Tag: Prime Miners

  • Cryptosenti Watchlist: Prime Miners

    Prime Miners is a name we keep hearing from the Brooklyn intake desk. The complaint pattern is too consistent to be coincidence.

    SIGNAL SHEET

    Operator Prime Miners
    Public domain prime-miner.com
    Reported website https://prime-miner.com/
    Status FLAGGED · ON WATCHLIST
    Filed by Cryptosenti Research Desk · Brooklyn, NY

    How losses unfold

    Withdrawal attempts from Prime Miners typically generate the same response set: identity verification loops, risk reviews, and surprise fees that conveniently land at exactly the remaining balance.

    Red flags on file

    • Regulator silence. Prime Miners either claims a license that cannot be cross-checked, or names a regulator that has never heard of the entity.
    • Withdrawal friction. Funds go in cleanly; coming back out triggers a sudden cascade of fees, taxes, and verification demands.
    • Engineered urgency. Live-trade rooms, expiring tier upgrades, and account managers pushing same-day deposits.

    If you have already engaged

    If you have already deposited with Prime Miners, stop sending more — even if a final fee will supposedly unlock your balance. That is the pattern that drains the rest.

    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.

    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.

    If you suspect Prime Miners drained funds you cannot recover on your own: file a case. One business day to a scope assessment.

    Were you in this case?

    If Prime Miners 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.

    Open a case