SARFund tracks AFT as an funds-recovered partial pool, with approximately 600+ victims currently registered against the case. Evidence has been routed to the partner team conducting wallet tracing for verification and tracing.
Across the verified submissions, three red flags repeat: the broker operated through impersonated KYC documents, rebranded under multiple domains in succession, and demanded “tax” or “verification” fees before withdrawal. None of these are unique to AFT — they are the structural fingerprint of this scam typology.
Channels through which AFT has been reported include Google Search complaints, TrustPilot complaints, and direct victim submissions through SARFund. SARFund cross-references new submissions against existing reports before adding evidence to the case file.
What evidence helps most
Transaction hashes (the on-chain proof of your deposit), screenshots of the broker dashboard, KYC documents you submitted, and full conversation history with any account manager. These four pieces let the partner build a defensible chain of custody.
Why details on this case stay redacted
The Recovery Partner field, victim count, and traced-wallet figures are masked on the public registry. This is deliberate: publishing partner identities or live victim counts compromises tracing operations and tips off counterparties. Verified claimants receive the partner contact privately after submitting evidence.
Suspect you were affected by AFT? Submit your claim evidence and SARFund will route it to the partner working this case. No upfront fees, no obligation, no recovery guarantee — just verification and coordination.
SARFund does not guarantee recovery. All recovery actions are conducted by independent partners. Submission is free. SARFund is an intermediary case registry, not a recovery firm.