Scam Detective
Domain

www.freedomrealestateinvesting.com

First seen Mar 1, 2026

Suspicious
  • No SSL certificate
  • 11 community reports from users

Campaign Intelligence

This cluster centers on 2382 connected domains tagged as PureHVNC, elf, sh. 572 of these domains have been flagged by threat intelligence feeds including Google Safe Browsing and URLhaus. The connected infrastructure includes 969 phone numbers (8772427372, 1319641540, 1319641221) with 557 FTC complaints; 690 email addresses (kellymoore_64@yahoo.com, schantzsybg7@aol.com, online.motors@consultant.com). Across all linked entities, consumers have filed 2228 complaints with federal agencies. Geog...

This cluster centers on 2396 connected domains tagged as 156-233-71-230, Quakbot, lnk. 586 of these domains have been flagged by threat intelligence feeds including Google Safe Browsing and URLhaus. The connected infrastructure includes 969 phone numbers (8772427372, 1319641540, 1319641221) with 565 FTC complaints; 690 email addresses (kellymoore_64@yahoo.com, schantzsybg7@aol.com, online.motors@consultant.com). Across all linked entities, consumers have filed 2237 complaints with federal agen...

This cluster centers on 2416 connected domains tagged as BABADEDA, WallStealer, meterpreter. 607 of these domains have been flagged by threat intelligence feeds including Google Safe Browsing and URLhaus. The connected infrastructure includes 969 phone numbers (5086371451, 9366439335, 1842506726) with 570 FTC complaints; 690 email addresses (kellymoore_64@yahoo.com, schantzsybg7@aol.com, online.motors@consultant.com). Across all linked entities, consumers have filed 2243 complaints with federa...

This cluster centers on 2764 connected domains tagged as BeaverTail, Kaiji, fbf543. 645 of these domains have been flagged by threat intelligence feeds including Google Safe Browsing and URLhaus. The connected infrastructure includes 1132 phone numbers (7638857447, 8664372914, 2157987305) with 10266 FTC complaints; 146 companies (JPMORGAN CHASE & CO., Advanced Resolution Services Inc., EVERBANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION) with 8616274 CFPB complaints; 298 email addresses (xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx@vm...

This cluster centers on 3287 connected domains tagged as HijackLoader, RemcosRAT, screenconnect. 617 of these domains have been flagged by threat intelligence feeds including Google Safe Browsing and URLhaus. The connected infrastructure includes 1649 phone numbers (5408463620, 8552597377, 8007873903) with 7110 FTC complaints; 143 companies (Informative LLC, HomePlus Corporation, Doral Capital Corporation) with 8547081 CFPB complaints; 807 email addresses (kellymoore_64@yahoo.com, schantzsybg7@...

This cluster centers on 2874 connected domains tagged as QuasarRAT, StealitStealer, pw-k53mv9bc. 652 of these domains have been flagged by threat intelligence feeds including Google Safe Browsing and URLhaus. The connected infrastructure includes 1375 phone numbers (2157987305, 2025069230, 2028641298) with 14635 FTC complaints; 160 companies (JPMORGAN CHASE & CO., Advanced Resolution Services Inc., EVERBANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION) with 8680419 CFPB complaints; 299 email addresses (abuse@fb.com, ...

This cluster centers on 1486 connected domains tagged as None, keylogger. 5 of these domains have been flagged by threat intelligence feeds including Google Safe Browsing and URLhaus. The connected infrastructure includes 1364 phone numbers (3124141737, 3163966869, 8553892999) with 17909 FTC complaints; 170 companies (EQUIFAX, INC., TRANSUNION INTERMEDIATE HOLDINGS, INC., BANK OF AMERICA, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION) with 8747332 CFPB complaints; 187 email addresses (xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx@vmh5.grup...

