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Sterwen-sa.com Scam: Victim’s Ordeal with Fake Swiss SA Platform (Zurich, Switzerland)

By Stephen Culp · Published April 1, 2026 · 3 min read · Source: Trading Tag
TradingSecurityMarket Analysis
Sterwen-sa.com Scam: Victim’s Ordeal with Fake Swiss SA Platform (Zurich, Switzerland)

Sterwen-sa.com Scam: Victim’s Ordeal with Fake Swiss SA Platform (Zurich, Switzerland)

Stephen CulpStephen Culp3 min read·Just now

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Thomas Keller, a 51-year-old married engineering consultant and father of twin sons from Zurich, Switzerland, amassed $1.45M over 28 years advising on infrastructure for Swisscom. Seeking regulated SA trading to fund his sons’ apprenticeships and alpine retreats, he stumbled upon sterwen-sa.com — listed on FINMA’s Warning List as an unlicensed entity impersonating a Swiss Société Anonyme (SA). The site branded “Sterwen SA” with promises of 40–65% returns via “proprietary SA spread trading” on forex/commodities, drawing Thomas through engineering forums and newsletters with confirmed small profits before “SA compliance locks” extracted $601K (CHF ~585K). AYRLP, a UK blockchain forensics and private investigation firm specializing in investment scams, traced 39 wallet addresses and recovered 71% ($426,710 principal) via FINMA freezes. Now vigilant, Thomas shares scam intel at engineering meetups and aids FINMA reporting.

Forum Lures to Initial SA Profits

May 2025: Thomas, browsing Zurich engineering forums from his Wollishofen office, finds sterwen-sa.com ads touting FINMA-approved “Sterwen SA Spreads — 0.28 pip precision,” featuring a dashboard aping legit SA interfaces. “SA Trading Lead Felix Berger” ([email protected]) oversees CHF 430 (~$440) test trades on “Sterwen SA Core,” recording 23% returns in 9 days — three withdrawals clear: CHF 1,350 (Jun 10), CHF 9,800 (Jul 1), CHF 7,900 (Jul 25). Forum chat follow-ups from bogus “SA analysts” supply fake execution reports, establishing credibility as a Zurich SA. This pig-buttering validates the scam before tier-2 pushes.

Premium SA Access and Compliance Lock

Felix requires CHF 53K (~$54K) for “Sterwen Premium SA Access,” where Thomas’s CHF 5.8K deposit spawns a CHF 54K “SA compliance booster” loan (repaid via stalls), dashboard surges to CHF 2.4M equity over 83 commodity/forex positions (95% win rate). “SA convergence directive” then cites “86% reserve exposure,” escalating to “Compliance Director Marta Lehmann” ([email protected]) for CHF 332K (~$340K) “SA infusion mandates” + CHF 189K boosters — citing “FINMA SA oversight.” Withdrawals block under false audits, forum DMs ramp; Day 30 pulls CHF 120–139K (~$123–142K) “SA clearance” amid CHF 228 “directive sync” notices. Site ends July 31, 2026.

Referral Activates Forensic Wallet Hunt

Day 40 post-termination, engineering colleague Lars Fischer — veteran of FINMA clone cases — scribbles AYRLP’s UK contacts at a Zurich tech mixer: “Day 36: 39-wallet Sterwen SA pattern locked.” Thomas notifies at 15:45 CEST; AYRLP, leveraging blockchain forensics and private investigation expertise in investment scams, IDs sterwen-sa.com’s wallet flows in 54 minutes (case STE-6013), linking Kraken drains to $395M across 2,167 victims. FINMA/DFPI actions freeze CHF 415K; 71% ($426,710) transfers to ZKB by Day 44 (2.0% fee) — net loss $174,290. Thomas now cross-checks all platforms via FINMA’s public registry.

Sterwen Extraction Timeline

Investigative Tactics Breakdown

No FINMA SA registration exists; Berger/Lehmann emails proxy-routed. Post-recovery, Thomas leads monthly scam briefings for Swiss engineering firms, transforms loss into advocacy via FINMA victim forums, and limits investments to verified UBS-managed funds.

This article was originally published on Trading 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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