A Ponzi scheme thought dead has risen again. Secure Reannex, a cryptocurrency investment platform operating out of Pakistan, appears to be the third iteration of B4U Global—a $46.7 million fraud that collapsed in 2021.

The evidence is damning. Secure Reannex's website hides the names and faces of its actual owners. The company can't even spell its own name consistently in its branding. Its domain was privately registered on June 27th, 2022, months after B4U Global imploded. And according to marketing materials, old victims from both B4U Global and a short-lived reboot called SR Group are being funneled directly into Secure Reannex's system.

B4U Global launched in 2020 and promised monthly returns up to 20%. It was a textbook Ponzi scheme that unraveled around mid-2021, evaporating roughly $46.7 million in investor money. The operation's leader was Saifur Rehman Khan. Pakistani authorities arrested him after the collapse. As of March 2022, Khan remained in custody awaiting a bail hearing while different government agencies squabbled over who should handle the prosecution.

SR Group emerged next as a transparent attempt to continue the fraud. The name stood for "Saif ur Rehman Group"—a barely disguised reference to Khan himself. That operation folded quickly. Now Secure Reannex has taken over, maintaining the "SRG" initials in its branding while Khan sits in jail. The conclusion is obvious: Khan's accomplices are running this new scheme.

The purported CEO is a man named Ken Barbaros. He doesn't exist. Investigators found no trace of Barbaros anywhere outside Secure Reannex's presentation materials. He's either a hired actor or a stolen identity used to add legitimacy to the operation. All of Secure Reannex's website traffic originates from Pakistan, according to SimilarWeb data.

The mechanics are identical to the original fraud. Secure Reannex has no actual products or services to sell. Affiliates simply recruit other investors and pocket commissions. Members buy in through cryptocurrency, investing between $50 and $50,000 or more in USDT tokens across six package tiers named Rose, Tulip, Lotus, Lily, Daisy, and Jasmine.

The promised returns arrive monthly over either 3 or 5-year periods, though Secure Reannex never specifies exact percentages. The scheme demands reinvestment once payouts hit 350% or cumulative returns reach 700%. The company extracts a 5% fee whenever anyone tries to withdraw.

This is how dead schemes stay dead: they rebrand, relocate slightly, and recycle their victim lists. B4U Global didn't disappear—it transformed. Those who lost money the first time are being asked to trust with their money again, now under a different logo and a fictional CEO.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is Secure Reannex and its connection to B4U Global?
Secure Reannex is a cryptocurrency investment platform allegedly operating from Pakistan, suspected to be the third iteration of B4U Global, a fraudulent scheme that collapsed in 2021 after raising $46.7 million. The platform reportedly directs former victims from B4U Global and its reboot SR Group into its system.

What are the red flags associated with Secure Reannex?
The platform conceals ownership identities on its website, displays inconsistent branding and spelling of its own name, registered its domain privately in June 2022 after B4U Global's collapse, and systematically recruits previous victims from defunct predecessor schemes.

How did B4U Global operate as a Ponzi scheme?
B4U Global, launched in 2020, promised monthly returns reaching 20% to investors.


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