If you’re reading this and curious enough to click on any link to LEV/AI (Getlev.ai), be aware — the sign-up page you land on will place you directly under my referral ID.
I’m not promoting this as a legitimate business opportunity — quite the opposite — but I know some people will sign up regardless of the warnings. At least this way, if you insist on joining, I can track activity and see just how far the scam spreads.
LEV/AI bills itself as a “game-changing” AI-powered business solution. Their one-page site promises to “launch, market and grow businesses — no team, agency, or tech skills required,” claiming it can replace up to $800 worth of subscriptions. The feature list sounds impressive: an AI Video Twin that can speak in over 150 languages, access to more than two billion searchable global profiles, a CRM with screenshot imports, and even an instant website builder.
But when you dig beneath the AI hype, a very different picture emerges. LEV/AI is built on a recruitment-first, multi-level marketing structure, and it’s being pushed by long-time MLM promoter Randy Schroeder, a man with a history of jumping from one “groundbreaking” opportunity to the next — including Talk Fusion, TranzactCard, and FinMore.
Recruitment Disguised as Leadership
The site doesn’t just encourage you to use the software — it urges you to become a Founding Partner. Before you can see full details, you’re asked for your name, phone number, email, and a referral code. In exchange, you’re promised mentorship, leadership opportunities, and commissions. This isn’t how genuine software companies onboard customers; it’s how MLMs recruit sellers.
LEV/AI’s marketing uses phrases like “Earn commissions,” “Mentor & learn together,” and “Lead others into the AI-powered future.” These are classic recruitment hooks, designed to make you think about building a downline rather than building a business.
Big Claims Without Evidence
Among the promises are lines like “Replaces up to $800 in subscriptions”, “Your likeness, your voice – in 150+ languages”, and “Over 2 billion global profiles to keep your business growing.” Yet there’s no independent verification of these claims, no transparent demos, and no customer case studies. The “all-in-one” tool looks suspiciously like a bundle of white-labeled AI and marketing products that can be found elsewhere without the recruitment strings attached.
Privacy Policy Red Flags
The Privacy Policy reveals just how much data LEV/AI intends to harvest. They collect personal details like your date of birth, gender, address, and location at the time of use. They gather “derivative data” such as IP addresses, browser type, device information, and the pages you visited before and after theirs. They also handle payment information through third-party processors.
What’s more concerning is that they can change the Privacy Policy at any time without directly notifying you. Continued use of the site automatically means you accept the new terms. That’s a dangerous amount of control for a company already pushing hard for your personal details.
Terms & Conditions: Tilted in Their Favour
In the Terms & Conditions, refunds are only available within the first 30 days of your first purchase, and only if you request them via email. Monthly subscriptions auto-renew unless you cancel at least three business days before the next billing date. They reserve the right to terminate your account at any time, for any reason, without refund.
They also disclaim all responsibility for whether the service works as advertised, is secure, or meets your expectations. The “prohibited activities” section is so broad it gives them the freedom to remove anyone whose behaviour they simply don’t like.
Policies & Procedures: The MLM Blueprint
The Statement of Policies & Procedures makes the MLM structure clear. Commissions are based on team volume, not just retail sales, and rank advancements depend heavily on recruiting others. Partners must maintain monthly “personal volume” to qualify for commissions, which often means buying the product yourself if you can’t sell enough.
If your account is terminated, you lose your commissions and your downline. Disputes must go to arbitration in a venue chosen by LEV/AI, not a public court. They also reserve the right to change the rules or the compensation plan at any time, meaning your income potential is never secure.
The Randy Schroeder Pattern
Randy Schroeder’s career follows a predictable path: launch with heavy hype, recruit aggressively, keep a tight grip on messaging, then move on when the opportunity fizzles. His past ventures — Talk Fusion, TranzactCard, and FinMore — all followed this trajectory, leaving behind disappointed recruits while he pivoted to the next project. LEV/AI fits perfectly into this pattern.
The Zoom Meeting That Said It All
A recent promotional Zoom meeting for LEV/AI made the recruitment-first agenda unmistakable. The attendees included Marshonda Henderson, known for promoting the failed Ponzi scheme Trage Technologies; Larry Lane, accused of dumping 1,500 fake affiliate accounts into the Vidme scam, whose co-founder Michael Popovich is now facing a civil lawsuit seeking over $100,000 in damages; and Marty DeGarmo, a high-profile OnPassive promoter until he was forced out.
When a new “opportunity” attracts this roster of seasoned MLM and Ponzi promoters, it’s not because they believe in the tech — it’s because they see another chance to build a downline.
