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Fortuneprimeglobalirts.com: ASIC-flagged clone scheme that cost a Seattle accountant $228,000

By Linda Bell · Published April 27, 2026 · 10 min read · Source: Cryptocurrency Tag
MiningSecurity
Fortuneprimeglobalirts.com: ASIC-flagged clone scheme that cost a Seattle accountant $228,000

Fortuneprimeglobalirts.com: ASIC-flagged clone scheme that cost a Seattle accountant $228,000

Linda BellLinda Bell8 min read·Just now

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Press enter or click to view image in full sizeSeattle Accountant Lost $228K to fortuneprimeglobalirts.com
Seattle Accountant Lost $228K to fortuneprimeglobalirts.com

A 51-year-old certified public accountant from Seattle, Washington, had spent twenty-six years advising small business owners on their finances. She was meticulous, risk-aware, and had never fallen for a scam before. But the previous year had been brutal: her husband was diagnosed with a rare neurological disorder, and the cost of experimental treatments was devouring their savings faster than she could replenish them.

Desperate for a way to grow her remaining capital without taking on debt, she began searching online for reputable investment platforms. A Facebook ad caught her attention. It featured the logo of Fortune Prime Global, an Australian-regulated broker she vaguely recognised, and promised “AI-powered trading with institutional-grade returns.”

The ad directed her to fortuneprimeglobalirts.com. The website was polished and professional. It displayed what appeared to be a valid Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) license number — AFSL 400364 — and prominently featured the regulator’s logo. The platform listed a London office address and a Sydney headquarters. It offered trading in forex, crypto, and contracts for difference (CFD).

A “senior account manager” named “James” called her the same day. James was patient, knowledgeable, and never pushy. He explained that he was a licensed financial advisor and that the platform’s proprietary AI system generated “reliable weekly returns of 5‑10% with minimal risk.” He sent her official-looking documents bearing ASIC’s branding. He asked about her husband’s condition, remembered his name, and offered sympathy when she hesitated. “I know you’re worried about the medical bills,” James said. “That’s exactly why you can’t afford to miss this. The AI handles everything. You just watch your money grow.”

She made a small test deposit of US$1,000. Her dashboard showed steady, believable gains. A withdrawal of US$3,000 was approved without any fees or delay. The money arrived in her bank account within three days. Convinced the platform was legitimate, she transferred her savings and her husband’s treatment fund — a total of US$228,000 — into her account. Her dashboard balance climbed steadily.

When she attempted to withdraw US$50,000 for her husband’s next round of treatment, her account was frozen. James demanded a US$12,000 “withdrawal processing fee.” She paid. Then a US$19,000 “compliance verification fee.” She paid again. Then a US$32,000 “tax clearance prepayment,” which James claimed was required by the IRS before funds could be released. When she refused to send more, James stopped answering. The WhatsApp group she had been added to vanished. The login page remained active, but the funds were gone.

The victim later discovered that the legitimate Fortune Prime Global had published a scam alert warning of fraudulent websites impersonating the company. More critically, on April 17, 2026, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) added a “Fake FPG Fortune Prime Global” to its official Investor Alert List, stating that this entity “may be providing financial services or products without proper authorisation in Australia”. The legitimate company’s only official websites are www.fortuneprimeglobal.com and www.fortuneprimeglobal.com — not the domain she had used.

Domain: fortuneprimeglobalirts.com
Regulator warnings: ASIC Investor Alert List (17 April 2026)
Legitimate company: Fortune Prime Global Capital Pty Ltd (ASIC AFSL 400364)
Total lost: $228,000

Why the victim took the bait — real‑life reasons

The victim was not a foolish woman. She was a 51-year-old CPA who had spent more than two decades helping clients navigate complex financial regulations. She was analytical, detail‑oriented, and had never fallen for an investment scam before. Two factors made her vulnerable.

1. The stolen ASIC license and branding. The scammers had copied the official ASIC license number (AFSL 400364) and the regulator’s logo directly from the legitimate Fortune Prime Global. When the victim visited the official ASIC website, she found that a real company did hold that licence. She did not realise that the scammers had simply misappropriated those details. Clone firms like this one are explicitly designed to mimic a licensed broker’s website to appear legitimate.

2. The successful test withdrawal. The US$3,000 withdrawal arrived without issue. That US$3,000 was the bait — paid from later victims’ deposits — designed to convince her the platform was real.

3. Emotional grooming. “James” called her twice a week for a month, asking about her husband and remembering details. When she hesitated, he said: “I know you’re worried about the medical bills. That’s exactly why you can’t afford to miss this.” The psychological bond broke down her defences.

After she had sent US$228,000, the sunk‑cost fallacy kept her paying each additional fee, terrified of losing what she had already committed.

The anatomy of the fraud

Phase 1: Facebook ad with stolen branding — The scammers created a polished social‑media advertisement using the legitimate Fortune Prime Global logo and ASIC licensing claims. The ad promised AI‑powered trading with institutional returns.

Phase 2: Clone website — The scammers built fortuneprimeglobalirts.com, a near‑perfect copy of the legitimate company’s site. They misappropriated the real ASIC licence number (AFSL 400364) and displayed fake regulatory seals. The legitimate company has warned that fraudulent websites “often mimic our branding and layout in an effort to appear legitimate”.

Phase 3: Personal manager grooming — The victim was assigned a dedicated “senior account manager” named “James,” who built a personal relationship over weeks, asking about her family.

Phase 4: Small‑withdrawal bait — A successful test withdrawal of US$3,000 was approved to build trust. This withdrawal was paid from funds deposited by earlier victims.

Phase 5: Account freeze — After the large deposit of US$228,000, every withdrawal request was blocked.

Phase 6: Fee‑escalation trap — The platform demanded unrecoverable upfront fees: “withdrawal processing,” “compliance verification,” and “tax clearance.” Each payment triggered another “final” demand.

Phase 7: Disappearance — When the victim refused to pay more, James stopped answering, and all associated WhatsApp groups were deleted. The website remained online for fresh victims.

What the security reports show

Red flags the victim missed (and you shouldn’t)

How AYRLP helped recover 60% of the loss

After the victim realised she had been scammed — her husband’s treatment fund drained by a platform that ASIC had already flagged — she contacted AYRLP, a UK‑based blockchain forensic firm certified by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA).

AYRLP’s investigators:

Through AYRLP, the victim recovered 60% of her loss — approximately $136,800.

“I thought my money was gone forever. AYRLP got back more than half of it. My husband can continue his treatment. I can finally stop blaming myself for trusting a stolen ASIC license.”
The victim

Final warning: An ASIC licence number on a website does not make the website safe — clone firms steal them

The fortuneprimeglobalirts.com scam is a textbook example of corporate identity theft combined with advance‑fee fraud. The scammers stole the legitimate ASIC licence number and branding of Fortune Prime Global, built a copycat website, and used a caring “account manager” to extract $228,000 from an accountant trying to pay for experimental medical treatment.

If you or someone you know has been victimised by fortuneprimeglobalirts.com or any similar clone‑licence impersonation scheme, contact the FBI’s IC3, your state securities regulator, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) , and a reputable blockchain forensic firm like AYRLP immediately.

This article was originally published on Cryptocurrency Tag and is republished here under RSS syndication for informational purposes. All rights and intellectual property remain with the original author. If you are the author and wish to have this article removed, please contact us at [email protected].

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