RecXPro.com (Recovery Expert Pro) is alerting crypto users to a surge of fraudsters posing as legitimate recovery services.
Impersonators are cloning websites, forging testimonials, and pressuring victims to pay upfront “recovery fees” — often requesting extra payments mid-process.
If you’ve been contacted by a supposed recovery agent, don’t send funds and preserve all communications.

What’s happening
Over the last several months RecXPro.com’s intake team has observed multiple campaigns where scammers contact recent scam victims offering to “recover” lost funds — for a fee.
These groups recreate the look-and-feel of established recovery firms, use domain names that mimic real sites, and publish fake success stories and fabricated regulatory badges.
Their goal is simple: extract additional money from victims who are desperate and emotionally vulnerable.
How victims are targeted
Typical patterns include direct messages on social media or WhatsApp, unsolicited emails claiming “urgent recovery available,” or cold calls from numbers that spoof legitimate companies.
After initial contact, victims are often asked to pay a “verification fee,” an “insurance payment,” or a non-refundable deposit.
If victims refuse, the impostors escalate pressure — sometimes threatening legal action or promising immediate results if the payment is made.
Red flags — quick checklist
- Demands for upfront payment or recurring “processing” fees.
- Websites with slight misspellings in the URL, odd subdomains, or unfamiliar TLDs.
- Fake or stock photography testimonials; no verifiable case history.
- Requests to use non-traceable payment methods (gift cards, crypto to personal wallets).
- Pressure tactics: “pay now or we can’t help,” or “this offer expires.”
- Unwillingness to provide clear contract, written scope, or accountable contact details.
Real-world insight from RecXPro
“Scammers are adapting fast — cloning everything from logos to terms of service,” says a senior investigator at RecXPro.com.
“If someone asks for money before doing verifiable forensic tracing, treat them as a red flag. Legitimate recovery teams work transparently and won’t demand large upfront sums.”
If you’ve been contacted — immediate steps
- Stop any payment immediately (if possible) and do not provide further funds.
- Document everything: screenshots, messages, phone numbers, wallet addresses, transaction IDs.
- Verify the company: check domain WHOIS, official social accounts, and independent reviews. Call the company’s official line (not a number the contact provides).
- Report: file a complaint with local authorities, the platform where you were contacted, and with RecXPro.com for a case review.
- Preserve evidence — do not delete chats or transaction records.
Why RecXPro’s approach matters
RecXPro.com operates on a success-based model and emphasizes transparency in its process.
That means clients aren’t asked to gamble again with large upfront fees and can instead seek help from teams that will only collect when verifiable recovery progress is made.
This structure reduces the chance of victims being preyed upon by opportunistic impostors.
Conclusion & help
Don’t let scammers take advantage of your loss twice.
If you suspect you’ve been contacted by a fake recovery firm or need a free case review, visit RecXPro.com (Recovery Expert Pro) and submit the details for a prompt intake evaluation.




