The Ledger

Field guidance and analysis from the Cryptoslock custody desk.

  • The Yield That Never Paid: $74,900 Traced and Returned From Bright Finance

    [ the ledger / recovery story ]

    The Yield That Never Paid: $74,900 Traced and Returned From Bright Finance

    Bright Finance promised a steady yield that always showed up on the dashboard and never in Aisha’s wallet. $74,900 later, the chain told the real story.

    Cryptoslock Custody Desk · Recovery Story · 28 Jun 2026

    Bright Finance marketed a “managed yield” product with returns that looked modest enough to be believable. A Dubai consultant, Aisha deposited in USDT and watched her balance tick up daily for two months.

    The “yield” was a number on a screen. When she tried to withdraw, a “smart-contract unlock fee” was demanded, then a larger one. The platform had never staked or invested anything — deposits were swept on arrival.

    Because the operators had pooled funds rather than dispersing them immediately, our on-chain trace caught most of the balance at an off-ramp. We filed the freeze, verified Aisha’s ownership, and returned 88% of her $74,900. The Bright Finance wallet cluster is now part of our watchlist.

    Operator on file
    Bright Finance — read the scam-broker dossier
    View the record ›

    A “yield” you can see but can’t withdraw?

    If a platform shows returns but blocks payouts, the funds may still be traceable. The sooner we look, the better.

    Open a CaseSee case studies
  • From Daily Pressure Calls to a Refund: €33,700 Recovered From EmpireFX

    [ the ledger / recovery story ]

    From Daily Pressure Calls to a Refund: €33,700 Recovered From EmpireFX

    The daily pressure calls from EmpireFX only stopped when Carlos asked to withdraw. The Cryptoslock custody desk picked up where they went quiet.

    Cryptoslock Custody Desk · Recovery Story · 24 Jun 2026

    EmpireFX worked through relentless contact — calls, messages, and a “senior broker” urging Carlos, a Madrid contractor, to deposit more before a “limited window” closed. He funded the account by card and crypto, watching invented gains climb.

    When Carlos requested a withdrawal, the calls dried up and a “profit tax” appeared in their place. €33,700 sat behind a wall of conditions. He came to us with his statements and the broker’s messages.

    We traced the crypto deposits to a reachable exchange and prepared the card disputes with full documentation that no genuine service had been rendered. The combined effort recovered 72% of his loss, and the case notes now reinforce our public record on EmpireFX.

    Operator on file
    EmpireFX — read the scam-broker dossier
    View the record ›

    Pressured into depositing more?

    Urgency is the tell. If a broker is rushing you, slow down and bring the details to us first.

    Open a CaseSee case studies
  • Paying to Get Paid: How a Capital Swift Victim Got S$120,000 Back

    [ the ledger / recovery story ]

    Paying to Get Paid: How a Capital Swift Victim Got S$120,000 Back

    Capital Swift kept asking Wei to pay one more fee to release his returns. The fees were the scam. Here is how S$120,000 found its way back.

    Cryptoslock Custody Desk · Recovery Story · 18 Jun 2026

    Capital Swift presented as an established investment firm, complete with forged registration details. A Singapore engineer, Wei was told his portfolio had matured handsomely — he just needed to clear a “release bond,” then an “anti-money-laundering fee,” before withdrawing.

    Each payment unlocked another demand. This advance-fee structure is designed to extract money from the hope of recovering money. By the time Wei stopped, he had sent S$120,000 in USDT and bank transfers.

    We documented every payment, clustered the receiving wallets to a single operator, and identified the off-ramp and banking rails involved. With an attested freeze and coordinated recall requests, 83% of his funds were returned. We also flagged the forged registration to the relevant registry.

    Operator on file
    Capital Swift — read the scam-broker dossier
    View the record ›

    Asked to pay fees to “release” your funds?

    No legitimate firm makes you pay to get your own money back. Talk to us before you send anything more.