Details

First Seen
3/1/2026

Related Domains

Community Reports

I got scammed by real estate wholesalers... anyone else? I now know that I have pretty severe bipolar disorder type II. I had a bad hypomanic phase last year when I got caught up by real estate wholesaling. If you've ever seen crappy signs on the side of the road that say "WE BUY HOUSES FOR CASH" or something to that effect, those are real estate wholesalers. Real estate wholesaling is a scam where an "investor" uses direct marketing like junk mail, the WE BUY HOUSES "bandit signs" (called that because they are typically illegal and placed in the middle of the night like bandits), and cold calling numbers from public records. Typically they target people who are in desperate situations, such as bankruptcies/foreclosures, divorces, code violations, and even families of recently passed relatives via probate court records. They use a fast-talking sales pitch to try and convince the owner to sell quickly, saying they pay cash and can close in five days or less, but they must sell now. In exchange, the wholesaler wants a DEEP discount off the price of the house (typically 40-50% off market value), claiming it's necessary to recover repair costs, and to entice a buyer to close quickly. Once the agreement is made, the wholesaler "buys" the house with transactional funding, flips the house immediately to the actual investor, and collects a middle-man fee ranging anywhere from $5,000-$20,000. I wasn't scammed by this, but I was the scammer, unintentionally. Here's where the MLM piece comes in. Like MLM, there are motivational speakers like [Brock Collins](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nVta7w7y1NI) and [Phil Pustejovsky](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lSXGxOiRp7A), who offer "training" on real estate wholesaling. They entice people in by saying it's a "no money down" real estate investment, say no real estate agent license or training is required, and make wild income claims from their past deals. They can back up their income claims with the HUD-1 documents, b

3071 days ago54 upvotes

I got scammed by real estate wholesalers... anyone else? I now know that I have pretty severe bipolar disorder type II. I had a bad hypomanic phase last year when I got caught up by real estate wholesaling. If you've ever seen crappy signs on the side of the road that say "WE BUY HOUSES FOR CASH" or something to that effect, those are real estate wholesalers. Real estate wholesaling is a scam where an "investor" uses direct marketing like junk mail, the WE BUY HOUSES "bandit signs" (called that because they are typically illegal and placed in the middle of the night like bandits), and cold calling numbers from public records. Typically they target people who are in desperate situations, such as bankruptcies/foreclosures, divorces, code violations, and even families of recently passed relatives via probate court records. They use a fast-talking sales pitch to try and convince the owner to sell quickly, saying they pay cash and can close in five days or less, but they must sell now. In exchange, the wholesaler wants a DEEP discount off the price of the house (typically 40-50% off market value), claiming it's necessary to recover repair costs, and to entice a buyer to close quickly. Once the agreement is made, the wholesaler "buys" the house with transactional funding, flips the house immediately to the actual investor, and collects a middle-man fee ranging anywhere from $5,000-$20,000. I wasn't scammed by this, but I was the scammer, unintentionally. Here's where the MLM piece comes in. Like MLM, there are motivational speakers like [Brock Collins](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nVta7w7y1NI) and [Phil Pustejovsky](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lSXGxOiRp7A), who offer "training" on real estate wholesaling. They entice people in by saying it's a "no money down" real estate investment, say no real estate agent license or training is required, and make wild income claims from their past deals. They can back up their income claims with the HUD-1 documents, b

3071 days ago54 upvotes

I got scammed by real estate wholesalers... anyone else? I now know that I have pretty severe bipolar disorder type II. I had a bad hypomanic phase last year when I got caught up by real estate wholesaling. If you've ever seen crappy signs on the side of the road that say "WE BUY HOUSES FOR CASH" or something to that effect, those are real estate wholesalers. Real estate wholesaling is a scam where an "investor" uses direct marketing like junk mail, the WE BUY HOUSES "bandit signs" (called that because they are typically illegal and placed in the middle of the night like bandits), and cold calling numbers from public records. Typically they target people who are in desperate situations, such as bankruptcies/foreclosures, divorces, code violations, and even families of recently passed relatives via probate court records. They use a fast-talking sales pitch to try and convince the owner to sell quickly, saying they pay cash and can close in five days or less, but they must sell now. In exchange, the wholesaler wants a DEEP discount off the price of the house (typically 40-50% off market value), claiming it's necessary to recover repair costs, and to entice a buyer to close quickly. Once the agreement is made, the wholesaler "buys" the house with transactional funding, flips the house immediately to the actual investor, and collects a middle-man fee ranging anywhere from $5,000-$20,000. I wasn't scammed by this, but I was the scammer, unintentionally. Here's where the MLM piece comes in. Like MLM, there are motivational speakers like [Brock Collins](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nVta7w7y1NI) and [Phil Pustejovsky](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lSXGxOiRp7A), who offer "training" on real estate wholesaling. They entice people in by saying it's a "no money down" real estate investment, say no real estate agent license or training is required, and make wild income claims from their past deals. They can back up their income claims with the HUD-1 documents, b

