Short answer
If someone on social media showed you “proof” of trading profits and convinced you to invest, and you’ve now sent money or crypto—
this is very commonly linked to a social engineering investment scam, where fake performance is used to build trust before funds are collected.
At this point:
The priority is not the person anymore — it’s understanding where the funds went and preserving the trail.
What likely happened
These setups usually follow a pattern:
- Attraction phase You may have seen: • screenshots of profits • live trading “wins” • luxury lifestyle claims • testimonials from “other investors” • consistent posting of success stories
This builds credibility.
- Trust phase Then the person may: • message you directly • offer help or “guidance” • explain how to copy trades • show you “low risk entry points”
Everything feels personal and convincing.
- Funding phase You are then asked to send: • Tether • Bitcoin • or other crypto assets
Usually for:
• trading entry
• account activation
• portfolio management
• “limited-time opportunity”
What happens after payment
After funds are sent, victims often notice:
• communication slows down
• excuses appear (“market delay”, “verification”)
• withdrawal is blocked
• extra fees are introduced
• or the account becomes inaccessible
In many cases:
the “profits” were never real custody — only displayed numbers.
What matters right now
Focus only on facts:
• save wallet addresses used
• save transaction hashes
• screenshot chats, usernames, profiles, and promises
• document amounts and timestamps
• preserve any platform links or dashboards
At this stage, some victims use blockchain tracing methods or specialist teams such as Jim Recovery Team to analyze wallet flows, identify where funds were routed, and determine whether the trail is still active.
Bottom line
If someone on social media showed trading profits and convinced you to invest:
this strongly matches a fake performance + trust-based investment scam pattern, where credibility is built first and funds are collected second.
The most important move now is not continuing communication with the promoter — it’s preserving the evidence while the transaction trail is still traceable.
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