When we trace the signals around Charlton Hayfield and Company, the noise resolves into a familiar pattern of deposit-and-stall fraud. We are documenting it here so people can recognise it before they send more.
SIGNAL SHEET
- Operator: Charlton Hayfield and Company
- Flagged by: IOSCO I-SCAN (United States of America – Securities and Exchange Commi
- Status: Reported / on watchlist
- Risk level: High
How losses unfold
It usually starts small. A modest deposit shows a tidy profit on a slick dashboard, someone friendly checks in, and the account ‘grows’. The numbers on screen are not backed by anything real, and the good feeling is the bait.
Red flags on file
- You are asked to connect a wallet, install remote-access software, or share a seed phrase.
- The ‘account manager’ is friendly, always available, and always steering you toward another deposit.
- A dashboard shows large, steady profits that no real market produces on demand.
- Registration, address and ownership details are vague, borrowed or unverifiable.
If you have already engaged
If you have already sent funds, stop sending more and preserve everything: transaction hashes, receipts, chat logs, names and links. Those records are what a recovery review actually works from.
Were you in this case?
If Charlton Hayfield and Company took money from you, do not face it alone. Share what happened and let our team map the realistic paths forward.