    Open a CaseSee case studies
  • The Account Manager Who Vanished: €58,400 Recovered From Elite Peak Capital

    [ the ledger / recovery story ]

    The Account Manager Who Vanished: €58,400 Recovered From Elite Peak Capital

    Martina’s “account manager” at Elite Peak Capital called every morning — until the day the money was supposed to come back. €58,400 later, here is how the trail led home.

    Cryptoslock Custody Desk · Recovery Story · 12 Jun 2026

    Elite Peak Capital ran a textbook boiler room. Martina, a Hamburg pharmacist, was assigned a charming manager who built trust over weeks, honoured one small early withdrawal, then encouraged her to scale up across cards and USDT.

    The dashboard gains were fiction. A “performance tax” blocked her withdrawal, a surprise “bonus” locked the balance, and soon the platform stopped loading and the calls stopped coming. She had lost €58,400.

    We built two evidence tracks at once — reason-coded card chargebacks and an on-chain trace of the USDT-Tron deposits. The crypto leg led to a regional exchange we could reach with a freeze request. Combined, the two channels returned 64% of her money: a partial result, and an honest one, given how much had already been cashed out.

    Operator on file
    Elite Peak Capital — read the scam-broker dossier
    View the record ›

    Was your “managed account” a boiler room?

    Card deposits and crypto top-ups can often be pursued on parallel tracks. Bring us both.

    Open a CaseSee case studies
  • A Frozen Bithoven Account, Unlocked: Returning CA$96,500 to a Toronto Trader

    [ the ledger / recovery story ]

    A Frozen Bithoven Account, Unlocked: Returning CA$96,500 to a Toronto Trader

    Daniel could deposit to Bithoven instantly. Withdrawing was a different story. Eleven days after he called us, most of his money was moving home.

    Cryptoslock Custody Desk · Recovery Story · 06 Jun 2026

    Bithoven presented itself as a mid-tier crypto exchange with tight spreads and a slick app. A Toronto trader, Daniel moved CA$96,500 across BTC and USDT over a few weeks, reassured by small test withdrawals that paid out early on.

    When he tried to cash out in full, a “capital verification hold” appeared, liftable only by depositing more. He recognised the pattern and stopped — then contacted the Cryptoslock custody desk the same day.

    Speed was everything. Because Daniel reported fast, the bulk of his balance was still pooled in Bithoven’s consolidation wallet. We mapped the flow, attributed the receiving off-ramp, and filed a documented freeze before the funds dispersed. He recovered 91% — one of the strongest outcomes a frozen-exchange case can reach.

    Operator on file
    Bithoven — read the scam-broker dossier
    View the record ›

    Can’t withdraw from an “exchange”?

    The first days matter most — funds are often still pooled. Reporting fast is the single biggest factor in recovery.

    Open a CaseSee case studies
  • How Crypto Custody Breaks: Eight Scam Patterns and How Much Is Actually Recoverable

    [ the ledger / how-crypto-custody-breaks ]

    How Crypto Custody Breaks: Eight Scam Patterns and How Much Is Actually Recoverable

    Most crypto isn’t lost to some exotic exploit. It’s lost when custody — control of the keys, or trust in whoever holds them — breaks in one of a handful of predictable ways. Here is what those breaks look like from our side of the desk, and the honest range of what can be recovered.

    Cryptoslock Custody Desk · The Ledger · 9 min read

    [01]Custody is really about control

    Every crypto scam is, underneath, a custody breach. Either you are tricked into signing away control of your own keys, or you hand funds to a counterparty who never intended to give them back. The asset doesn’t vanish — control of it moves. That distinction matters, because recovery is the work of re-establishing a claim over those funds before they pass beyond reach.

    On a public blockchain, the movement is visible. What decides the outcome is not whether we can see the funds — we almost always can — but whether we can reach them at a point where someone is obliged to freeze them. The eight patterns below are the ones that fill our case files, each built on an operator already documented in our scam directory.

    [02]The eight breaches we see most

    Each links to a full case file naming the operator involved. The recovered figures are the real outcomes from those files — not promises.

