For months, BG Wealth Sharing has been telling its members that their money is being traded on a sophisticated crypto exchange called DSJEX. It’s the name they drop when people start asking uncomfortable questions about where their deposits go, who is trading them, and why withdrawals suddenly stop working. DSJEX is presented as the “real” exchange — the engine behind the promised daily returns.

But after a deep investigation, it becomes painfully clear that DSJEX is not a crypto exchange at all. It is a fabricated platform, built to give BG Wealth Sharing the illusion of legitimacy. The two are not separate companies. They are two halves of the same fraud: BG Wealth Sharing recruits the victims, and the DSJEX provides the fake trading interface to keep them believing the story.

And when the pressure started mounting, DSJEX released a “CEO announcement” video — a video so artificial, so stilted, and so devoid of human authenticity that it raised more alarms than it silenced.

This is the autonomy of that deception.

The DSJEX “CEO” Who Doesn’t Exist

A few months ago, on January 1, 2026, DSJEX published A YouTube Video featuring a man claiming to be the CEO of the platform. On the surface, it looks like the kind of corporate update you’d expect from a legitimate exchange. But the moment you watch it, something feels off.

The man claims to be Joseph Smith. In the video, the man’s face moves strangely. His expressions don’t quite match the words. His voice sounds synthetic, almost too smooth. His eyes blink in a pattern that doesn’t feel natural. And the script he reads is vague, generic, and completely devoid of substance. He never mentions licenses, audits, compliance, or even the most basic details about the company he claims to run.

It looks like AI. It sounds like AI. And it behaves like AI.

This is not a CEO. This is a digital puppet, created to reassure victims at a moment when the scam is beginning to unravel. Real executives don’t hide behind synthetic faces. Real companies don’t rely on AI avatars to deliver corporate updates. Real crypto exchanges don’t need to manufacture leadership.

DSJEX does — because there is no leadership to show.

The UK Shell Company Registered Under “Ben McCallum”

To bolster their credibility, DSJEX points to a UK-registered company called DSJ EXCHANGE LIMITED, which lists a single director: Ben McCallum, a British national residing in Australia. This is not Joseph Smith.

At first glance, this registration looks like a legitimate corporate registration. But when you examine it closely, the cracks appear immediately. The company was dissolved on October 28, 2025.

There is no website. No employees. No crypto licenses. No audited financials. No evidence of trading activity. No connection between the company and the DSJEX platform. It is a paper entity, nothing more.

And the “CEO” in the DSJEX video is clearly not Ben McCallum. He does not match the age, nationality, or location. He does not reference the UK company at all.

This is a classic tactic used in crypto Ponzi schemes: register a shell company to create the illusion of legitimacy, then point victims to it when they start asking questions. The registration exists to be waved around, not to reflect reality.

The GitHub Leak That Exposed the DSJEX Backend

The most damning evidence came from a public GitHub repository titled BG-Wealth-Script. Inside it was the backend code for the DSJEX platform — the very system BG Wealth Sharing claims is trading millions of dollars in crypto.

BG Wealth Flask System DSJEX

The code reveals a simple Flask application with:

  • a login system
  • a SQL database
  • fake “token balance” logic
  • Stripe payment integration
  • a simulated dashboard
  • no real trading functionality

The internal name of the project? “DSJ Token System.” 

DSJ Token Systems BG Wealth Sharing

This is the smoking gun. The backend for DSJEX is the same backend used by BG Wealth Sharing. The trading is simulated. The profits are fabricated. The entire platform is a façade — a digital stage set designed to convince victims that something is happening behind the scenes.

Nothing is happening behind the scenes.

The Hidden Admin Panel

One of the most revealing discoveries in the leaked DSJEX backend code is found inside the app.py file — the core of the platform. Buried in the routes is an admin control panel, giving a single operator the ability to manipulate user accounts, balances, transactions, and system-wide settings.

