2. 50 investors committed suicide in 1994 after it crashed
The police closed the offices of MMM for tax evasion on July 22, 1994. The company tried to continue the scheme but the business shut. In the aftermath at least 50 investors who lost all of their money committed suicide.
3. The CEO is a convicted fraudster
Seigei Marvrodi is a convicted fraudster who had run similar fraud schemes in Russia. He was arrested in August 1994 for tax evasion. In 2007, a Russian court found him guilty of defrauding 10,000 investors out of 110 million rubles (4.3 million US dollars). He was sentenced to four and a half years in prison
4. The current MMM Bitcoin version emerged in around 2011
Following Mavrodi’s release from prison, he launched another pyramid scheme called MMM-2011 in January 2011. He asked investors to buy so-called Mavro currency units. However, in May 2012, he froze the operation and announced that there would be no more payouts.
5. It began operations in South Africa in 2015
With the same business model as MMM-2011, it started operations in South Africa, promising a 30 per cent per month return through a social financial network. A number of South African banks are shutting down accounts they believe could be linked to MMM. In May, Capitec bank reportedly closed 2000 bank accounts linked to the MMM scheme.
6. MMM platform in Zimbabwe crashed
In September, reports surfaced that the scheme had crashed in Zimbabwe and thousands of people lost their investment. It was later reported that it did not crash but the reward was slashed from 100 per cent to 20 per cent.
7. It has been banned in China
The Chinese government banned MMM in January 2016 on the grounds that it is a pyramid scheme, (Ponzi scheme). According to the government, it is not registered in the country (and it cannot be registered as it is a fraudulent scheme)
8. Launched in 2016 in Nigeria
MMM launched a website targeting the Nigerian audience in July 2016. Since its launch, a good massive percentage of Nigerians have invested in the scheme and more people are still joining
9. There comes a time when it will crash
Businesses that fall under Ponzi scheme often run until it fails to achieve the returns expected. Once investment slows down, the scheme shuts down. Most of the time, the promoter vanishes into thin air carting away all the investment money.Many Nigerians will continue to defend the scheme and accuse the government of a hidden agenda to stop their means of income. However, people should be wise while investing in business ventures that are too good to be true.
With all listed... MMM is paying Nigerians but Nigerians should not invest with all their savings...
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