CentreForex — Forensic Casefile, Wallet Trace, and Off-Ramp Map
Quick Forensic Summary
- Platform: CentreForex
- Domain on record:
centreforex.com - Den read: high-risk; treated as unregistered venue until a verifiable charter number is produced
- Typical claimant outcome without filing: withdrawal stall, fresh-fee request, support silence
- Recovery posture: chain trace + disclosure card paired with parallel regulator filings
- What the Den does not do: guarantee recovery, cold-call claimants, or charge upfront unlock fees
Claimant Pattern
The arc claimants describe with CentreForex is consistent: a warm introduction through a private message thread, a small deposit accepted with a confirmation screen that looks polished, an in-platform balance that grows while the claimant is still calibrating trust, then a request to top up before the first withdrawal can clear. By the time the off-ramp is requested in earnest, centreforex.com has either gone dark or has begun citing fresh fees. The chain trail does not vanish with the website — every deposit address CentreForex ever issued remains on the public ledger, and that is the foundation a Den casefile is built on.
Forensic Red Flags
- > fast-funded receiving wallet — deposit addresses tied to CentreForex forward inbound funds to a consolidation wallet within minutes — a hallmark of a relay funnel rather than a custodial brokerage.
- > mirrored landing page — centreforex.com replicates the visual shell of an established platform pixel-for-pixel, but the support paths, regulator footers, and registration text resolve to dead URLs.
- > off-ramp through high-risk exchange — claimant deposits routed through CentreForex arrive at an exchange that has been named in chain-analytics blocklists for laundering throughput — visible on Etherscan and Chainabuse without subscription tools.
The on-chain trail behind CentreForex
The website at centreforex.com can disappear overnight; the chain history attached to CentreForex cannot. Every deposit you sent — whether BTC, ETH, USDT on Tron, or any token the platform accepted — sits on a public ledger that no operator controls and no domain registrar can take down. The Den’s wallet-trace work begins from those deposit transactions and follows the funds forward, hop by hop, to whatever consolidation wallet or exchange off-ramp received them. That graph is the spine of the disclosure card; everything else hangs off it.
How We Investigate
- Casefile intake. The Den catalogs every deposit hash, wallet address, screenshot, and message thread tied to CentreForex. Nothing leaves the casefile uncatalogued.
- Chain reconstruction. Each deposit is followed forward on Etherscan, the Blockchain.com explorer, and TRON-side tools where CentreForex accepted USDT-TRC20.
- Off-ramp identification. Funds are tracked to the exchange or mixer cluster they consolidated into; named-bad-actor signals are pulled from MistTrack, SlowMist, and Chainabuse.
- Disclosure card assembly. The Den binds the deposit history, on-chain graph, and platform claims into a single document a regulator intake officer can read in one sitting.
- Parallel filings. The disclosure card is routed to the FBI IC3 portal, the SEC TCR pipeline, your state attorney general, and Chainabuse simultaneously — single filings get archived; parallel ones get reviewed.
- Honest case communication. The Den reports back on whether a freeze window is open, what the realistic recovery posture looks like, and what the next-step ask is. No guarantees, no scripts.
External Verification Sources
Frequently Asked Questions about CentreForex
Where do I file a complaint against CentreForex?
The four intakes the Den routinely pairs with a CentreForex disclosure card are FBI IC3 (ic3.gov), the SEC TCR portal (sec.gov/tcr), your state attorney general (search via NAAG), and Chainabuse for the receiving wallet itself. A parallel filing across these channels carries weight that any single submission does not.
Will the SEC really act on a case like CentreForex?
SEC TCR intake is processed regardless of platform size. What moves a CentreForex report up the queue is the quality of the attached evidence — wallet addresses with on-chain confirmations, screenshots of the platform's own claims, and a documented timeline of the withdrawal block. A vague narrative is archived. A disclosure card is reviewed.
Should I hire a recovery firm that cold-called me about CentreForex?
No. Cold contact about a loss to CentreForex is the canonical follow-up scam. Legitimate forensic teams do not phone, message, or email claimants who have not initiated contact. If you have already paid an upfront fee to such a firm, document that interaction too — it forms a second, separate filing.
Final Words — What to Avoid Right Now
- Do not pay any "clearance," "unlock," or "tax" fee that CentreForex introduces at withdrawal time. Paying it does not release funds; it confirms to the operator that you will pay again.
- Do not engage anyone who cold-contacts you about a loss to this platform. Cold outreach to known claimants is the textbook follow-up scam pattern; legitimate forensic teams do not work that way.
- Do not delete any messages, screenshots, or wallet addresses associated with the platform. The casefile depends on them, and a regulator filing without supporting evidence is filed and forgotten.

