This cybersecurity analysis reveals a multi-domain scam network operating through shared infrastructure, targeting consumers with fraudulent passport services and supplement sales. The campaign centers around a cluster of 8 domains sharing the same hosting infrastructure through registrar TUCOWS.COM, CO., with most domains registered between January 31 and February 7, 2025. The primary domains include uspassportandvisa.org, www.uspassportandvisa.org, passport.uspassportandvisa.org (appearing to offer fraudulent passport services), and supplement-focused sites iverpure.com, veritas-suppliments.com, harperandlane.com, mytinythinker.com, and rawtruthultra.com.
Infrastructure analysis shows 15 documented relationships connecting these entities, with the majority linked through same_infrastructure connections at 0.50 confidence levels. All passport-related domains (uspassportandvisa.org, www.uspassportandvisa.org, passport.uspassportandvisa.org) share infrastructure with supplement sites mytinythinker.com, iverpure.com, and harperandlane.com. Additionally, iverpure.com and veritas-suppliments.com are reported together with phone number 877-390-4200, which currently shows 0 FTC complaints. The network also includes ACCOUNT SERVICES INC., a debt collection company with 8 CFPB complaints.
Consumer impact data reveals a pattern of order fulfillment fraud primarily targeting supplement purchasers. Community reports document multiple cases of consumers paying for products from iverpure.com but never receiving their orders, including purchases of parasite cleanse products, celltox supplements, and goda oil. Victims report unresponsive customer service, ignored emails, and inability to contact the company after payment processing through PayPal accounts. One consumer noted the company stopped advertising entirely after taking payments, indicating a classic take-the-money-and-run operation.
To protect against this campaign, consumers should verify any passport service provider through official government channels at travel.state.gov before providing personal information or payments, as legitimate passport services are only available through authorized government facilities. For supplement purchases, research companies through Better Business Bureau ratings and verified customer reviews on independent platforms. If contacted by these entities, hang up immediately, do not click any links in emails, and report incidents to the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov or file complaints with the FCC. Consumers can check if phone numbers or domains are flagged by searching scam databases and consumer protection websites before engaging.
This represents a high-threat, active fraud network combining government document fraud with supplement scams through coordinated infrastructure. Immediate action is recommended: consumers should avoid all listed domains, report any contact attempts to federal authorities, and financial institutions should monitor for transactions involving these entities. The recent registration dates of multiple domains and shared infrastructure patterns suggest an organized operation requiring continued monitoring and public awareness campaigns.