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2.9

Average

TrustScore 3 out of 5

2 reviews

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2.9

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2 reviews in the last 12 months

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Rated 1 out of 5 stars

If you had looked me in the eye a month…

If you had looked me in the eye a month ago and told me I'd lose everything to a scam, I'd have laughed in your face. I was browsing Reddit for investment advice when someone suggested an exclusive underground trading pool. They transferred $10,000 worth of Solana to my account to 'practice.' I followed their exact signals, doubled the money in days, and withdrew $15,400 directly to my bank account. The scammer then strongly advised that I invest more so I could unlock 'VIP' rewards. I took out a massive credit card cash advance for $222,647, deposited it, and watched my balance explode to $1,930,266. Ready to retire on the spot, I hit withdraw on my $2 million balance. A pop-up stated I needed to cover a 5% broker commission upfront, exactly $100,000. I blindly sent it, only for them to instantly demand a 15% anti-money laundering deposit. That was the exact moment it dawned on me that it was a massive con. I frantically explained everything to my credit provider, and he referred me to a specialized digital forensics firm - FISCOP ADVISOR -. They launched a deep, forensic blockchain analysis, following the microscopic breadcrumbs through the dark web. They found the real identities behind the fake exchange, got international law enforcement involved, and my funds were actually recovered in full.

June 8, 2026
Unprompted review
Rated 1 out of 5 stars

I am a retired physical therapist from…

I am a retired physical therapist from Minnesota. I spent thirty-four years helping people recover from injuries and surgeries. I thought I was smart with my money. I had a pension, some savings, and I wanted to grow it a little so my wife and I could travel. I found Corex Solutions online. The website looked professional. It said "Corex Asset Management GmbH" and claimed to be an independent investment advisory firm for institutional investors in Switzerland. I figured if they worked with institutions, they were legitimate.

A man named Thomas called me. He had a slight accent and sounded very professional. He told me about their multi-asset strategies and how they managed over 45 billion rand in investments. He made it sound sophisticated and safe. I started with ten thousand dollars. My dashboard showed steady growth. Thomas called me every few days. He asked about my retirement plans and my wife's health. He made me feel like I was in good hands.

Then my wife needed surgery and I tried to withdraw fifteen thousand to cover the deductibles. My account froze. I called Thomas. Voicemail. I emailed support. No response. I called the main number and a woman told me I needed to pay a verification fee to unlock my account. I paid it. Then they asked for a compliance processing fee. I paid that too. Then they asked for a tax clearance fee.

That is when I started digging.

I found out the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority, FINMA, had issued a warning about corexsolutions.com on June 25, 2026. The website was not related to any Swiss company registered in the commercial register. The Swiss address they claimed was fake. The whole thing was an impersonation of a legitimate Swiss firm.

I also found out the domain was registered with privacy protection, meaning the real owner was hidden. The Gridinsoft review said there were caution points despite the domain being 9.1 years old. The FINMA warning confirmed what I already suspected. I was dealing with a fraud.

I reached out to a group called AY'RLp that a former colleague in healthcare finance mentioned. They helped me document everything and file reports with the authorities. They walked me through the recovery process step by step. With their guidance I managed to recover about twenty five percent of what I lost. But the rest is gone.

Thomas never called me back. The Swiss office does not exist. The 45 billion rand they claimed to manage was a lie. And I am left with nothing but a lesson I already knew but forgot. If it sounds too good to be true, it is.

May 7, 2026
Unprompted review

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