Tag: Vladislav Kogan

Vladislav ‘Vlad’ Kogan: The Elusive Money Launderer Facing Law Enforcement Heat in Australia and Europe!

In the tangled web of global cybercrime, Vladislav "Vlad" Kogan, a Russian-born Australian, is a key player in a multimillion-dollar laundering saga. According to criminal files from the Gal Barak and Uwe Lenhoff cybercrime case, Kogan facilitated the laundering of hundreds of millions through his Czech-based company, Xtrabit s.r.o., for numerous scams. While European courts and defrauded victims demand restitution, Kogan faces legal battles in Australia, with assets frozen since 2019.

Whistleblower campaign – Law enforcement and lawyers on the search for Vladislav Kogan

Vladislav Kogan was born in March 1973 in Krasnodar, Russia, and later emigrated to Australia. These are the dates in the criminal file. Kogan was the operator of the Czech and scam facilitators payment processor Xtrabit s.r.o. Which, among other things, supported the cybercrime organizations of Gal Barak and Uwe Lenhoff. FinTelegram reported on this, and Kogan sued for defamation and lost. He would have to pay the legal costs, but our lawyers cannot find him. He disappeared! Let us know his whereabouts.

Wanted for restitution payments – Payment processor XTrabit and Vlad Kogan

For FinTelegram readers, it is certainly no secret that we are hunting scam-supporting payment processors. These payment processors are even worse than the scams themselves. Scams come and go while payment processors stay and support new scams all the time. They know the scammers and where the money goes. They facilitate these scammers in defrauding ever-new victims. One of these evil payment processors is Russian-born Australian Vladislav "Vlad" Kogan. He has laundered hundreds of millions for dozens of scams with his Czech registered Xtrabit s.r.o.

Vienna Cybercrime Trials – Payments, Payvision, and about not being a Chief Financial Officer

Today was day #3 of the Vienna Cybercrime Trials in the case of Marina Barak. Last week, her lawyer, Norbert Wess, had announced that his client would not answer any questions. Apparently, the statements of the law enforcement agent, who provided his testimony today, caused her "I am silent" attitude to change. Marina Barak was then again available for questioning by the court and the prosecutor. Today's focus was all about the financial processes, the payment processors, and the money-laundering of the cybercrime organization E&G Bulgaria.