The ‘Regulated’ Exchange That Froze Every Withdrawal: A $58,400 Recovery
A Denver contractor moved his savings onto a polished trading platform that showed steady profits — until the day he tried to take money out. Here’s how a fake exchange traps deposits behind invented ‘tax’ walls, and how we traced part of the funds back.
Illustrative case study. Details are a dramatized composite based on real recovery patterns; the broker, client and figures are fictional and shown for education. Outcomes vary case by case.
How the scam unfolded
He answered a slick video ad promising “commission-free crypto trading with bank-grade protection.” The site, Zentavo Exchange, looked legitimate — live charts, a verification badge, a registered company number. A friendly ‘account manager’ walked him through funding with Bitcoin, then suggested converting to USDT for ‘stable growth.’ His dashboard climbed past $80,000 in eight weeks.
Where it went wrong
The trouble began at the exit. His first withdrawal request was met with a demand for a 12% ‘capital-gains release tax,’ payable only in fresh USDT to a new address. When he paid, a second ‘anti-money-laundering deposit’ appeared. The balance on the dashboard had never been real — it was a number on a webpage.
“Every time I got close to my money, there was one more fee. The balance looked real, so I kept believing it would clear.”— Client statement (illustrative)
How the recovery worked
- 1We froze the trail. Within 48 hours we mapped the BTC and USDT he’d sent to Zentavo’s collection wallets before more funds could move.
- 2Followed the consolidation. The USDT funneled through three hop wallets into two centralized exchanges — a common cash-out pattern.
- 3Filed exchange freezes. We submitted evidence packets to both exchanges’ compliance teams; one froze a portion still sitting on-platform.
- 4Coordinated the report. We helped him file with IC3 and his bank, linking the on-chain evidence so the freeze could be actioned.
- 5Returned what was held. The frozen balance was released to him after verification — 47% of the reported loss.
A realistic outcome for a fake-exchange case reported after several weeks. Funds that have already cashed out are rarely recoverable; the portion still resting on an exchange was.
Warning signs to remember
- A platform that asks for any ‘tax,’ ‘release’ or ‘deposit’ fee before letting you withdraw.
- Profits that exist only on the platform’s own dashboard.
- An ‘account manager’ who pushes you to convert to USDT and move quickly.
- Regulatory badges and company numbers you can’t independently verify.
- Real exchanges deduct fees from your balance — they never ask you to send more crypto to ‘unlock’ a withdrawal.
- A rising dashboard number is not the same as funds you control. Test a small withdrawal early.
- Verify a company number on the official registry directly, not through a link the platform gives you.
Think this has happened to you?
If you’ve lost crypto to a scam like this, the first hours matter. Our team will review your case and tell you honestly what can and can’t be recovered — at no upfront cost.
Talk to a recovery specialist →