DANNY  DE HEKIf you’ve been dabbling in the world of online business or scrolled through YouTube looking for that “one opportunity” to change your financial future, chances are you’ve come across Cassandra Goode. She’s friendly. She’s persistent. She calls herself a mentor.

But dig a little deeper, and what you’ll find is someone who’s made a full-time career out of pushing pipe dreams and commission-chasing schemes to vulnerable people trying to build a better life.

My name is Danny de Hek, aka The Crypto Ponzi Scheme Avenger, and I’m here to give you the full breakdown of Cassandra Goode—an individual whose entire brand revolves around misleading others into programs that rarely, if ever, deliver on their wild claims. If you’re a mum or dad investor, this is exactly the kind of person you need to steer clear of. Let’s get into it.

Cassandra Goode’s Dirty Laundry List of Schemes, Scams, and Affiliate Funnels

  1. LiveGood
    The MLM scheme Cassandra has promoted more than any other. She’s uploaded dozens of videos praising it as a game-changer for passive income. But let’s be real—LiveGood’s model is built on classic recruitment-first tactics. She rarely talks about actual product value. Instead, it’s all about “locking in your spot,” “timing,” and “positioning.” That’s MLM code for: the only people making money are the ones roping in others.
  2. Gladiacoin
    A crypto Ponzi scheme that was shut down after scamming investors worldwide. Cassandra promoted it like it was a legitimate trading platform, encouraging people to invest without disclosing the high risk or the lack of regulatory oversight. The platform vanished, and so did people’s funds.
  3. Questra World / AGAM
    Another confirmed Ponzi scheme with promises of weekly returns for passive investors. Cassandra made over 30 videos celebrating its supposed payouts. The platform was investigated and collapsed, with no accountability.
  4. 30 Day Success Formula
    This flyer-based cash gifting scheme was so blatantly fraudulent, the U.S. Department of Justice had to step in. But Cassandra? She was out there promoting it like it was a sure thing. Even after it collapsed, she kept churning out content about mailing flyers to make money from home.
  5. Easy1Up
    A pay-to-play gifting scheme wrapped in digital product sales. Cassandra marketed it as a six-figure opportunity. The reality? You only make money when someone else buys in underneath you. Zero sustainability.
  6. Forsage
    Flagged by the SEC as a crypto pyramid scam. Cassandra created step-by-step videos showing people how to fund it using ETH. She left out the part where nobody really wins except the early promoters.
  7. MyDailyChoice / HempWorx
    An MLM pushing CBD oil and fake promises of global expansion. Cassandra promoted it heavily as a way to ride the wellness wave—but just like the others, the money was in the recruiting, not the product.
  8. CREC.Club (Flyer Scheme)
    This one is particularly damning. Cassandra appears on the actual payment instructions, requesting $1,000 money orders directly to her name. The system requires you to pay three separate people and hope others will do the same to you. Pyramid structure in plain sight.
  9. Please Fund Me
    A self-funding “GoFundMe alternative” where people send each other money through cash or money orders. But it’s not crowdfunding—there’s no product or cause. It’s another gifting loop disguised as community support.
  10. Paid Per Letter
    Claims you can earn $50–$75 an hour writing letters by hand. It’s been floating around since the early 2000s and resurfaces under new names. Zero proof of payment, no real explanation of who pays or why.
  11. WiseClixs.com
    Cassandra’s own solo ad traffic funnel. Sells clicks and email leads to desperate affiliate marketers. She markets it using fear tactics—”everyone else is selling bots, but not me!”—but offers no transparency, no proof of real results, and bribes people for testimonials.
  12. MyLeadGenSecret
    A recycled list-building tool offering “100 leads a day” for $1. She promotes it like a passive income opportunity, but it’s just another email spam funnel. Users are encouraged to recruit others and earn commission off their sign-ups.
  13. Treasure Island Reality Show Scam
    Cassandra is promoting this new scheme where people supposedly earn passive income by being affiliated with a reality show and referring friends. Of course, there’s an optional “loan” you can give to earn more. No TV network. No transparency. All hype.
  14. Solo Ad Funnel Schemes
    Aside from WiseClixs, Cassandra has promoted generic solo ad services where you’re buying traffic to build lists for Clickbank, CPA, and MLM offers. The whole thing’s a hamster wheel of recycled leads, poor conversions, and phantom profits.

So Has Anything Cassandra Promoted Ever Delivered?

Let’s be blunt—no. Everything she’s pushed is either recruitment-based, lacks transparency, or collapses after the hype dies. She frames herself as a seasoned expert but conveniently ignores the wreckage left behind. And with every collapse, she jumps to the next shiny object.

Her content is designed to reel in newcomers with emotional language, fast-action bonuses, and no-skill-required hooks. And every link points back to her affiliate programs where she earns commissions from every person who signs up beneath her.

This isn’t mentorship. It’s monetised manipulation.

Cassandra Goode is exactly the type of person I warn people about on my YouTube channel. She doesn’t just participate in shady schemes—she actively sponsors them. She trains others to do the same. And she’s still doing it, even now.

If you’ve been tempted by her offers, please take a step back and ask yourself one question: if this stuff really worked, why would she need to keep promoting new ones every six months?

I expose Ponzi schemes and scammers because too many people get caught in the trap of hope. Let this blog be your sign to stay far, far away from Cassandra Goode and anything she touches.

Stay sharp, Danny de Hek
The Crypto Ponzi Scheme Avenger