1. Core Promotion Points of Goldmanre Prosperity Group
Goldmanre Prosperity Group narrates its story to the outside world through goldmanre.com, claiming it was "founded in 2009" and emphasizes bringing Wall Street capabilities to ordinary people.[1]
The official website binds participation mechanisms with the Prosperity Group token, stating that participants are "co-builders and beneficiaries" of the Athena system. Such narratives are common in pyramid schemes: repackaging financial relations as “ecological participation,” weakening the responsibility of financial services.[1]
2. "Founder" and "AI System" Appear to Be Packaging
The official website portrays a character named Douglas Hawthorne, claiming he worked at Lehman Brothers and created the Athena System.[2] The problem is that this type of "legendary resume + proprietary AI" combination often lacks third-party verifiable evidence. Many scams use fictitious or hard-to-verify "teachers/founders" to substitute regulatory and real qualifications, reducing victims' vigilance.[2]
3. Old Domain Name Does Not Prove Operational History
A third-party domain information summary page shows that goldmanre.com might have been established on 2005-04-07, with recent update records, while registrant information is protected by privacy.[3] The long existence of a domain only proves that “the domain is old,” not that “the same team has been operating it long-term.” Buying old domains to create a profile is one of the common tactics of fraud groups.[3]
4. Lack of Regulatory Information is a Key Risk Point
The official website does not prominently disclose verifiable license numbers, regulatory agency registration links, or legal entity information.[1]
Taking FCA as an example, it has long reminded the public to verify authorization and registration through official channels and issued warnings about unauthorized entities.[4] FCA has also publicly explained that clone firms often attach themselves to well-known brands to defraud.[5]
The name "Goldmanre" itself provides brand attachment space, easily creating associations with well-known financial institutions, lowering vigilance thresholds.[5]
5. Suspicious Scam Model Closer to "AI + Token Pyramid Scheme" Structure
Judging from the "AI System + Token Incentives" combination on the website, it aligns more with the operational framework of common high-risk schemes:[1][2]
- Using "education/tools/AI quantification" as a shell to avoid direct recognition as "investment services."
- Creating theoretical earnings through a token or point system and delaying redemption through set rules.
- Setting thresholds and successive fees (certification, taxes, deposits, risk control fees, etc.) for withdrawals, forming continuous exploitation.
The core risk of this type of structure does not lie in "volatility," but rather in "platform control of capital flows and account figures."
6. Consequences for Victims Often Go Beyond Principal Loss
Common losses include: inability to withdraw the principal, forced payment of various fees, personal information collected in "certification/KYC" and possibly misused.
The annual report of the FBI IC3 has long pointed out that investment scams (including crypto-related) involve extremely high losses, and once funds enter cross-border or blockchain channels, the difficulty of recovery rapidly increases.[6]
7. Outcomes of Similar Cases Are Highly Consistent
OneCoin absorbed funds by narrating a "crypto revolution," ultimately identified as a huge fraud by the U.S. judiciary, with its co-founder sentenced to a severe penalty.[7]
BitConnect packaged itself as a "trading robot/return system," also accused of a Ponzi-like scheme by U.S. law enforcement and regulatory agencies.[8][9] The common points of these cases are: technical mythology, community propagation, profit promises, and withdrawal obstruction.
8. Conclusion
Based on the available public information, Goldmanre Prosperity Group builds credibility through "AI Athena + token rights + founder legend," but lacks clear, verifiable regulatory and entity proof.[1][2]
The age of the domain might be old, but it cannot prove a genuine operational history, instead fitting the common routine of "buying old domains to establish credentials."[3] Considering the brand attachment naming, lack of regulation, and token mechanism, the risk level should be considered highly suspicious.
References
[1] Goldmanre Prosperity Group official homepage
https://goldmanre.com/
[2] About the Founder (Douglas Hawthorne and Athena System)
https://goldmanre.com/about-the-founder/
[3] goldmanre-caution Domain Information Summary Page (third-party)
https://www.goldmanre-caution.com/
[4] FCA: Warning List of Unauthorized Firms
https://www.fca.org.uk/consumers/warning-list-unauthorised-firms
[5] FCA: Goldman Sachs (clone) Warning Example
https://www.fca.org.uk/news/warnings/goldman-sachs-clone-firm
[6] FBI: Annual Internet Crime Report (IC3 report page)
https://www.fbi.gov/news/press-releases/fbi-releases-annual-internet-crime-report
[7] U.S. DOJ SDNY: OneCoin Co-Founder Sentencing Announcement
https://www.justice.gov/usao-sdny/pr/co-founder-multibillion-dollar-cryptocurrency-scheme-onecoin-sentenced-20-years-prison
[8] U.S. DOJ SDCA: BitConnect Related Charges Announcement
https://www.justice.gov/usao-sdca/pr/founder-fraudulent-cryptocurrency-charged-2-billion-bitconnect-ponzi-scheme
[9] U.S. SEC: SEC Charges BitConnect Founder With $2 Billion Fraud
https://www.sec.gov/newsroom/press-releases/2021-172