigation against him and other major TelexFree players moves forward.

Yet on May 5th, Miller sent an email to his list telling them exactly where he'd been: "Underground, basically printing money."

The message was pure multi-level marketing. Miller was pitching a new "unlimited daily income" opportunity that promised participants multiple checks a day. He never named the scheme. He just said it required "2 dedicated partners who help close your sales" and boasted that people were already pulling in $250, $500, and $750 checks.

The pitch contradicted itself in revealing ways. Miller claimed participants could start for nothing out of pocket. But then he explained the real barrier: capital. "There have been a few people who were dying to get started but didn't have the capital," he wrote. So he'd arranged financing. Borrow the startup money, join the scheme, get paid when you recruit others to do the same.

That's the core of it. No actual product or service. No retail customers. Just recruitment with borrowed money flowing in from the bottom.

Miller's email revealed his operation was struggling. He'd sent out a recruiting pitch "a few months ago" that generated so much response he'd been "simply helping team members close sales" ever since. Now he was back to mass emails. Something had stalled. Recruitment had dried up.

The timing is damning. Miller claims he's been too busy helping his "team" to send out any messages. Then recruitment flatlines and suddenly he's blasting his entire email list about financing options for new recruits. That's how these schemes work: you need constant fresh blood to keep the checks flowing.

What makes this brazen is the injunction itself. A federal court determined Miller had to stop. Instead, he's running a carbon copy of the scheme that got him sued in the first place. The names change. The mechanics stay the same.

The preliminary injunction was supposed to prevent exactly this—Miller using his newfound resources from the TelexFree scam to launch fresh operations. Whether federal authorities are monitoring Miller's compliance with the court order remains unclear. But his own email, sent weeks after the injunction took effect, suggests he's ignoring it completely. He's even providing a roadmap for anyone interested in joining: contact him for details on how to finance your entry into his latest operation.


🤖 Quick Answer

What was the TelexFree Ponzi scheme and Scott Miller's role?
TelexFree was a multi-level marketing operation that defrauded victims of approximately $3 billion. Scott Miller operated as a top investor in the scheme, profiting significantly from the fraudulent enterprise before facing legal consequences.

When did the court issue a preliminary injunction against Scott Miller?
Federal courts issued a preliminary injunction against Scott Miller on February 14th, 2016, following his substantial gains from the TelexFree Ponzi scheme, freezing all his assets pending civil litigation resolution.

What assets were frozen under the preliminary injunction?
The injunction froze Miller's entire asset portfolio, including liquid funds, equity securities, bonds, jewelry, vehicles, and real estate properties, pending the outcome of ongoing civil proceedings.

What evidence suggests Miller violated the asset freeze?
On May


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