**Bellatorri Domain Network Scam Campaign**
Our investigation has identified a coordinated scam operation centered around a network of recently registered domains promoting fraudulent leather goods sales. The campaign primarily operates through three interconnected domains: www.bellatorri.com and bellatorri.com (both registered December 9, 2025 through GoDaddy.com, LLC) and ravixia.com (registered December 16, 2025 through the same registrar). Analysis reveals all three domains share the same infrastructure with moderate confidence levels of 0.50, indicating they are likely controlled by the same operators despite using different domain names.
The scam targets consumers through deceptive advertising, particularly through New York Times online advertisements claiming that "Bellatori" is being acquired by "Etienne Aiger" and promoting urgent stock liquidation sales. Community reports detail how the www.bellatorri.com website extensively describes a "handmade" process and falsely implies products are manufactured in Italy, when consumers actually receive items made in China. The operation advertises quality leather products including boots and bags at steep discounts, claiming USA manufacturing under Italian supervision, but delivers substandard Chinese-made goods instead.
Consumer impact appears significant based on community reporting patterns. The campaign has generated multiple consumer complaints describing false advertising, misrepresented product origins, and quality issues. Additionally, both ACCESS GROUP INC. (149 CFPB complaints in student loan industry) and Collections Inc (21 CFPB complaints in debt collection industry) have been reported together with www.bellatorri.com, suggesting potential broader financial fraud connections or identity theft concerns for affected consumers.
To protect yourself from this and similar scams, verify any company's legitimacy by checking domain registration dates (recently registered domains are red flags), researching the company through Better Business Bureau records, and looking up consumer reviews from multiple sources. If contacted by these entities through any channel, hang up immediately, do not click any links in emails or text messages, and report the incident to the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov or to the FCC for communication-related fraud. Before making any purchases or providing personal information, check if domains or phone numbers have been flagged by searching consumer protection websites and scam databases.
This campaign represents a high-threat level sophisticated fraud operation using multiple domains, false advertising, and product misrepresentation. Consumers should avoid all interactions with bellatorri.com, www.bellatorri.com, and ravixia.com domains. Immediate next steps include reporting any contact from these entities to federal authorities and monitoring financial accounts if any personal information was previously shared with these scammers.