Our process combines advanced technology, extensive partner networks, and professional oversight to map fund flows and notify holding platforms—putting you in direct contact for potential freezes or refunds.
The first step is straightforward and protected. Visit our encrypted submission form and provide key details about the incident: transaction IDs, wallet addresses (for crypto), bank/account info (for fiat transfers), approximate amounts, dates, scam descriptions, and any supporting evidence (screenshots, emails, or receipts—uploads are end-to-end encrypted).
We use industry-standard encryption and comply with strict privacy standards. Your data is shared only with certified, regulated crypto intelligence partners (e.g., blockchain analytics providers) and financial intelligence sources needed for accurate tracing.
Once submitted, our AI network activates, drawing from multiple specialized sources:
Most blockchains are public ledgers. We use advanced blockchain forensics software to perform transaction tracing, graph analysis, address clustering, and pattern recognition.
This maps the flow from your sending wallet through exchanges, mixers (if used), or chain-hopping to current locations, revealing where funds went and if they’re still in controllable CEX wallets.
While bank transactions aren’t public, reported fraudulent accounts, flagged transfers, and shared intelligence from financial partners enable tracing. We leverage aggregated data from regulated financial databases and partner networks to follow the trail across institutions.
Professional digital and financial investigators supervise every case, reviewing AI outputs for accuracy and context.
Within under 24 hours (often faster for straightforward cases), you receive a clear, reliable response: fund flow, current status (e.g., still in perpetrator-controlled accounts/wallets?) and any red flags like rapid laundering indicators.
If analysis locates funds in seizable accounts or wallets (still held by perpetrators or traceable platforms), we take immediate next steps:
banks, fintech providers, crypto exchanges, or custodians holding the assets. Alerts include precise details from our trace to support potential freezes, holds, or reversals.