// the investigation

The investigation

Sacromonte — also posted under the name Bieliash LLC — is one of the few subcontractors documented here advertising the LLC-as-SSN-substitute requirement on the public channel rather than burying it in the DM sort. The public T-Mobile Miami recruitment post states flatly: "Company (LLC) required" — phone 561-428-3990 attached, no hedging. The ad does not require work authorization; it requires an LLC as the functional substitute, the "company substitute" variant of the scheme stated in the first line of the recruitment copy. The company is not hiding the arrangement. It is advertising it.

Andrew Busketts' DM response to an LLC-only applicant matched the public posture and moved past it immediately. The applicant disclosed having an LLC but no SSN (using the Russian-transliterated slang "соушал" for Social Security). Busketts' reply: "Good. When can you start?". The "good" dispatches the documentation question; the "when can you start" is the operational follow-up. The pattern is the same one UTT Group's Nick used (also "when can you start?"), the same one Art J at Niksen used ("can you call after lunch?"), the same one Aleh at Oliva used ("can you call in half an hour?"). The shared syntax is the scheme's shared syntax.

The Bieliash LLC brand runs continuous recruiting for T-Mobile and Verizon crews across Florida, Georgia, and the Carolinas with promises of no pay delays and openings for both experienced climbers and helpers-willing-to-learn. The two brand names — Sacromonte and Bieliash — operate out of the same phone number, documenting the multi-brand single-operator pattern that recurs across the bundle. What looks like two separate subcontractors to a prime's vendor-management system is one operation with two invoice headers.

T-Mobile and Verizon contract the work that Sacromonte and Bieliash recruit for. The public ad states the LLC requirement on the first line. The DM confirms LLC-no-SSN acceptance in two words. The two brand names operate from one phone. T-Mobile's and Verizon's vendor-management programs could surface the multi-brand structure by reading the Telegram channel where both brands recruit, or by checking, against their own certification systems, whether the workers on Sacromonte and Bieliash closeouts are the workers actually hired and on what authorization. They have not. They know.

// findings

3 findings on this card

Each finding is a single corpus message (or a short cluster) with a verbatim quote, severity tag, and provenance label. Click any finding to view the source message and context window. Speaker identifiers below are Telegram name (the handle the user chose for themselves on Telegram — can be a real name, a single letter, an emoji, or anything else they set) plus Telegram UID (the numeric account identifier).

m0114 HIGH W2_TO_1099_ARBITRAGE PROVEN

Хорошо. Когда сможешь приступить?

Good. When can you start?

Tagged as: LLC_AS_SSN_SUBSTITUTE

source: DM · msgs 226-352 (4) · Telegram name: Andrew Busketts ° ͜ʖ ͡ - +1 (561) 428-3990 · uid 6262816280 · role: Andrew Busketts
View source message and context →
m0115b HIGH JOB_POSTING_LLC_SUBSTITUTE PROVEN

Тмобил Майами Требуется работники с опытом на Тмобил. Компания обязательна 5614283990

T-Mobile Miami. Workers with T-Mobile experience needed. Company [LLC] required. 5614283990

source: CHAT · msg 15520 · Telegram name: Andrew Busketts ° ͜ʖ ͡ - +1 (561) 428-3990 · uid 6262816280
View source message and context →
m0267 MEDIUM JOB_POSTING_AMBIGUOUS PROVEN

👉 Компания Bieliash LLC ищет надёжных людей в команды Т- Мобил и Верайзен Работа на простых сайтах Verizon и T-Mobile 🤙 География — Флорида , Джорджия, Каролина. Сайты идут подряд — без простоев Мы

Bieliash LLC is looking for reliable people for T-Mobile and Verizon crews

source: CHAT · msg 45506 · Telegram name: Andrew Busketts ° ͜ʖ ͡ - +1 (561) 428-3990 · uid 6262816280
View source message and context →
Source
Primary msg
Telegram Name
Telegram UID

CONTEXT WINDOW

Before you read

The Shadow Zone Investigation documents labor violations in U.S. wireless tower construction — including wage theft, undocumented-labor schemes, fraudulent safety certifications, child labor, and immigration coercion. 339 documented findings across 93 named subcontractors and 384 individuals. Anonymous investigation team.

Three editorial commitments:

  • Every finding carries a PROVEN, ALLEGED, or INFERRED label. The label is the editorial commitment, not decoration.
  • Russian-language source quotes are preserved verbatim, with English translations.
  • Three corruption allegations against named primes are framed as ALLEGED throughout. The corpus does not prove them. They are surfaced because named industry sources, separately, raised them. Every unproven allegation on this site is collected on the What Is Alleged — and Not Proven page.

Mistakes may exist. The corpus runs to ~30,000 messages over 5+ years; translations were AI-assisted across four independent analyses. Some errors likely remain. To report a factual error or dispute a finding's framing, see the corrections policy on the About page.