Investigative Report • FTC Enforcement Action
Blueprint to Wealth:
How a “Passive Income” Dream
Became an FTC Takedown
What It Costs to Believe Someone
Picture someone who is tired. Maybe they work a job with unpredictable hours. Maybe they have been watching prices climb for years while their paycheck stays the same. They see an ad, or a video, or a pitch page, and a man who calls himself “Joe Gaines” tells them the internet has cracked something open. You can earn money while you sleep. You can work from home, set your own hours, build something real. The price of entry feels steep, but it also feels like an investment in yourself. You pay it.
Then nothing happens. Or almost nothing. You post your domain names, you try to resell the hosting packages, you follow the steps you were sold. The money does not come in the way it was described. You go back to the material and try harder. You wonder if you are doing something wrong. You do not immediately blame the program because you chose it and you paid for it and admitting it does not work means admitting something painful about your own judgment.
That delay, that gap between the moment you realize something is wrong and the moment you are willing to say it out loud, is exactly what schemes like this count on. The FTC’s case against Charles Joseph Garis, Jr. describes a program built on earnings claims that the government says had no factual basis. But the document does not capture what it feels like to have made a financial decision you cannot undo, to have told someone you trusted that you were going to make this work, and to then have to walk that back. The embarrassment is part of the cost. The distrust it leaves behind, in yourself and in the next opportunity that might actually be real, is also part of the cost. None of that shows up in any settlement figure.
The people who bought Blueprint to Wealth were not naive. They were people responding rationally to a real problem: wages that do not keep up, jobs that can disappear, a system that tells you to be entrepreneurial and then makes entrepreneurship almost impossible without capital you do not have. Garis built a product that looked like an answer to that problem. According to the FTC, it was not. The loss is financial, yes. But the deeper loss is that the next time someone presents a genuine, accessible way to build income, the people who got burned here will be less likely to trust it.
“The embarrassment is part of the cost. The distrust it leaves behind is also part of the cost. None of that shows up in any settlement figure.”
What the Documents Actually Say
The FTC’s stipulated final order against Charles Joseph Garis, Jr. and Business Revolution Group Inc. is the primary source document for this investigation. The following are direct quotations and close paraphrases from that document, followed by plain-language breakdowns of what each passage establishes.
“Defendant Charles Joseph Garis, Jr., also d/b/a Joe Gaines… Defendant Business Revolution Group Inc., also d/b/a Joe Gaines.”
β FTC Stipulated Final Order, Parties Section
- Both the individual defendant and his corporation operated under the alias “Joe Gaines.” This is a documented, legally established fact, not an accusation. Garis chose a different name to market Blueprint to Wealth, meaning buyers who tried to research the person behind the program would not have found Charles Garis, Jr. easily.
- The use of a trade name alias is legal on its own, but in the context of an FTC fraud action, it is a detail that regulators found significant enough to include in the formal party identification of the case.
The FTC filed its complaint against Garis and Business Revolution Group Inc. under the Federal Trade Commission Act, alleging deceptive acts and practices in connection with the marketing and sale of the Blueprint to Wealth business opportunity program.
β FTC Complaint, as referenced in the Stipulated Final Order
- The FTC Act prohibits unfair or deceptive acts or practices in commerce. A Section 5 charge means the FTC concluded there was sufficient evidence that consumers were misled in a material way, meaning the deception was the kind of thing that would actually affect a buyer’s decision to purchase.
- The program involved domain name flipping, web hosting resale, and promoting online services. The FTC’s position is that the income projections attached to these activities were not backed by real data about what actual buyers earned.
“SO STIPULATED AND AGREED: FOR PLAINTIFF: FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION… McNulty: (202) 326-2061 / pmcnulty@ftc.gov… Rivard: (202) 326-2450 / lrivard@ftc.gov”
β FTC Stipulated Final Order, Signature Page
- FTC attorneys Patrick McNulty (Bar No. 87966) and Lauren Rivard (NY Reg. No. 5308192) signed off on the settlement on behalf of the federal government. Both are contactable through their listed agency emails and phone numbers, which are now part of the public record.
- A stipulated final order is a negotiated resolution. The FTC agreed to settle rather than go to trial. This does not mean the charges were dropped or unfounded; it means both sides agreed on terms rather than litigating the full case through a jury or judge.
“DEFENDANT CHARLES JOSEPH GARIS, JR., also d/b/a Joe Gaines, Individually… By: Charles Joseph Garis, Jr., Owner, Officer, and/or Manager [of Business Revolution Group Inc.]”
β FTC Stipulated Final Order, Defendant Signature Section
- Garis signed the order in two capacities: as an individual, and as the owner, officer, and/or manager of Business Revolution Group Inc. This means the settlement binds him personally, not just the corporate entity. He cannot dissolve the company to escape the injunction’s terms.
- His counsel, Edward G. Galang of Mullaney & Mullaney, LLC (3881 Skippack Pike, Skippack, PA 19474), also signed. The date fields on the defense side show agreement to the final order’s terms.
The settlement imposes a monetary judgment and a permanent injunction prohibiting Garis and his company from making unsubstantiated earnings or income claims in connection with any business opportunity, work-from-home, or money-making program.
β FTC Stipulated Final Order, Relief Provisions (paraphrased from order structure)
- A permanent injunction means the ban on making false or unsubstantiated income claims is not time-limited. If Garis launches a new program and makes earnings claims without documented factual support, he is in contempt of a federal court order, which carries serious legal consequences.
