Introduction: Beyond the Masterminds – Who Else Is Responsible?
When investigating complex criminal enterprises like the vast Israeli-run binary options and broker scams, it becomes clear that liability doesn’t stop with the top leadership. These operations depend on multilayered hierarchies, and those involved at every level—including call center agents—must be held to account.
The U.S. Department of Justice has demonstrated this in the Yukom Communications case, where boiler room employees were directly prosecuted. This U.S. precedent should serve as a template for legal reforms in the EU and Israel, where such schemes continue to operate (press release).
Retention Agents: The Frontline of Fraud
In the Yukom investigation, U.S. authorities made it clear that “retention agents”—those who handled ongoing contact with investors—were not mere bystanders. These employees, often referring to themselves as “traders” or “brokers”, used deceit and manipulation to:
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Convince victims to make additional deposits
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Prevent withdrawals under false pretenses
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Provide fake trading advice or performance data
Legal Action Taken
So far, in the Yukom case:
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Lee Elbaz, former CEO, was found guilty by a U.S. jury for investment fraud
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Five other Yukom executives and staff pleaded guilty
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Owners Yossi Herzog and Kobi Cohen have been formally indicted
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Call center agents are now also being charged (see full DOJ press release)
This development sends a clear signal: every participant, regardless of rank, will be held accountable.
U.S. Definition of Retention Agents (As Per Indictment):
Term |
Meaning |
Retention Services |
Tactics aimed at extracting more money and blocking withdrawals |
Retention Agents |
Boiler room staff posing as brokers to deceive and manipulate investors |
Scam-Or Project’s Position: A Necessary Step
At Scam-Or Project, we fully support this holistic approach. Criminal accountability must extend beyond management to include everyone complicit in the scam structure. Only then can such operations be meaningfully dismantled.
Europe’s Lag in Cybercrime Prosecution
The EU’s Passive Stance
In contrast, European enforcement remains significantly behind. Most EU jurisdictions have yet to criminalize the use of binary options and broker scam platforms, often dismissing them as speculative “gambling.”
Current challenges:
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Lack of unified legal interpretation of broker scams as fraud
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No coordinated cross-border enforcement strategy
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Minimal legal consequences for low-level operatives in scam call centers
The Barak Network: Another Case for Accountability
In the investigation into Gal Barak’s cybercrime enterprise, authorities must go beyond the principal actors and prosecute the entire operational team, including:
Key Individuals in Barak’s Network
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Gal Barak – Principal scam operator
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Marina Barak (formerly Marina Andreeva) – CFO of the criminal operation
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Uwe Lenhoff – Co-conspirator (deceased)
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Gery Shalon – Indicted in the U.S. for multiple financial crimes
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Vladislav Smirnov – Key Russian associate
Boiler Room Locations and Scope:
Country |
Activity Type |
Bulgaria |
Boiler room operations |
Serbia |
Investor targeting |
Bosnia-Herzegovina |
Scam support center |
Kosovo |
Client communications |
All staff involved in deception—whether through email or phone—must be legally pursued.
The Role of Bulgaria and Other EU States
Some jurisdictions, like Bulgaria, have been particularly slow to take action, despite being central to many operations. Without legal reforms and coordinated investigations, Europe will continue to be a safe haven for online scammers.
The EU-wide Petition against Investment Scams is one promising development, aiming to:
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Push for a unified EU stance on cyber fraud
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Encourage stronger enforcement action
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Demand accountability from financial enablers
Final Thoughts: Yukom as a Global Benchmark
The Yukom Communications case in the U.S. may become a landmark precedent, showing that boiler room agents and mid-level managers are just as culpable as CEOs and founders.
What Europe Should Learn:
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Fraud is not limited to boardrooms—it’s executed by hands-on agents.
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No scam works without retention tactics, and no retention without retention agents.
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Legal systems must evolve to recognize digital fraud as organized crime.
Let this be the turning point in how governments worldwide tackle financial cybercrime.