**Scam Campaign Report: Multi-Domain Employment and Biotechnology Fraud Network**
Our analysis has identified a sophisticated scam network operating through five interconnected domains, all utilizing shared infrastructure and recently registered through NAMECHEAP INC. The primary domains include cleave-therapeutics.com (registered November 4, 2025), cleavebio.com, talenthunthr.com (registered November 4, 2025), aleruva.com (registered November 7, 2025), and www.hugrer.com (registered November 11, 2025). These domains demonstrate a coordinated campaign with 16 documented cross-entity relationships, primarily sharing the same underlying infrastructure with 50% confidence levels across all connections.
The scam operation appears to target job seekers through fraudulent employment opportunities, particularly focusing on remote work positions in biotechnology and data entry roles. Community reports reveal suspicious hiring communications offering positions as "Data Entry Clerk" with work-from-home flexibility, promising $20 per hour for two-week paid online training followed by $27 per hour post-training compensation. Additional reports describe biotechnology company recruitment emails targeting individuals who have "shown interest" in employment opportunities. The network's connection to Direct, Inc, a mortgage industry company with 5 CFPB complaints, suggests potential expansion into financial services fraud through co-reported activities.
Consumer impact includes individuals receiving unsolicited job offers and potentially compromised personal information through fake application processes. The rapid registration timeline of these domains within a seven-day period (November 4-11, 2025) indicates an active, evolving campaign designed to evade detection. The shared infrastructure across all domains suggests a centralized operation capable of quickly pivoting between different fraudulent schemes, from employment scams to biotechnology investment fraud.
To protect yourself from this campaign, verify any job opportunities by independently researching the company through official channels and never provide personal information through unsolicited emails or unfamiliar websites. If contacted by any of these entities, hang up immediately if by phone, do not click any links in emails, and report the incident to the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov or to the FCC for phone-based contact. Before engaging with any suspicious domain or phone number, check its legitimacy through consumer protection databases and verify company registration through official business directories.
This network represents a high-threat, active scam campaign with significant potential for consumer harm through identity theft and financial fraud. Immediate action is recommended to monitor these domains for takedown procedures and alert job placement services about the fraudulent recruitment activities targeting remote work seekers.