I’DANNY  DE HEKm Danny de Hek, aka The Crypto Ponzi Scheme Avenger. My mission is to shine a harsh spotlight on the scammers, grifters, and multilevel marketing parasites who are siphoning away the life savings of hardworking mums and dads.

I don’t just expose scams—I expose the people behind them. And right now, one name keeps showing up on the scam circuit like clockwork: Mai Summer Vue.

From Classroom to Crypto Carnage

Mai Summer Vue wasn’t always a scammer. She once stood in front of a classroom as a schoolteacher. That all changed when she took her school to court, alleging harassment, and claimed she could no longer work in education. Instead of changing careers with dignity, she rebranded herself as a “coach,” pushing one fraudulent crypto opportunity after another.

Mai wants you to believe she’s self-taught, that she’s here to help, that she’s just another humble leader looking out for her “community.” But let’s be honest—this isn’t leadership. This is profiteering at the expense of vulnerable people.

The Scams She’s Promoted—It’s a Hall of Shame

Let’s take a look at just some of the schemes Mai Summer Vue has actively promoted:

  • HyperFund – Promised daily rewards for staking HDAO tokens, which turned out to be worthless. The platform collapsed after regulators and whistleblowers flagged it as a Ponzi. Mai Vue was a vocal promoter.
  • HyperVerse – A rebrand of HyperFund after its collapse. Still peddled fake passive income and ran on the same broken promises. Vue continued to support it.
  • HyperNation – Another desperate rebrand from Sam Lee and crew. Pushed a fake decentralized “nation” concept with zero backing. Vue doubled down on promoting it.
  • SableDAO – Claimed to offer secure decentralized finance. No real product ever materialized. It was purely about recruitment and disappeared quietly.
  • We Are All Satoshi – Pitched itself as a revolutionary blockchain project. In reality, just more MLM tactics with no transparency. Vue urged followers to get in early.
  • AVA – Another so-called AI-powered investment platform. Used vague language and buzzwords, but no proof of external revenue. Eventually fizzled out.
  • CrypTex – Paid commissions for bringing in new investors, not from trading profits. Collapsed like all classic Ponzis do. Vue admitted she was heavily invested.
  • ViDiLOOK (Beta, 2.0, and V.E.N.D 3.0) – “Watch ads, earn crypto” gimmick. Promised daily returns for ad views. It was rebranded multiple times as it fell apart.
  • Satoshi AI – Used AI as a smokescreen to justify fake returns. No transparency, no verified trading, just a flashy interface and referral commissions.
  • Trage Technologies – An obscure trading platform pushed by influencers. Offered no real trading data, just affiliate rewards and empty promises.
  • MetaCapital – A so-called capital management fund with no audits, no regulators, and no way to withdraw. Likely another brief cash grab that left investors stuck.

That’s not a résumé—it’s a rap sheet. And many of these schemes trace back to Sam Lee, who is now criminally charged in relation to the $1.9 billion HyperVerse fraud. And yes, Vue worked alongside him. You don’t get to play the victim when you’re the one running Zoom meetings that help people get fleeced.

Beonbit: Her Latest Disaster

Mai Summer Vue’s latest scam promotion isn’t just shady—it’s textbook criminal. Beonbit is an Australian-registered crypto MLM scheme wrapped in flashy buzzwords like “AI-powered trading,” “machine learning algorithms,” and “financial freedom.” But strip away the marketing and what you’re left with is one of the most blatant Ponzi setups we’ve seen to date.

They’re offering so-called “guaranteed” daily profits ranging from 1% all the way up to a staggering 5.6%. That’s not an investment—that’s a fantasy. In reality, the only money moving around is from new victims to earlier ones. Classic Ponzi economics.

Here’s how their investment plans break down:

  • Basic Plan: $25–$1,000 invested for 15 days earns 1%–1.5% daily.
  • Advanced Plan: $1,000–$10,000 invested for 25 days earns 1.5%–2% daily.
  • Premium Plan: $10,000–$50,000 invested for 50 days earns 2%–2.5% daily.
  • Expert Plan: $50,000–$500,000 for 75 days earns 2.5%–3% daily.
  • Master Plan: $100–$50,000 for 90 days earns 3%–4.5% daily (but you’re locked in—no withdrawals).
  • Professional Plan: $50,000–$500,000 for 150 days earns 4.5%–5.6% daily (again, no withdrawals allowed).

Even worse, their multi-tiered referral system—15 levels deep—rewards users for pulling in new recruits with up to 47% of the invested capital being passed upstream. That’s not sustainable. That’s a recruitment pyramid.

Their supposed CEO, “Richard Bates,” is another red flag. He doesn’t exist outside of their staged marketing videos. He’s not on LinkedIn. No business record. Nothing. Just an actor with a dodgy accent reading from a teleprompter.

We Gave Beonbit a Chance to Respond

We reached out to Beonbit directly—multiple times. We called the phone number listed on their website (no answer), and tried their live chat (dead). We even emailed them offering a chance to come on camera and defend their business model.

They ghosted us. Silence is a red flag in itself—legitimate companies don’t hide when challenged.

Even more alarming? They somehow got an app listed in the Apple App Store. This gives Beonbit a false veneer of legitimacy. But the app is just a glorified portal for depositing crypto and sharing referral links. It has no real functionality, and it certainly doesn’t prove any of their trading claims.

Meanwhile, Mai Summer Vue keeps hosting Zoom meetings, calling herself a “global leader,” and promising people the world. She brags about her direct line to the CEO, hypes up the returns, and floods her YouTube Channel with recruitment content disguised as “training.”

This isn’t leadership. It’s exploitation.

Beonbit will collapse like all the others, and Mai will move on to her next “opportunity.” But by then, more people will have lost everything. That’s why this exposure matters. That’s why we’re calling it out now.

Hiding Behind God and the Bible

When Mai is called out, she doesn’t reply with logic or facts—she prays for her critics to suffer divine punishment. She’s posted public prayers asking God to bring “justice upon Danny de Hek” and even claims she’ll “see us in Heaven’s Court.”

This isn’t faith—it’s a deflection tactic. When you’ve made a career out of promoting scams, asking God to do your PR won’t save you from accountability.

Why It Matters: Beyond the Money

Mai Summer Vue isn’t just another misguided affiliate. She’s part of a much bigger problem—people who profit from financial crime while pretending to help others achieve freedom.

These “opportunities” aren’t just draining bank accounts. Many of them are linked—either directly or indirectly—to human trafficking rings and money laundering operations. At the Global Financial Crime Summit 2024, experts shared disturbing evidence of online casinos, MLM scams, and fake job platforms funding torture compounds in Myanmar, Cambodia, and the Philippines.

If you promote these get-rich-quick platforms for a few commissions, you are part of the problem.

Final Thoughts: Don’t Let Her Fool You

Mai Summer Vue is not an innocent bystander. She is a serial scam promoter who jumps from scheme to scheme, promoting whatever earns her the highest commissions. She’s ignored cease-and-desist orders. She’s ignored victims. And now she’s promoting Beonbit as if nothing’s happened.

If she truly cared about people, she’d delete her old posts, shut down her “Woo Hoo Passive Income” site, and stop using religion as a shield.

But she won’t—because she’s too deep into the MLM crypto cult to turn back now.

Don’t fall for it.

And if you’ve already been caught in one of her scams, speak out. Report the fraud. Share your experience. You might just stop someone else from losing everything.

— Danny de Hek The Crypto Ponzi Scheme Avenger