Crushed by Silence
Inside the Hidden War to Defend Crypto Victims When No One Else Will
He said it without drama. No raised voice. No clenched fist. Just a quiet certainty that echoed louder than any siren in the room.
Bezalel Eithan Raviv has been chasing ghosts. Ghosts that walk through firewalls, speak in emojis, and vanish across borders with millions in stolen cryptocurrency. But it’s not the theft that haunts him. It’s the aftermath — the silence that follows.
“The law doesn’t speak for them,” Raviv says. “So we do.”
In an era where a digital wallet can be emptied faster than a heartbeat, Lionsgate Network has become an unlikely stronghold — a forensic dream team armed with blockchain analytics, government liaisons, and the kind of persistence you don’t learn in school.
The Sound of Nothing
Let’s be clear: there’s no hotline for crypto crime. When a Florida surgeon loses $3.2 million to a romance scam, he doesn’t get a cavalry — he gets a case number. Maybe.
Victims file complaints, upload screenshots, wait. And wait. And wait. Sometimes, by the time they call Lionsgate Network, they’re not looking for money anymore. Just a sense that someone gives a damn.
And Lionsgate Network does. But they’re not miracle workers. They’re trackers — digital bloodhounds following funds across blockchains in ways few government agencies even understand.
The hard part? Getting the baton passed before it’s too late.
One Step Ahead, Alone
Founded by Raviv — a former musician who swapped melodies for metadata after a personal loss — Lionsgate Network now leads international investigations with partners like Homeland Security and the IRS. They’ve helped seize millions. But for every success story, there are ten others where the evidence dies in bureaucratic purgatory.
“There are moments,” Raviv says, “when you can see the whole trail. You know where the money went. But unless someone with a badge moves, the criminal walks free. And the victim? They’re left carrying it all.”
One client called it “being mugged in a stadium while the guards sip coffee.”
The System Isn’t Broken. It’s Unaware
Crypto scams aren’t cute Nigerian prince emails anymore. They’re organized, multilingual, AI-optimized traps run by global networks — with entire call centers dedicated to psychological manipulation.
But to most local law enforcement? They still sound like tech support gone bad. Lionsgate Network wants to change that. They’re pushing for dedicated crypto crime task forces, faster seizure pipelines, and real-time collaboration zones where vetted forensic experts can work with government—not just shout into the void, all with the ultimate goal of improving global crypto recovery efforts.
What You Don’t See Is the Problem
The most disturbing part of crypto crime isn’t how it happens — it’s what happens next. Or doesn’t.
Victims don’t get headlines. They get humiliation. They get second-guessing friends. They get lawmen shrugging and lawyers who won’t touch blockchain.
Lionsgate Network is trying to give them a narrative. A name. A shot.
“If we can track terrorists with a SIM card,” Raviv asks, “why can’t we track your aunt’s stolen savings?”
Not Just a Company — A Counterforce
Call them idealists. Or call them what they really are: tacticians in a system that wasn’t built to care.
Lionsgate Network’s analysts speak Solidity and Subpoena. They operate like an emergency room for justice — triage, stabilize, escalate. And if the state won’t act, they do everything short of kicking down doors themselves, all in the relentless pursuit of crypto recovery.
Because behind every transaction is a person.
And behind every person is a right to not be forgotten.


