In a world flooded with get-rich-quick schemes, there’s a new breed of scammer hiding behind smiles, scripture, and self-help slogans. Meet Marshonda Henderson — a seasoned multilevel marketer, crypto shill, and manipulative speaker who uses religious undertones and NLP tactics to gaslight vulnerable people into Ponzi schemes. If you’ve seen her on Zoom or YouTube, chances are she was pitching yet another fake opportunity.

She presents herself as a positive, spiritually guided coach, but behind the curtain is a calculated predator with a 16-year YouTube history of promoting one scam after another. She hides behind disclaimers, deletes old videos once each project collapses, and moves on to the next scheme — often dragging the same investors with her.

Who is Marshonda Henderson?

According to her LinkedIn Profile, Marshonda describes herself as an “International Speaker, Coach & Team Builder on a mission to help people create positive mindsets & financial solutions.” She lists experience with Tony Robbins Companies, claiming to be an NLP-trained Personal Results Specialist and MUST Team Mentor.

Her base of operations appears to be Las Vegas, Nevada — and unlike many scammers, we actually know Where She Lives. That matters. Because accountability starts with visibility.

Marshonda isn’t just another misguided promoter. She’s a serial scammer with a pattern, a process, and a polished pitch designed to deceive. Her use of religious language is particularly alarming. She prays on calls, references scripture, and positions herself as a vessel for God’s financial blessings — all while funneling people into fake tokens, collapsed trading platforms, and pyramid recruitment schemes.

How Marshonda Manipulates

Marshonda’s tactics are dangerously effective. She:

  • Uses Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP) techniques to build perceived authority and emotional rapport.
  • Embeds religious messages in her recruitment pitches to create trust and spiritual urgency.
  • Blames victims for their losses by saying they didn’t “stay positive” or “trust the process.”
  • Gaslights critics and blocks whistleblowers.
  • Routinely deletes videos to erase evidence of failed schemes.
  • She frames criticism as “attacks,” and any questions about legitimacy as “negative energy.” These are classic scam tactics used to maintain control.

Marshonda’s Ponzi Scheme Portfolio

Marshonda Henderson has left behind a trail of broken promises, drained bank accounts, and deleted YouTube videos. Below is a comprehensive list of Ponzi schemes and crypto scams she has actively promoted — some of which she hosted full tutorials for, complete with fake success stories and affiliate onboarding guides.

  1. Infinity Pi / Infinity Pi DAO
    A fake DAO project framed as a decentralized finance opportunity. Promoted as a long-term community project with token giveaways, it had no functional product.
  2. IPC / Intelligence Prime Capital
    A notorious Ponzi trading bot scheme that promised high daily returns through fake AI trading. It collapsed in early 2022. Marshonda was a vocal promoter.
  3. Vidilook
    A ridiculous scheme claiming to pay people for “watching ads.” Marshonda hosted training videos for this and encouraged viewers to sign up with her referral link.
  4. Pluto BNB Hunter / Pluto Meme Coin
    She made detailed videos teaching viewers how to use PancakeSwap to buy Pluto tokens, add custom contracts, and earn spillover. Claimed a woman made $337 in 5 days with “no referrals,” reinforcing the Ponzi illusion.
  5. The Bulls Army (TBA)
    Sold as a community-driven crypto token, but the team was anonymous and the only real activity was internal hype and token manipulation. She actively promoted it alongside XBullRun.
  6. Fintoch
    Another trading bot platform disguised as an “AI DeFi opportunity” with laughable returns. Fintoch was called out across multiple fraud networks before disappearing.
  7. MetaFastest (NFT Horse Racing)
    Promoted as a gaming investment platform with NFT horses. She pushed affiliate links and posted unrealistic ROI stories about racing payouts.
  8. XBullRun / XBR Protocol
    A pump-and-dump token scheme where leaders locked down Zoom calls, blocked whistleblowers, and used fear and faith to keep members compliant. Marshonda defended it repeatedly and helped onboard victims.
  9. BizNet.College
    Positioned as an educational crypto business, it was actually a glorified sales funnel for David Chandler and Bob Wood’s fake platform. Marshonda pushed this after Trade Technologies collapsed.
  10. E1U Life / GoE1ULife
    rebranded 1-Up gifting matrix, now pretending to use “AI-powered business tools.” Marshonda used emotional hype and false scarcity to lure new recruits.
  11. CoopCrowd / CoopLife
    A crowdfunding-style gifting circle. Disguised as “community giving,” it was just another pyramid scheme.
  12. MevBridge
    She recently began promoting MevBridge, a Dubai-based MLM Ponzi scheme disguised as a trading bot platform. The project offers 600% capped ROI and massive commissions for recruitment. She’s using the same old tactics — new victims, same playbook.

Why This Matters

When you add it all up, Marshonda Henderson isn’t just someone who “makes mistakes” or gets “overexcited” about crypto. She is a full-time scam promoter. She profits from fake opportunities, uses faith as a shield, and surrounds herself with known scam artists like:

They move from one scam to the next, often overlapping in promotions and recycling the same audiences.

My Message as The Crypto Ponzi Scheme Avenger

I’m Danny de Hek, and I’ve spent the last several years documenting, exposing, and disrupting Ponzi schemes. My YouTube Channel and website are dedicated to protecting everyday people from fraudsters like Marshonda Henderson.

We now have hundreds of pieces of evidence, including deleted videos, victim statements, and live meeting recordings. In one recent video (Confronting the Crypto Queen: My Heated Interview with Marshonda Henderson: PONZI SCHEMES & SCAMS), I confronted Marshonda in a Zoom call. She denied being a scammer, justified her actions through “belief,” and claimed to be helping people. But her actions say otherwise.

These platforms never deliver what they promise. And Marshonda knows it. That’s what makes her dangerous.

Conclusion

Marshonda Henderson is not an inspirational leader. She’s a spiritual scammer using motivational language, religious manipulation, and polished Zoom calls to build trust — then exploit it.

She doesn’t invest in real assets. She invests in your trust, and then cashes out.

Stay vigilant. Share this post. Report her activities. And if you’ve been harmed by any of her schemes, reach out. Let’s hold her accountable.

Together, we’re building a database. A trail of digital breadcrumbs that no scammer can erase.

Stay safe out there. And remember: not every smiling face is your friend — especially when they’re asking for your money in the name of God.