DSJEX BG Wealth App.py

This is not something you find in a legitimate crypto exchange. Real exchanges rely on automated systems, audited processes, and strict regulatory controls. They do not give one person the power to alter user balances with a click.

But DSJEX does.

The admin panel includes functions that allow the operator to:

  • edit user balances
  • approve or deny withdrawals
  • create or delete accounts
  • modify transaction histories
  • adjust “profit” values
  • override system behavior

In other words, DSJEX is not a trading platform — it is a controlled dashboard, where the scam operator decides what victims see.

The presence of this admin interface confirms what the rest of the code already suggests: the “profits” shown to users are not generated by trading bots, AI systems, or market activity. They are generated by a human being sitting behind an admin panel, manually adjusting numbers to keep victims believing the illusion.

This is not crypto trading.
This is theatre.

How the DSJEX/BG Wealth Sharing Scam Actually Works

The scam operates in a predictable cycle:

BG Wealth Sharing recruits victims with promises of daily crypto returns.
Victims are shown DSJEX as the “exchange” where their money is supposedly being traded.
They deposit real money — often through Stripe, crypto wallets, or bank transfers.
DSJEX displays fake profits on a dashboard that looks convincing enough to keep them invested. For more information about that, click Here.
Withdrawals begin to slow, then fail entirely.
A fake CEO video is released to calm the panic.
The operators will eventually disappear and the platform will collapse.

This is not innovation.
This is not trading.
This is not crypto.
This is a Ponzi scheme with a digital mask.

How to Spot Fake CEOs (and AI-Generated Scam Leaders)

As crypto scams evolve, so do their tactics. One of the newest trends is the use of AI-generated “executives” — synthetic faces designed to look authoritative while revealing nothing.

Here’s how to spot them.

They never put their hands in front of their face.

AI face-tracking breaks the moment a hand crosses the face. Scammers know this. That’s why these “CEOs” sit perfectly still, hands below the frame, never gesturing naturally, never touching their face, never interacting with their environment.

It’s one of the easiest tells.

Scam-buster Jim Browning popularized a simple but devastating test: Ask the person to hold three fingers in front of their face.

AI can’t do it.
The face glitches.
The hand disappears.
The model breaks.

Real humans pass instantly.
Fake CEOs fail spectacularly.

No verifiable identity

Fake CEOs have no LinkedIn, no corporate history, no regulatory presence, no interviews, no conference appearances, no digital footprint. They appear out of nowhere because they were created out of nowhere.

Vague, scripted language

They speak in buzzwords, platitudes, and motivational filler. They avoid specifics because specifics can be checked.

Unnatural smoothness

AI videos often have overly smooth skin, robotic blinking, and static backgrounds. They look “too perfect,” because they are not real.

The Illusion of an Exchange

DSJEX is not a crypto exchange. It is the illusion of one — a fabricated platform built to support the BG Wealth Sharing scam. The AI-generated CEO, the UK shell company, the leaked backend code, and the simulated trading dashboard all point to the same conclusion: this is a coordinated fraud designed to extract money from victims while hiding behind synthetic faces and disposable infrastructure.

The more you look at DSJEX, the more obvious it becomes that nothing about it is real — except the losses.

By Beth Gibbons (Queen of Karma)

Beth Gibbons, known publicly as Queen of Karma, is a whistleblower and anti-MLM advocate who shares her personal experiences of being manipulated and financially harmed by multi-level marketing schemes. She writes and speaks candidly about the emotional and psychological toll these so-called “business opportunities” take on vulnerable individuals, especially women. Beth positions herself as a survivor-turned-activist, exposing MLMs as commercial cults and highlighting the cult-like tactics used to recruit, control, and silence members.

She has contributed blogs and participated in video interviews under the name Queen of Karma, often blending personal storytelling with direct confrontation of scammy business models. Her work aligns closely with scam awareness efforts, and she’s part of a growing community of voices pushing back against MLM exploitation, gaslighting, and financial abuse.