Eric Worre has been the target of several accusations that he is a scam artist. If you come into touch with Eric Worre, the following assessment will help you decide whether you can trust him:
Eric Worre quits OmegaPro Ponzi after loss
Once OmegaPro falls, the scumbags who were involved in running, promoting, and facilitating the Ponzi fraud will likely jump ship.
In May of 2022, Eric Worre, a proven expert in multi-level marketing, became an official strategy coach for OmegaPro Corporation.
Worre is getting out of the Ponzi scam before it collapses on its own since there is no longer any money to take.
Concerned “friends” of Worre’s contacted him, Worre says, prompting him to film a video detailing his purported ties to OmegaPro.
Eric Worre doesn’t bring up OmegaPro once in the video that was posted earlier today. When confronted with the obvious Ponzi scheme, he just says “A company out of Dubai.”
Then Worre goes on to say that when he signs up for an MLM company:
“When trying to land new employees, the folks at that company often exaggerate how involved I am so they can beat out the competition.”
Knowing that his participation in OmegaPro would aid in the promotion of the Ponzi scheme for an unknown amount of money, Worre nonetheless consented to participate.
Capital that was eventually stolen from OmegaPro investors via financial fraud.
Even though he profits from OmegaPro’s ongoing “success” in deceiving people, Worre falsely claims that he doesn’t “benefit” when the company utilizes his reputation to locate victims.
I am dedicated to this profession because I believe it will benefit from my work.
Whoever wins or loses is not my business. I don’t think it’s wise for investors to pick and choose which firms to back. I don’t make an effort to sway people in any certain direction.
I think it’s fair to say that I don’t profit from any of those pushes.
Although Worre’s corporate remuneration is closely tied to the continuing acquisition of new victims, the terms of his contract with OmegaPro are kept hidden.
Introducing OmegaPro in 2019, this MLM Ponzi scam is simple and boasts a 200% ROI.
OmegaPro, as is known to BehindMLM, has changed the criteria to 24 months from 16 months when they first offered to pay out.
The abrupt disclosure of this adjustment had an impact on all OmegaPro affiliate investment holdings.
Before Worre accepted a corporate position with the Ponzi scheme earlier this year, OmegaPro had been issued regulatory fraud warnings by France, Belgium, the Congo Republic (resulting in many arrests), Spain (with two fraud warnings), Mauritius, Argentina, Colombia, Peru, Chile, and even Nicaragua.
In his Instagram bio, Eric Worre calls himself a “network marketing expert.” In his LinkedIn profile, Worre boasts about his actions.
According to Worre’s “Network Marketing Pro” website, he also claims;
For over a decade, Network Marketing Pro has kept the network marketing business at a higher standard.
One of the biographies on the site expresses that As an industry pioneer, Worre has been involved in network marketing for more than 25 years.
As president of a $200 million Network Marketing firm, he oversaw sales groups with over 500,000 distributors in over 60 countries. At the field level, he has been an outstanding producer.
If Eric Worre knew OmegaPro was a pyramid scam, he would have known it immediately. Joining a company to help promote it was his only choice due to the money.
OmegaPro’s XPL token departure fraud was exposed by BehindMLM a little over two weeks ago.
Withdrawals were disabled by OmegaPro about a week ago due to the worsening situation since then. The affiliate investors’ back office has also been inaccessible for much of this week.
Despite BehindMLM’s reluctance to pronounce OmegaPro dead, we are closely monitoring developments.
Consumers have likely lost hundreds of millions, if not over a billion, of dollars due to OmegaPro’s Ponzi scam, which has been running since 2019.
According to BehindMLM, Ted Nuyten, and BusinessForHome are under criticism for their apparent multi-level marketing (MLM) Ponzi scams, including their constant promotion of OmegaPro.
Posts on Nuyten’s Facebook page, after OmegaPro stopped allowing withdrawals, are tinged with annoyance:
A reader of BusinessForHome responded to Nuyten’s question, “Why do you post about firm XYZ? “It’s a scam!” inquiry;
While investigating BusinessForHome, BehindMLM looked into their “pay for content” business model.
BusinessForHome may violate the FTC Act as it does not disclose when the website’s material was acquired via a payment agreement.
Getting back to Eric Worre, he is an American citizen who lives in Arizona, even though OmegaPro is run by scam artists in Dubai and US investors are officially forbidden from investing there.
Worre has a history of involvement in MLM crypto Ponzi schemes, while OmegaPro is his most public foray into financial crime.
Another cryptocurrency Ponzi scam, this one for GSPartners, included Eric Worre as a speaker in May 2021.
American authorities are still confused about OmegaPro and Eric Worre’s roles.
If the prohibition on withdrawals remains in place, BehindMLM intends to declare OmegaPro inactive this next weekend.
According to BehindMLM, OmegaPro will be discontinued on November 27, 2022.
Eric Worre removed all references to OmegaPro from his social media platforms as of November 29, 2022.
I am writing to inform you that OmegaPro’s departure fraud was finalized as of December 30, 2022. It has been announced that The Broker Group is rebranding.
Eric Worre: Dubai MLM Ponzi struck Eric Worre
Today, while perusing BusinessForHome, I came upon a disturbing headline;
OmegaPro, the Middle Eastern MLM Scam? My, my. It has come to light that Worre has linked his Network Marketing Pro trailer to many MLM Ponzi scams in Dubai, not limited to OmegaPro alone.
The fact that Worre is associated with OmegaPro was brought to my attention when I heard him speak at one of their marketing events earlier this year.
