Case file: Aiwa FX — chain-cartography review

AndersFX — Cointiverse forensic case file

Every entity in this index has been through the Cointiverse cartography pipeline at least once. Case file: Aiwa FX has been through it three times — initial intake, victim escalation, then pattern-cluster review. The platform’s public-facing assets ticked many of the legitimacy boxes — domain age, support hours, even a thinly-staffed customer chat.

Trail review

The cartographer’s plot of Case file: Aiwa FX produces three readable layers:

1. The presentation layer — the broker’s public-facing narrative, marketing assets, and onboarding flow. 2. The custody layer — the receiving and consolidation addresses where deposited funds actually live. 3. The exit layer — the off-ramps, bridges, and exchange-deposit addresses where laundered value leaves the on-chain space.

Most recovery firms only chart the first layer. Cointiverse maps all three. In the Case file: Aiwa FX file, layer-three cartography surfaced multiple jurisdictional handles that compliance officers can act on — even where layer-one is uncooperative.

What the map enables

A chain map is not a refund — but it is the document on which refunds get built. For Case file: Aiwa FX cases, the map enables: compliance freeze requests at named exchanges, regulator filings (IC3, CFTC, SEC, Action Fraud where applicable) with on-chain evidence attached, civil-claim drafting with traceable counterparty identification.

Have you been involved with this entity?

Cointiverse maintains the case file index as an active forensic resource. If your loss event intersects with Case file: Aiwa FX, the cartographer can review your specific transaction hashes against the existing map.

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Disclaimer: Listing in the Cointiverse case file index reflects forensic review of on-chain behavior and victim reports. It is not an assertion of criminal liability.