3071 days ago54 upvotes

I got scammed by real estate wholesalers... anyone else? I now know that I have pretty severe bipolar disorder type II. I had a bad hypomanic phase last year when I got caught up by real estate wholesaling. If you've ever seen crappy signs on the side of the road that say "WE BUY HOUSES FOR CASH" or something to that effect, those are real estate wholesalers. Real estate wholesaling is a scam where an "investor" uses direct marketing like junk mail, the WE BUY HOUSES "bandit signs" (called that because they are typically illegal and placed in the middle of the night like bandits), and cold calling numbers from public records. Typically they target people who are in desperate situations, such as bankruptcies/foreclosures, divorces, code violations, and even families of recently passed relatives via probate court records. They use a fast-talking sales pitch to try and convince the owner to sell quickly, saying they pay cash and can close in five days or less, but they must sell now. In exchange, the wholesaler wants a DEEP discount off the price of the house (typically 40-50% off market value), claiming it's necessary to recover repair costs, and to entice a buyer to close quickly. Once the agreement is made, the wholesaler "buys" the house with transactional funding, flips the house immediately to the actual investor, and collects a middle-man fee ranging anywhere from $5,000-$20,000. I wasn't scammed by this, but I was the scammer, unintentionally. Here's where the MLM piece comes in. Like MLM, there are motivational speakers like [Brock Collins](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nVta7w7y1NI) and [Phil Pustejovsky](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lSXGxOiRp7A), who offer "training" on real estate wholesaling. They entice people in by saying it's a "no money down" real estate investment, say no real estate agent license or training is required, and make wild income claims from their past deals. They can back up their income claims with the HUD-1 documents, b

3071 days ago54 upvotes

I got scammed by real estate wholesalers... anyone else? I now know that I have pretty severe bipolar disorder type II. I had a bad hypomanic phase last year when I got caught up by real estate wholesaling. If you've ever seen crappy signs on the side of the road that say "WE BUY HOUSES FOR CASH" or something to that effect, those are real estate wholesalers. Real estate wholesaling is a scam where an "investor" uses direct marketing like junk mail, the WE BUY HOUSES "bandit signs" (called that because they are typically illegal and placed in the middle of the night like bandits), and cold calling numbers from public records. Typically they target people who are in desperate situations, such as bankruptcies/foreclosures, divorces, code violations, and even families of recently passed relatives via probate court records. They use a fast-talking sales pitch to try and convince the owner to sell quickly, saying they pay cash and can close in five days or less, but they must sell now. In exchange, the wholesaler wants a DEEP discount off the price of the house (typically 40-50% off market value), claiming it's necessary to recover repair costs, and to entice a buyer to close quickly. Once the agreement is made, the wholesaler "buys" the house with transactional funding, flips the house immediately to the actual investor, and collects a middle-man fee ranging anywhere from $5,000-$20,000. I wasn't scammed by this, but I was the scammer, unintentionally. Here's where the MLM piece comes in. Like MLM, there are motivational speakers like [Brock Collins](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nVta7w7y1NI) and [Phil Pustejovsky](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lSXGxOiRp7A), who offer "training" on real estate wholesaling. They entice people in by saying it's a "no money down" real estate investment, say no real estate agent license or training is required, and make wild income claims from their past deals. They can back up their income claims with the HUD-1 documents, b

