Scam Campaign Report: Fake Remote Job Operation Linked to monitor.sxbfgc.com
A cluster of connected entities has been identified as part of an apparent fake remote job scam campaign. The campaign involves the domain monitor.sxbfgc.com, the email address anthony.mitchell464@monitor.sxbfgc.com, and the phone number 332-265-3626. These three entities have been reported together across multiple relationship pairings, though the confidence scores for each connection remain low at 0.20, indicating the campaign may be in early stages or underreported relative to its actual reach. The domain monitor.sxbfgc.com was registered on June 29, 2025, through Hefei Juming Network Technology Co., Ltd., a Chinese registrar. The recency of the domain registration is consistent with infrastructure created specifically to support a short-lived fraud operation before being discarded.
The campaign's primary lure, as described in community reports, involves unsolicited outreach via iMessage promoting a fabricated position called "Partnership Assessment Associate." Targets are promised earnings of $200 to $800 USD per day for minimal work. This type of offer is a well-documented hallmark of task-based or advance-fee job scams, in which victims are eventually asked to pay fees, provide banking information, or perform fraudulent financial transactions under the guise of job duties. The email address anthony.mitchell464@monitor.sxbfgc.com uses a Western-sounding name paired with the suspicious domain, a tactic commonly used to establish false credibility. Phone number 332-265-3626 currently shows zero FTC complaints, suggesting it is either newly deployed or used sparingly to avoid detection.
The geographic and infrastructure profile of this campaign points to overseas operation. The use of Hefei Juming Network Technology Co., Ltd. as the registrar ties the domain to mainland China, and the subdomain structure under sxbfgc.com suggests the operators may be running multiple campaigns from the same parent domain. The iMessage delivery vector indicates deliberate targeting of Apple device users in North America, consistent with regional targeting patterns seen in similar pig-butchering and fake task scams that have surged in the United States and Canada. No specific regional concentration within North America can be confirmed from the current data, but the use of a 332 area code, assigned to New York City, may be intended to create a false sense of local legitimacy.
Consumer impact at this time is reflected in three community reports, each describing the same fake job solicitation and each receiving one upvote. While formal FTC complaint volume stands at zero for the associated phone number, the repetition of identical reports suggests coordinated or scripted outreach rather than isolated incidents. Victims who engage with this type of scam beyond initial contact risk financial loss, identity theft, and potential involvement in money laundering if directed to transfer funds as part of fabricated job tasks.
Consumers who receive any communication referencing the domain monitor.sxbfgc.com, the email anthony.mitchell464@monitor.sxbfgc.com, or the phone number 332-265-3626 should not respond, click any links, or provide personal or financial information. If contacted via iMessage or phone, hang up or disengage immediately. Unsolicited job offers promising high daily pay for vague or minimal work are a reliable indicator of fraud regardless of how professional the message appears. To verify whether a domain or phone number has been flagged, consumers can search community databases such as WhoCalledMe, ScamNumbers, or use WHOIS lookup tools to check domain registration details. Suspicious contacts should be reported to the Federal Trade Commission at reportfraud.ftc.gov and to the Federal Communications Commission at fcc.gov/consumers/guides/filing-informal-complaint. If the outreach arrived via iMessage, it can also be reported directly to Apple by forwarding the message to reportjunk@apple.com.
This campaign represents a low-to-moderate threat level at present, driven primarily by its early infrastructure and limited complaint volume. However, the combination of a freshly registered domain, overseas registrar, scripted job-lure messaging, and multi-vector outreach including email and phone suggests an active and scalable operation. Recommended next steps include continued monitoring of the parent domain sxbfgc.com for additional subdomains, tracking of the 332-265-3626 number for increased complaint volume, and flagging of monitor.sxbfgc.com with major domain reputation services and browser safety databases to limit consumer exposure as the campaign potentially expands.