AI as MLM Bait
AI is the perfect buzzword to lure people in during 2025. It’s exciting, poorly understood, and easy to oversell. LEV/AI is using AI to make the recruitment engine look like a legitimate software business. But the “product” here is the income opportunity, and like all recruitment-driven models, it will collapse when new sign-ups slow down.
Final Thoughts
If LEV/AI was a legitimate SaaS product, it would have transparent leadership, clear pricing, verifiable technology, and customers who pay for the service because it works — not because they hope to recruit others. Instead, it’s built on vague promises, aggressive data collection, one-sided legal terms, and a network of known MLM operators.
Until LEV/AI can prove it’s more than just AI-wrapped MLM hype, it belongs firmly on every scam-watchlist.
Join the Review Challenge
If you’ve ever tried posting a one-star review exposing a scam on Trustpilot, you’ll know it’s almost impossible to get it approved. Their so-called AI filter system seems to remove almost anything negative, no matter how truthful it is. But here’s the loophole — you can write whatever you like, in as harsh and honest a tone as you want, as long as you give it five stars. That’s exactly what I did during our GETLEV live stream, and my “minus-five star” review went straight through and got approved.
So here’s the challenge: try posting your own one-star review on GETLEV’s Trustpilot page and see if it sticks. If Trustpilot deletes it, repost the exact same review but change it to five stars — watch how quickly it gets approved. This not only warns others about GETLEV, but also exposes just how flawed Trustpilot’s system is when it comes to protecting consumers from scams.
You can find GETLEV’s Trustpilot page here: trustpilot.com/review/getlev.ai
The Faces Behind the Zoom Call
When we infiltrated Randy Schroeder’s LEV/AI Zoom pitch, it wasn’t just Randy pushing the “AI-powered business revolution” narrative — the attendee list read like a who’s who of MLM regulars, Ponzi promoters, and opportunity hoppers. These are the people who chose to sit in, listen, and in many cases actively support this recruitment-first model.
Among those present were: Kim Parish, Campbell Scott, Ron Helms, Carol Sodman-Morris, Allan Hordal, Sue Tombrella, Thomas Carter, Glenn Coplin, Lior Skaler, Melissa Martini, Jeff Evers, Steve Bastrom, Dave Gile, Sandra Hansel, James Tag, Tom Bice, Charles Jackson, Stephen Bird, Attila Hevesy, Jeffrey Leonard, Susan McGraw, Michael Arceneaux, Brian Route, Paul R. Leite, Mary Beth Jaeger, Bill Price, Rick Walsh, Paul and Dru Barrios, Jill Reed, Edgar Morales Acevedo, Jamie Hansel, Paul Prehm, Dan Ratekin, Marshonda Henderson, Jeff Simpson, Greg & Elaine Rupert, Bryan Rew, Al Diaz Jr, Sherman Unkefer, Alexander Frank, Steve Halstrum, Baldwin Ellis, Linda Sloan, Todd Stofka, Bob Amato, Kari Kerluke, Mark Saileer, Michael Beal, Paul Jones, David Stewart, Main_User, Debra Morgan, Otis Corbett, Lovetta Chester, Marti Fischer, Yolanda, Harlequin Murray, Nancy Moy, Tom Mueller, Mimi L Hatton, Barb Horsfall, Joseph Meredith, Barry Elrod, Carlos Wiley, Elouise Baccus, Ashara Love, Alan Smith, Lanie Boyden, Rich Graves, Patricia Varlack, Carolynn Fernandez, David Francis, Ray Herron, Linda Marquez, Tyler White, Elie Michel, Chris Atkinson, Teri Josefik, Ed Russo, James OC, Eric Zuley, Drew Jones Jr, Mark Hackman, Verner Dixon, Michael Bray, Mike McDonald, Catriona Jones, Rod Milliman, Selena Jackson, Robert M. Burns, Haseeb Seif, Joyce Roettger, Stefan Jadlowkier, Ray Harrison, Chandler S. Tullis, Billy Scoggins, Anne Long, Judy Millar, Ivy Brooks, Sue Harrison, Judy Turner Miller, JoAnn Owens, Toya Thames, Steven Baker, Brian Hartman, Tommy Dunn, Glen Echeverria, Pete Ade, Fernando Gomez, Mary Duffy, Ron Hazard, Floyd Williams, Haydon Cameron, Tamara Malott, Cheryl Dacey, Jack Welch, Lonna Noland, Teri Norgrove, Jon O’Sullivan, Melvin Davis, Dennis Yamasaki, Lisa Campbell, Brian Hitchens, Aileen Thomas, Barbara Turner, Monty Stratton, Larry Johnson, Brad Howat, Jeff Reid, Timothy Black, Tammy Wachter, Christy Ivkovich, Karen Marie, Tess Boehm, Crystal Davis, Ron Wong, Joseph Hasson, Cheryl Sayegh, Renee Hall, Sonya Jones, Larry Lane, Hardy Cornelious, Michael Morgan, Rick Fleming, Thomas & Holly Buck, Pati Slay, Art Phelps, Gerald Forbes, Doug Jones, Mary McDermott, Jeff Vandeborne, Annice Jones, Kevin Gardner, Ken Burwen, Susan Guthrie, James Goodenough, Rich Hylton, Al B, Stana Males, Karl Lambright, Mary Alimo, Barlos Sims, Christopher Santiago, Ivan Nuñez, Natalie Odumes, George Brown, Francis Lindon, Sean Nickens, James Hammons, Paul Gogan.
