THE $65 MILLION DECEPTION
THE NON-FINANCIAL LEDGER
This is a story about money. $65 million of it. But it’s also a story about the theft of something more valuable: hope. Lurn, Inc. sold a fantasy of financial freedom to people desperate for a way out. Their telemarketers, armed with manipulative scripts, were instructed to dig into people’s lives. They asked about their income goals and, more importantly, how that money would change their lives. They preyed on the dream of bringing a loved one home from a difficult job or finally achieving stability.
After extracting these personal motivations, the script directed them to say, “I’m 100% confident we can help you.” This wasn’t a promise of tools or education. It was a promise of a specific outcome, a guaranteed result they knew they couldn’t deliver. They confirmed that consumers could achieve their dreams regardless of their experience. This is the real currency of the scam: the betrayal of trust. For every dollar taken, a measure of hope was poisoned.
LEGAL RECEIPTS
The government’s case file exposes the company’s internal awareness of its deception. While executives told the public one story, their own employees and internal documents told another. They knew their marketing was illegal and that their products failed to deliver.
“I hate to say it, but typical results will suck for all programs. Typically, people don’t do anything, and get no results.”
That quote comes directly from a Lurn marketing employee in a company Slack channel in February 2021. This admission confirms the business model was based on selling an outcome that was, for the typical user, a fantasy. The company’s Copy Chief also admitted that testimonials used for the “Printable Profits” webinar were not real.
Even after being formally warned by the FTC, Lurn created an internal presentation for its customers on how to comply with FTC law. In that very presentation, after pages of legal warnings, they included this piece of advice:
“Legal doesn’t sell – never simply write ‘compliant copy.’”
The company knew the rules. It taught the rules to its own customers. And it simultaneously encouraged them to bend those rules because compliant, honest marketing doesn’t sell as effectively as fabricated dreams.
SOCIETAL IMPACT MAPPING: ECONOMIC INEQUALITY
Lurn’s business model is a textbook case of wealth extraction. It transferred $65 million from thousands of ordinary people to a single corporate entity owned by one person, Anik Singal. This wasn’t value creation; it was a wealth transfer built on false promises.
The data from one of their own partners tells the story. For the “Printable Profits” course, which cost $1,588, Lurn promised students they could make over $11,000 per month selling custom mugs. Lurn sold this course to nearly 6,000 people. Yet, data from the recommended mug drop-shipper reveals the truth:
- Fewer than 1,000 of those customers ever ordered a single product.
- Of those who did, 50% ordered 10 or fewer items total.
- 98% spent less than $10,000 on mugs, making the promised six-figure income a statistical impossibility.
This is the engine of modern inequality. Systems are sold to the public as pathways to prosperity, but they are designed to funnel money upwards, leaving the vast majority with less than they started with. The product wasn’t a business opportunity; the customers were the product.
THE “COST OF DECEPTION” METRIC
The FTC complaint seeks monetary relief for the full amount taken from consumers through these deceptive practices.
WHAT NOW?
Accountability begins with knowing the names and roles of the individuals who formulated and participated in these practices, as detailed in the FTC complaint.
LEADERSHIP ACCOUNTABILITY WATCHLIST
- CEO & SOLE OWNER Anik Singal
- PROGRAM CREATOR: KINDLE CASHFLOW UNIVERSITY Tyrone Cohen
- PROGRAM CREATOR: PRINTABLE PROFITS David Kettner
REGULATORY WATCHLIST
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is the primary agency responsible for pursuing this case (Case 8:23-cv-02622-AAQ). Their actions determine the extent of financial restitution for victims and penalties for the company.
THE RESISTANCE
The desire for financial independence is real and valid. Systems like Lurn exploit that desire. The alternative is to reject individualist “get rich quick” schemes. Build collective power instead. Support local mutual aid networks, join tenant unions, and participate in skill-sharing workshops in your community. Real economic power is built together, not bought from a webinar promising a shortcut.
The source document for this investigation is attached below.
The FTC has a press release about the customers getting refunds from this: https://www.ftc.gov/enforcement/refunds/lurn-refunds
Explore by category
Product Safety Violations
When companies sell dangerous goods, consumers pay the price.
View Cases →Financial Fraud & Corruption
Lies, scams, and executive impunity that distort markets.
View Cases →


