
I’m writing this because I don’t want you to be the next headline. I don’t want you to sit in a cold house, staring at a “Past Due” mortgage notice, wondering how you’re going to eat tomorrow.
I was scammed by Ellsworth Vane. It wasn’t because I was greedy; it was because they were perfect at being fake. Here is the playbook they used on me, and how I finally broke the cycle.
It started with a woman I met online. She didn’t ask for money. She asked about my day. For weeks, she shared “official” business documents and trading wins. She built a bridge of trust so convincing that I didn’t see the cliff on the other side.
She introduced me to Ellsworth Vane. I was skeptical, so I tested it. I put in a small amount, saw the professional charts moving in real-time, and withdrew $500 with no issues.
Confident that the platform was legitimate, I moved $270,000 — my entire life savings — into gold trading. The returns looked incredible. I thought I was set for life.
When I tried to withdraw my funds, the “professional” platform turned into a hostage situation.
I was left broke, behind on every bill I owned, and questioning my own sanity.
I stopped believing in “luck” and started looking for experts. After weeks of research, I connected with AYRLP.com.
They didn’t give me a sales pitch; they gave me a forensic strategy. While the scammers at Ellsworth Vane tried to hide behind digital layers, AYRLP’s team went to work tracing the assets.
The Result: * 80% Recovery: I successfully reclaimed $216,000 of my stolen funds.
If you are investing online, you need to implement these three things immediately — the same protocols AYRLP set up for me:
The shame is the heaviest part. But the scammers win when you stay silent. If you recognize these red flags, stop what you are doing. Seek forensic help. I was able to save my future because I stopped trying to fix it alone and found a team that actually knew how to fight back.
WARNING: How I Lost $270,000 to Ellsworth Vane (and the Only Way I Got it Back) was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.