This wasn’t a room full of tech entrepreneurs evaluating cutting-edge AI tools — it was a packed house of seasoned MLM players, many of whom have been spotted in and out of questionable “opportunities” before. Seeing this level of attendance from the usual industry suspects reinforces the point: LEV/AI isn’t attracting serious business owners, it’s attracting the recruitment crowd.
In a move that perfectly sums up MLM recklessness, Randy Schroeder proudly shared his screen during a Zoom call, showing off how many people had signed up under his affiliate link for GETLEV. In doing so, he inadvertently broadcasted every participant’s personal details to the world. No hacking required — just Randy’s eagerness to parade his “downline” numbers without thinking about privacy or security. Here’s exactly what he showed live on screen:
Keith Youngren – cptaxrelief@yahoo.com, Justin Temple – bitzone06@gmail.com, Tim Nihoul – timnihoulqc@gmail.com, Barry Elrod – barryelrod@gmail.com, Larry Lane – lanetwins@gmail.com, Michael Beal – justkeepinitreal@gmail.com, Michael Alhgrim – joinmike@me.com, Brent Christian – bchristian0425@gmail.com, Angela Judy – angela_judy@hotmail.com, Bradley Howat – yourwhymatters8@gmail.com, Sandra Salesas – sandysalesas@gmail.com, Alejandro Villa – heavyhittingclub@gmail.com, Jason Winter – wipinternational@gmail.com, Christopher Peavie – cpeavie@gmail.com, Armen Hamalian – advantagedsolutionsllc@gmail.com, David Stewart – david@surftheweb.ai, Benyamin Waziri – benyamin.waziri@pm.me, Karla Wiley – wehiredaily@gmail.com, Carlos Wiley – thewileyinvestmentgroup@gmail.com
Disclaimer: How This Investigation Was Conducted
This investigation relies entirely on OSINT — Open Source Intelligence — meaning every claim made here is based on publicly available records, archived web pages, corporate filings, domain data, social media activity, and open blockchain transactions. No private data, hacking, or unlawful access methods were used. OSINT is a powerful and ethical tool for exposing scams without violating privacy laws or overstepping legal boundaries.
About the Author
I’m DANNY DE HEK, a New Zealand–based YouTuber, investigative journalist, and OSINT researcher. I name and shame individuals promoting or marketing fraudulent schemes through my YOUTUBE CHANNEL. Every video I produce exposes the people behind scams, Ponzi schemes, and MLM frauds — holding them accountable in public.
My PODCAST is an extension of that work. It’s distributed across 18 major platforms — including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, YouTube, and iHeartRadio — so when scammers try to hide, my content follows them everywhere. If you prefer listening to my investigations instead of watching, you’ll find them on every major podcast service.
You can BOOK ME for private consultations or SPEAKING ENGAGEMENTS, where I share first-hand experience from years of exposing large-scale fraud and helping victims recover.
“Stop losing your future to financial parasites. Subscribe. Expose. Protect.”
My work exposing crypto fraud has been featured in:
- Bloomberg Documentary (2025): A 20-minute exposé on Ponzi schemes and crypto card fraud
- News.com.au (2025): Profiled as one of the leading scam-busters in Australasia
- OpIndia (2025): Cited for uncovering Pakistani software houses linked to drug trafficking, visa scams, and global financial fraud
- The Press / Stuff.co.nz (2023): Successfully defeated $3.85M gag lawsuit; court ruled it was a vexatious attempt to silence whistleblowing
- The Guardian Australia (2023): National warning on crypto MLMs affecting Aussie families
- ABC News Australia (2023): Investigation into Blockchain Global and its collapse
- The New York Times (2022): A full two-page feature on dismantling HyperVerse and its global network
- Radio New Zealand (2022): “The Kiwi YouTuber Taking Down Crypto Scammers From His Christchurch Home”
- Otago Daily Times (2022): A profile on my investigative work and the impact of crypto fraud in New Zealand
Great summary, good program tonight. Congrats, and appreciation.
“Thanks! Glad you enjoyed it — every meeting we crash is another step toward exposing these scams.”