Although it is upsetting to see someone with a negative reputation in the MLM industry speaking at a Ponzi marketing event, BehindMLM would not publish a standalone piece about this.
Spend your money wisely by energizing the crowd, photographing them (the reason they’re paying you), and then leaving. It occurs at an alarming rate.
However, it is far from the whole of Worre’s most recent move.
There’s no doubt that OmegaPro offers its version; but, we will use the BFH version instead, as I observed it.
Worre is supposedly “the world’s most watched and most trusted human resource for intricate Network Marketing business training and support,” according to OmegaPro.
Ignoring the marketing jargon doesn’t make it any less terrible;
To promote premium grooming for the elite community, OmegaPro has now formed a long-term strategic coaching agreement with Eric Worre as The Official Strategic Coach. a continuing member of the OmegaPro Super Training Series and a frequent speaker at the Global Convention—Rise.
Eric Worre’s incredible new job as an educator of the people and top leaders makes him more than simply a one-time event for the flourishing community.
This possible exposure should also serve as a warning;
These days, his instruction is seen by almost 5 million people weekly. More than one hundred countries’ worth of leaders are now part of Worre’s Network Marketing Pro organization.
The number of US visitors to Network Marketing Pro’s website dropped by 74% according to SimilarWeb, although it may go up again. This leads us to the business strategy of OmegaPro: the United States is the global leader in actively regulating Ponzi schemes.
OmegaPro is a multi-level marketing crypto Ponzi fraud, and the perpetrators are based in Dubai.
Several countries’ authorities have taken action against OmegaPro in the past, including Nicaragua, the Congo Republic, Mauritius, Argentina, Colombia, France, Peru, Belgium, and Chile.
Any multi-level marketing company that commits securities fraud is, according to BehindMLM, running a Ponzi scheme.
Even worse, Worre’s Network Marketing Pro brand has been linked to fraud in other cases.
I wanted to know whether Worre had come clean about becoming the face of Dubai’s MLM scam, so I looked through his social media sites.
Instead, I came to this:
Pictured here are Eric Worre, Bruce Hughes, Andrew Eaton, and Dirc Zahlmann, all of whom are big earners in the GSPartners Ponzi scheme.
It was an incredible opportunity to hear my mentor, Eric Worre, speak at our Dubai event.
The late April Atlanta event was skipped by owner Josip Heit, so GSPartners planned an event in Dubai in early May to make it up to him.
Another Ponzi fraud using multi-level marketing and bitcoin is GSPartners. Members of the GSPartners affiliate program invest tokens, earn additional tokens passively via the plan, and then try to cash out their original investments using the (ever-complicated) protocol.
Nearly half of all GSPartners website visitors are located in the United States, according to SimilarWeb. Heit didn’t show up to the Atlanta GSPartners event because, well, life.
Between the OmegaPro announcement and the GSPartners event today, Worre was showing off fresh enhancements to his Las Vegas home on Facebook.
Even if he doesn’t know better, Eric Worre should and does. He was a member of every major US multi-level marketing Ponzi scheme, including BitConnect, Zeek Rewards, TelexFree, and OneCoin.
There was more than $600,000,000 in Zeek Rewards. Other than that, there were multi-level marketing Ponzi scams that involved billions of dollars.
There are 1.8 million investors, as stated in OmegaPro’s “Eric Worre is one of us” news release. The overall invested cash and losses that are quietly building up are not readily apparent.
Eric Worre is far from alone among US MLM event regulars enticed to Dubai by the promise of easy money.
I recently chronicled the relocation of Xifra Lifestyle to Dubai, after inventor Jonathan Sifuentes’ battles with US and Mexican regulators.
Decentra was the new name of the company when Sifuentes and Xifra Lifestyle ran away to Dubai. The rebranding included John C. Maxwell’s agreement to act as the “official mentor” for the Ponzi program.
In the advertising materials for his book, “The Power of Five for Network Marketing,” Maxwell states
John C. Maxwell has spoken at more than a hundred different Direct Sales & Network Marketing groups throughout the last three decades.
He has coached and trained some of the most successful company leaders.
Like Worre, Maxwell should and does have a greater understanding.
MLM Ponzi schemes that use affiliation to legitimize themselves have been around for a while. There have been instances of fraud involving sports teams, nonprofits, payment processors, and even governments.
Some people who claim to be “the world’s most watched and most trusted resource for Network Marketing” are insiders in the MLM industry who promote obvious Ponzi scams.
The con artists behind Ponzi schemes and others like Worre and Maxwell undoubtedly benefit from this behavior.
If so, how is it benefiting multi-level marketing?
Here are some comments that individuals have made on this Ponzi scheme:
Conclusion
Renowned multi-level marketing (MLM) specialist Eric Worre is under fire for allegedly being a member of and spreading the OmegaPro Ponzi scam, among others.
After joining OmegaPro in 2022 as a strategy coach, Eric Worre stepped back when the firm was in danger of going bankrupt and was subject to regulatory action. Even though he says he has nothing to gain from OmegaPro, his participation gives the product more legitimacy.
Worre’s involvement with many multi-level marketing (MLM) Ponzi scams, including GSPartners, brings up significant ethical questions about his position in these endeavors.
His history of being involved with questionable MLMs before pulling away exemplifies the wider dangers of prominent endorsements in the MLM sector.
To prevent becoming a victim of financial fraud, it is important to exercise care and thoroughness while dealing with multi-level marketing campaigns, as this scenario has shown.