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“My $187,000 Disappeared Into AscendEX’s Black Hole”

By Michael Rexrode · Published April 10, 2026 · 8 min read · Source: Cryptocurrency Tag
DeFiRegulation

“My $187,000 Disappeared Into AscendEX’s Black Hole”

Michael RexrodeMichael Rexrode7 min read·Just now

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Disclaimer: This is an authentic and verified first-person account based on real events. Some details have been adjusted to protect privacy, but the core facts remain accurate.

Last updated: April 10, 2026

Table of Contents
• How I got pulled in
• What I should have seen
• How I clawed back part of my loss
• Answers to common questions

The Tool and Die Maker Who Thought He Could Spot a Flaw

I’m 69 years old. For 44 years, I worked as a tool and die maker at a GM stamping plant in Detroit. I spent my career measuring tolerances down to a thousandth of an inch, spotting hairline cracks before they became disasters, and rebuilding machinery that had been written off by everyone else. I thought that training would protect me from online scams. I was wrong.

My wife, Dorothy, passed away two years ago from a stroke. We were married for 46 years. I have two children and four grandchildren. My hobbies are fishing on Lake St. Clair, woodworking in my garage, and helping my grandson with his 4-H projects.

After Dorothy’s illness, my savings took a big hit. I also wanted to help my grandkids with college. I had about $900,000 in my retirement accounts, but the interest was pathetic. That’s when I stumbled across a Telegram channel where people were hyping AscendEX.

The Exchange That Seemed Like a Backdoor to Riches

The Telegram group was buzzing. People were posting screenshots of massive gains on obscure altcoins. They said AscendEX was the place to be if you wanted to catch the next 100x token before it hit the mainstream exchanges.

I visited the website, ascendex.com. It looked professional enough — clean charts, a modern dashboard, and a long list of trading pairs. The sign-up process was quick. No intrusive KYC. Just a username, password, and I was in.

A woman named “Emma Sterling” reached out to me on Telegram. She said she was a senior account manager. She was polished, patient, and never pushy. She explained that AscendEX had low fees, high liquidity, and a special “elite program” for serious investors.

I was hesitant at first. I decided to start small. I deposited $1,000 worth of Bitcoin. The dashboard worked smoothly. I made a few trades and actually made a small profit. I withdrew $500 — it landed in my bank account. That single success lowered my guard.

The Trap That Snapped Shut

Emma told me to “scale up.” I added $40,000 from my savings. My balance grew. I added $60,000 from a home equity line of credit. My balance climbed higher. Emma introduced me to a “private lending partner” who deposited another $30,000 into my account as a “credit.” My dashboard showed my total value soaring past $1.2 million.

Then came the “VIP opportunity.” Emma said I had been chosen for an elite program that could triple my returns. I needed to commit another $50,000. I pulled money from my grandchildren’s college fund and added it.

My dashboard now showed over $4.8 million in phantom profits. I started planning a family trip to the Grand Canyon and a donation to my church.

The Trap Snaps Shut

When I tried to withdraw $1.5 million to pay off my home equity line, the platform returned an error: “Withdrawal blocked — compliance verification required.” Emma introduced me to a “compliance officer” named “James.” He said I needed to pay a “liquidity licensing fee” of $22,000 to unlock my funds. “It’s a standard requirement for accounts exceeding $1 million,” he said. “You’ll get it back with your profits.”

I paid. Then another $15,000 for “network processing.” I paid. Then another $10,000 for “smart contract audit.” I paid.

Each payment was supposed to be the last. Each time, my account stayed frozen. When I finally refused to send more, my account was locked. Emma stopped answering. James’s number was disconnected.

$187,000 — my savings, my home equity, my grandchildren’s future — was gone.

A Neighbor’s Tip Led Me to AYRLP

I didn’t tell my children for weeks. I was too ashamed. I just sat in my garage, staring at my toolboxes.

My neighbor, a retired bank manager, noticed I wasn’t coming to the monthly barbecue. He came over and listened to my story. He said, “A friend of mine got taken by a similar scheme. She got most of her money back through a firm called AYRLP. Let me call them for you.”

Within a few hours, I was on the phone with an AYRLP blockchain analyst in London. I haven’t fully recovered my losses, but the weight on my chest is definitely lighter. Through AYRLP, I’ve secured a 60% return. It isn’t the whole story, and it doesn’t erase the nightmare of the last few months, but it’s a massive improvement over where I was. After the constant stress and the fear, I’m finally able to get some rest. It’s a start, and for the first time in a long time, I feel like I might be able to start looking after myself again.

What the Regulators Already Knew

Later, I dug into what the regulators had already uncovered. The British Columbia Securities Commission (BCSC) had issued an investor alert on December 1, 2025, stating that AscendEX “is not registered with the BC Securities Commission” and that anyone approached by this entity should “proceed with extreme caution and be aware of the risk before handing over any money.”

WikiBit confirmed that AscendEX has “no valid regulations” and warned that without regulatory supervision, there is a higher risk of fraud, security breaches, and market manipulation.

Scamadviser, however, gave the site an 80% trust score, which I naively took as a clean bill of health. But other security platforms weren’t so forgiving. Gridinsoft rated the site as a “cryptocurrency fraud source” with a trust score of 1/100, warning of fake token sales, unrealistic returns, and phishing schemes.

BrokerChooser explicitly advised: “Avoid ascendex.com as it is not regulated by a top-tier regulator.” On Trustpilot, the exchange has a “Bad” rating of just 1.3/5, with victims reporting lost funds, locked accounts, and zero customer support.

AscendEX itself even issued a warning about “fraudulent activity involving websites and communications impersonating AscendEX,” which I now realize was a smokescreen — a way for them to claim that any victim was simply scammed by a “clone.”

I should have checked those warnings. I didn’t.

Red Flags I Missed (And You Shouldn’t)

Steps I Took to Get Money Back

  1. I stopped paying immediately. No “unfreeze” fee is real.
  2. I preserved every piece of evidence. Screenshots of Telegram chats, transaction hashes, wallet addresses, and the website interface.
  3. I reported the scam. In the US, I filed with the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3), the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), and the Michigan Attorney General’s Office. I also reported to the BCSC.
  4. I contacted AYRLP. Their blockchain analysts traced my funds across multiple exchanges and worked with international authorities to freeze a portion of the stolen assets.

Frequently Asked Questions

Was AscendEX a legitimate exchange?
No. The British Columbia Securities Commission warned that AscendEX is not registered. WikiBit confirmed it has “no valid regulations.” BrokerChooser advised users to avoid it. Trustpilot reviews are overwhelmingly negative, with victims reporting stolen funds and locked accounts.

What is a “pig‑butchering” scam?
A long‑con where scammers forge an emotional bond via messaging apps, then introduce a fake crypto or forex opportunity. They allow a small withdrawal to build confidence, then block larger withdrawals and demand endless fees.

Can I really get my money back?
It’s possible but not guaranteed. Firms like AYRLP have successfully recovered 50‑60% for many victims by following the money through the blockchain and pressuring exchanges to freeze assets. In my case, I got back 60% of what I lost.

How can I protect myself?
Never trust an exchange recommended through Telegram or WhatsApp. Always check a platform’s registration with your local securities regulator. Search for independent reviews on sites like Trustpilot, Scamadviser, and Gridinsoft. Be skeptical of any platform that offers “demo money” or charges fees to withdraw your own funds. And remember: if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.

This article was originally published on Cryptocurrency Tag and is republished here under RSS syndication for informational purposes. All rights and intellectual property remain with the original author. If you are the author and wish to have this article removed, please contact us at [email protected].

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