Watchlist case file: RoyalStern. The story the front-end tells does not match the signal coming back from the chain.
| Operator | RoyalStern |
| Public domain | royalstern.com |
| Reported website | https://royalstern.com/ |
| Status | FLAGGED · ON WATCHLIST |
| Filed by | Cryptosenti Research Desk · Brooklyn, NY |
How losses unfold
Deposits to RoyalStern most often go through pressured stablecoin transfers, customer-service wallets, or third-party payment processors that route funds away from the broker brand entirely.
Red flags on file
- Opaque ownership. No verifiable corporate filing, no named principals, no auditable office address.
- Cloned legitimacy. Branding, language, and design lifted from real regulated brokers to inherit perceived credibility.
- Withdrawal friction. Funds go in cleanly; coming back out triggers a sudden cascade of fees, taxes, and verification demands.
If you have already engaged
Document everything you have: wallet addresses, transaction hashes, screenshots described in text, the exact account-manager handles, and dates. The Cryptosenti desk works from this evidence.
If you have already deposited with RoyalStern, stop sending more — even if a final fee will supposedly unlock your balance. That is the pattern that drains the rest.
Cryptosenti never asks for your seed phrase, private keys, or exchange password. Anyone who does — even someone claiming to represent us — is running a recovery scam.
The desk is at 10 Grand Street, Brooklyn. Open a case and we will read your file.
Were you in this case?
If RoyalStern is part of your story, the Cryptosenti desk reads every signal that comes in. One business day to a scope assessment from the Brooklyn office.