    Read the detailed write-ups in our custody recovery case studies. Together they show the same lesson from eight angles: the trail survives, but the window to act on it does not.

    [03]What actually decides recovery

    Speed. Stolen funds usually sit pooled in a consolidation wallet before they are laundered or cashed out. The first days — sometimes the first hours — are when the largest share is still frozen-in-place. The pig-butchering claimant who reported within eight days recovered 79%; the drainer victim, whose ETH was swapped within minutes, recovered 26%. The difference was almost entirely timing.

    Rails. Centrally-issued assets such as stablecoins, and funds that touch a centralized exchange, can be frozen at the source. Coins swapped on a decentralised exchange or pushed through a mixer generally cannot. The same case can split both ways — which is why a number like 58% is honest and a flat ‘100% guaranteed’ is a red flag in itself.

    The off-ramp. Recovery happens at the moment fraud proceeds try to become spendable money at a regulated venue. A documented on-chain trace, an attestation, and a freeze request placed before that conversion are what turn a visible trail into returned funds. Across these eight files the outcomes range from 26% to 88% — honest numbers that track how fast each victim acted and where the money went.

    The case files
    See all eight custody-breach recoveries, with outcomes
    Open the case studies ›

    [04]The first 72 hours

    If you think your custody has been breached, this is the checklist that protects the most recoverable value:

    • Revoke any open token approvals on the affected wallet — stop the bleed first.
    • Record every transaction hash, wallet address, and platform URL while it is still in front of you.
    • Do not pay any ‘tax,’ ‘fee,’ or ‘release’ demand — that is the same scam continuing.
    • If cards or bank transfers were involved, notify your issuer immediately to open a dispute window.
    • Preserve every message, screenshot, and name used by anyone who contacted you.
    • Bring the whole record to a custody-recovery desk before the funds reach an off-ramp.

    One more warning. After a loss, a second wave often arrives: a ‘recovery service’ that asks for an upfront fee to ‘unlock’ your funds. That is double-fraud — we document exactly that in the AssetImperial case. A legitimate desk traces first and is transparent about odds; it never asks you to pay to release money that is already yours. If you want to see how we work before you commit anything, open a case and we’ll review the trail.

    Think your custody has been breached?

    Bring us the transactions and the timeline. We’ll tell you honestly what the on-chain trail supports — and what it doesn’t.

    Open a CaseVisit Cryptoslock
  • How We Recovered £41,200 From the Aquila Markets Withdrawal-Fee Trap

    [ the ledger / recovery story ]

    How We Recovered £41,200 From the Aquila Markets Withdrawal-Fee Trap

    Aquila Markets looked like a real CFD brokerage — right up until Priya tried to take her profits out. Then came the fees. Here is how the Cryptoslock custody desk got most of it back.

    Cryptoslock Custody Desk · Recovery Story · 31 May 2026

    A London marketing manager, Priya had funded an Aquila Markets account over three months — first by card, later in USDT her “account manager” insisted was faster. The dashboard showed steady gains, and for a while everything felt legitimate.

    The trouble began at withdrawal. Aquila Markets demanded a “liquidity release fee,” then a “tax clearance” payment, each one a precondition for the next. When Priya stopped paying, her account was quietly locked. She had lost £41,200.

    She brought us every transaction hash, card statement, and chat log. We traced the USDT to a consolidation wallet feeding two off-ramps, filed an attested freeze request, and ran card chargebacks in parallel. Within seven weeks, 78% of her money was back — the tranche that had reached a compliant exchange plus the card deposits the issuers reversed.

    Operator on file
    Aquila Markets — read the scam-broker dossier
    View the record ›

    Locked out by “withdrawal fees”?

    If a platform is charging you to release your own money, that is the scam continuing. Bring us the transactions and we will tell you honestly what can be recovered.

    Open a CaseSee case studies
[ ] Open a Case
FinCENSAR-ready filings
IC3 / FBICyber complaint packets
FCA / BaFinEU/UK reporting
CHAIN OF CUSTODYsigned & timestamped
EST · NEW YORK667 Madison Avenue