3071 days ago54 upvotes

I got scammed by real estate wholesalers... anyone else? I now know that I have pretty severe bipolar disorder type II. I had a bad hypomanic phase last year when I got caught up by real estate wholesaling. If you've ever seen crappy signs on the side of the road that say "WE BUY HOUSES FOR CASH" or something to that effect, those are real estate wholesalers. Real estate wholesaling is a scam where an "investor" uses direct marketing like junk mail, the WE BUY HOUSES "bandit signs" (called that because they are typically illegal and placed in the middle of the night like bandits), and cold calling numbers from public records. Typically they target people who are in desperate situations, such as bankruptcies/foreclosures, divorces, code violations, and even families of recently passed relatives via probate court records. They use a fast-talking sales pitch to try and convince the owner to sell quickly, saying they pay cash and can close in five days or less, but they must sell now. In exchange, the wholesaler wants a DEEP discount off the price of the house (typically 40-50% off market value), claiming it's necessary to recover repair costs, and to entice a buyer to close quickly. Once the agreement is made, the wholesaler "buys" the house with transactional funding, flips the house immediately to the actual investor, and collects a middle-man fee ranging anywhere from $5,000-$20,000. I wasn't scammed by this, but I was the scammer, unintentionally. Here's where the MLM piece comes in. Like MLM, there are motivational speakers like [Brock Collins](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nVta7w7y1NI) and [Phil Pustejovsky](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lSXGxOiRp7A), who offer "training" on real estate wholesaling. They entice people in by saying it's a "no money down" real estate investment, say no real estate agent license or training is required, and make wild income claims from their past deals. They can back up their income claims with the HUD-1 documents, b

3071 days ago54 upvotes

I got scammed by real estate wholesalers... anyone else? I now know that I have pretty severe bipolar disorder type II. I had a bad hypomanic phase last year when I got caught up by real estate wholesaling. If you've ever seen crappy signs on the side of the road that say "WE BUY HOUSES FOR CASH" or something to that effect, those are real estate wholesalers. Real estate wholesaling is a scam where an "investor" uses direct marketing like junk mail, the WE BUY HOUSES "bandit signs" (called that because they are typically illegal and placed in the middle of the night like bandits), and cold calling numbers from public records. Typically they target people who are in desperate situations, such as bankruptcies/foreclosures, divorces, code violations, and even families of recently passed relatives via probate court records. They use a fast-talking sales pitch to try and convince the owner to sell quickly, saying they pay cash and can close in five days or less, but they must sell now. In exchange, the wholesaler wants a DEEP discount off the price of the house (typically 40-50% off market value), claiming it's necessary to recover repair costs, and to entice a buyer to close quickly. Once the agreement is made, the wholesaler "buys" the house with transactional funding, flips the house immediately to the actual investor, and collects a middle-man fee ranging anywhere from $5,000-$20,000. I wasn't scammed by this, but I was the scammer, unintentionally. Here's where the MLM piece comes in. Like MLM, there are motivational speakers like [Brock Collins](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nVta7w7y1NI) and [Phil Pustejovsky](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lSXGxOiRp7A), who offer "training" on real estate wholesaling. They entice people in by saying it's a "no money down" real estate investment, say no real estate agent license or training is required, and make wild income claims from their past deals. They can back up their income claims with the HUD-1 documents, b

3071 days ago54 upvotes

I got scammed by real estate wholesalers... anyone else? I now know that I have pretty severe bipolar disorder type II. I had a bad hypomanic phase last year when I got caught up by real estate wholesaling. If you've ever seen crappy signs on the side of the road that say "WE BUY HOUSES FOR CASH" or something to that effect, those are real estate wholesalers. Real estate wholesaling is a scam where an "investor" uses direct marketing like junk mail, the WE BUY HOUSES "bandit signs" (called that because they are typically illegal and placed in the middle of the night like bandits), and cold calling numbers from public records. Typically they target people who are in desperate situations, such as bankruptcies/foreclosures, divorces, code violations, and even families of recently passed relatives via probate court records. They use a fast-talking sales pitch to try and convince the owner to sell quickly, saying they pay cash and can close in five days or less, but they must sell now. In exchange, the wholesaler wants a DEEP discount off the price of the house (typically 40-50% off market value), claiming it's necessary to recover repair costs, and to entice a buyer to close quickly. Once the agreement is made, the wholesaler "buys" the house with transactional funding, flips the house immediately to the actual investor, and collects a middle-man fee ranging anywhere from $5,000-$20,000. I wasn't scammed by this, but I was the scammer, unintentionally. Here's where the MLM piece comes in. Like MLM, there are motivational speakers like [Brock Collins](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nVta7w7y1NI) and [Phil Pustejovsky](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lSXGxOiRp7A), who offer "training" on real estate wholesaling. They entice people in by saying it's a "no money down" real estate investment, say no real estate agent license or training is required, and make wild income claims from their past deals. They can back up their income claims with the HUD-1 documents, b

