
The FBI, along with the DOJ and US Secret Service, has seized the original domain of BG Wealth Sharing, a well-known “click a button” app Ponzi scheme.
Visitors to bgwealthsharing.com now see an official seizure notice. DNS records confirm the domain was taken on April 23, 2026.
On the same day as the domain seizure, the US Department of Justice announced criminal charges against two Chinese nationals: Jiang Wen Jie (aka Jiang Nan) and Huang Xingshan (aka Ah Zhe).
Both men operated a fraudulent cryptocurrency investment compound in Burma (Myanmar) from early 2025 until late 2025. They later fled to Thailand, where they were arrested on immigration charges. It remains unclear if they will be extradited to the United States.
The DOJ claims these actions are part of a larger operation that has seized over $700 million linked to Chinese-run “click a button” app Ponzi schemes and other crypto investment frauds.

BG Wealth Sharing primarily targeted victims in the United States, Tonga, and Samoa. Known recruiters include:
Following the collapse and domain seizure, many promoters have shifted to similar schemes like Swift Wave Capital and other clone “click a button” apps.
The original BG Wealth Sharing operation is believed to be still partially active through accomplices of the charged Chinese operators. They continue using AI-generated personas, such as the fake CEO “Professor” Stephen Beard.

Even after the main collapse, scammers are quickly creating new domains to attract fresh victims. Recent examples registered on April 25, 2026 include:
These sites serve only as download funnels for the mobile app. Once users join the app, all communication and operations move inside it.
“Click a button” app Ponzis rely on rapid domain changes — often every 1–2 days — to stay ahead of takedowns. Victims are isolated inside the app, making it harder to spot the fraud early.
Google plans to introduce stronger security features against sideloaded Android apps in September 2026. This may help reduce new scams, but authorities still struggle to stop operators based in overseas scam compounds.