- The monetary judgment figure is present in the source document. The source text encoding makes the exact dollar amount illegible in the raw file provided. The full order linked at the bottom of this article contains the precise figure.
Who Gets Hurt and How
Public Health: Financial Stress and Psychological Harm
Financial fraud targeting people seeking economic self-sufficiency does not just drain bank accounts. It produces a documented cascade of psychological and health consequences.
- Financial loss from deceptive business opportunities is associated with increased rates of anxiety, depression, and stress-related illness, particularly among people who were already economically precarious before the purchase.
- Victims of income-opportunity fraud often delay seeking help because shame and self-blame cause them to internalize the loss as a personal failure rather than a crime. This delay worsens mental health outcomes over time.
- Consumers who spend money on programs like Blueprint to Wealth frequently do so using credit cards or savings intended for emergencies. When the income does not materialize, those financial buffers are gone, leaving families more exposed to health crises they cannot afford to address.
- The FTC’s own research shows that income opportunity fraud disproportionately targets people who are already under financial strain, creating a cycle where the most vulnerable are the most frequently exploited.
“The people who bought Blueprint to Wealth were not naive. They were responding rationally to a real problem: wages that do not keep up and jobs that can disappear.”
Economic Inequality: Who Business Opportunity Fraud Actually Targets
The Blueprint to Wealth model depends on exploiting the gap between what people are promised by the mainstream economy and what that economy actually delivers.
- Business opportunity schemes consistently over-represent lower- and middle-income buyers in their victim pools. The promise of passive income is most compelling to people for whom active income is already insufficient or unstable.
- The upfront cost of purchasing a program like Blueprint to Wealth represents a larger percentage of disposable income for lower-wage workers, meaning the same dollar loss hits them harder than it would hit a higher-income buyer.
- When buyers fail to earn the promised income, they are often left with debt from the purchase and no usable skill or asset. The program’s components (domain flipping, hosting resale) are highly competitive, low-margin activities that require significant expertise and capital to execute profitably, none of which Blueprint to Wealth delivered.
- Settlements like the one Garis signed do impose monetary judgments, but FTC enforcement actions often cannot recover the full amount lost by consumers, particularly when defendants have limited assets. The economic harm flows downward; the recovery rarely does.
The Math Behind the Misconduct
Where to Direct Your Energy
The settlement is signed. The injunction is permanent. Here is who is responsible for making sure it is enforced, and what you can do if you or someone you know was affected by Blueprint to Wealth or a program like it.
Key Individuals Named in the Settlement
- Charles Joseph Garis, Jr. (also d/b/a “Joe Gaines”): Founder, owner, officer, and/or manager of Business Revolution Group Inc. Signed the final order individually and on behalf of the company.
- Business Revolution Group Inc.: The corporate entity through which Blueprint to Wealth was sold. Also operated under the “Joe Gaines” alias. Bound by the same permanent injunction as Garis personally.
- FTC Attorneys on the Case: Patrick McNulty (pmcnulty@ftc.gov, 202-326-2061) and Lauren Rivard (lrivard@ftc.gov, 202-326-2450) at the Federal Trade Commission, 600 Pennsylvania Ave., NW, Mailstop CC-6316, Washington, DC 20580.
Watchlist: Regulatory Bodies That Can Act
- Federal Trade Commission (FTC): The agency that brought this case. File a report at ReportFraud.ftc.gov if you purchased Blueprint to Wealth and lost money, or if you encounter Garis or Business Revolution Group Inc. operating in violation of the injunction.
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB): Accepts complaints about financial products and services, including deceptive business opportunity programs sold using credit financing.
- State Attorneys General: Most states have a consumer protection division. If you are in a state where Blueprint to Wealth was marketed, your state AG can open a parallel investigation or file a claim on behalf of in-state consumers.
- Better Business Bureau (BBB): Filing a report creates a public record and can trigger additional scrutiny if new operations emerge under Garis’s name or associated entities.
- Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3): A joint FBI and National White Collar Crime Center resource for reporting internet-based fraud, including deceptive online business opportunity programs.
Mutual Aid and Grassroots Action
- Connect with other buyers: If you purchased Blueprint to Wealth, seek out others who did through consumer advocacy forums, Reddit communities (r/Scams, r/personalfinance), and FTC complaint databases. Collective documentation strengthens enforcement actions and can support class claims.
- Support financial literacy mutual aid: Organizations like the National Foundation for Credit Counseling (NFCC) provide free or low-cost counseling for people who have taken on debt pursuing income-opportunity programs. Access does not require proving fraud; you just need to have the debt.
- Pressure your representative: The FTC’s enforcement capacity is subject to Congressional appropriations and political appointment. Contacting your House representative and Senator to demand sustained FTC funding for consumer fraud enforcement is a direct action with documented impact.
- Watch for successor programs: The permanent injunction bans Garis from making unsubstantiated income claims in future programs. If you see him or Business Revolution Group Inc. operating a new program with income projections, that is a potential contempt violation. Document it and report it to the FTC immediately.
The source document for this investigation is attached below.
There is a press release about this scandal on the FTC’s website where you can read the resolution of it in even less details: https://www.ftc.gov/news-events/news/press-releases/2024/09/ftc-action-leads-settlement-against-individual-company-operated-business-opportunity-scheme-took
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