3071 days ago54 upvotes

I got scammed by real estate wholesalers... anyone else? I now know that I have pretty severe bipolar disorder type II. I had a bad hypomanic phase last year when I got caught up by real estate wholesaling. If you've ever seen crappy signs on the side of the road that say "WE BUY HOUSES FOR CASH" or something to that effect, those are real estate wholesalers. Real estate wholesaling is a scam where an "investor" uses direct marketing like junk mail, the WE BUY HOUSES "bandit signs" (called that because they are typically illegal and placed in the middle of the night like bandits), and cold calling numbers from public records. Typically they target people who are in desperate situations, such as bankruptcies/foreclosures, divorces, code violations, and even families of recently passed relatives via probate court records. They use a fast-talking sales pitch to try and convince the owner to sell quickly, saying they pay cash and can close in five days or less, but they must sell now. In exchange, the wholesaler wants a DEEP discount off the price of the house (typically 40-50% off market value), claiming it's necessary to recover repair costs, and to entice a buyer to close quickly. Once the agreement is made, the wholesaler "buys" the house with transactional funding, flips the house immediately to the actual investor, and collects a middle-man fee ranging anywhere from $5,000-$20,000. I wasn't scammed by this, but I was the scammer, unintentionally. Here's where the MLM piece comes in. Like MLM, there are motivational speakers like [Brock Collins](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nVta7w7y1NI) and [Phil Pustejovsky](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lSXGxOiRp7A), who offer "training" on real estate wholesaling. They entice people in by saying it's a "no money down" real estate investment, say no real estate agent license or training is required, and make wild income claims from their past deals. They can back up their income claims with the HUD-1 documents, b

3071 days ago54 upvotes

I got scammed by real estate wholesalers... anyone else? I now know that I have pretty severe bipolar disorder type II. I had a bad hypomanic phase last year when I got caught up by real estate wholesaling. If you've ever seen crappy signs on the side of the road that say "WE BUY HOUSES FOR CASH" or something to that effect, those are real estate wholesalers. Real estate wholesaling is a scam where an "investor" uses direct marketing like junk mail, the WE BUY HOUSES "bandit signs" (called that because they are typically illegal and placed in the middle of the night like bandits), and cold calling numbers from public records. Typically they target people who are in desperate situations, such as bankruptcies/foreclosures, divorces, code violations, and even families of recently passed relatives via probate court records. They use a fast-talking sales pitch to try and convince the owner to sell quickly, saying they pay cash and can close in five days or less, but they must sell now. In exchange, the wholesaler wants a DEEP discount off the price of the house (typically 40-50% off market value), claiming it's necessary to recover repair costs, and to entice a buyer to close quickly. Once the agreement is made, the wholesaler "buys" the house with transactional funding, flips the house immediately to the actual investor, and collects a middle-man fee ranging anywhere from $5,000-$20,000. I wasn't scammed by this, but I was the scammer, unintentionally. Here's where the MLM piece comes in. Like MLM, there are motivational speakers like [Brock Collins](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nVta7w7y1NI) and [Phil Pustejovsky](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lSXGxOiRp7A), who offer "training" on real estate wholesaling. They entice people in by saying it's a "no money down" real estate investment, say no real estate agent license or training is required, and make wild income claims from their past deals. They can back up their income claims with the HUD-1 documents, b

3071 days ago54 upvotes

Share Your Experience

What's Your Exposure?

Know your risk exposure to this message with a Thorough Analysis. It returns a detailed report covering the complaint history, your data breach exposure, related scam entities, and risk signals tied to this email message. Check the box and enter your email address now.

Proton VPN Block malicious sites and encrypt your connection

Proton VPN routes your traffic through encrypted servers and blocks known malware domains. Free plan available.