Blake Evertsen & Evertsen Equity: Unaddressed Financial Accountability in Disputed Investments

Status Update & Notice of Investigations — October 5, 2025
In the interest of resolution, repayment may be made in full or through an agreed-upon payment plan. Should such an arrangement be proposed and accepted, this record will be updated to reflect the new status. As of today, Evertsen Equity, Blake Evertsen, Eyad Abbas, and Dustin Boudreau have provided no response to public requests for clarification regarding the $328,495.95 owed from a failed Amazon store investment. This includes $135,494.99 plus interest that passed through Evertsen Equity's processors, for which I continue to demand repayment. This post contains investigative commentary and references to public records regarding these individuals and their companies, including Empower Consulting Group LLC and Empower Cosmetics LLC.
Attention: If you believe you have been victimized, defrauded, or otherwise harmed by the above-named persons or parties, DisputeVoice is compiling names for a coordinated “class-action-style” submission to the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) to press for a full federal investigation...read more here.
DisputeVoice is compiling names for a coordinated “class-action-style” submission to the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) to press for a full federal investigation.
Disclosure: This post reflects my documented experience and conclusions, based on verified transactions, communications, and public legal filings. It is not a legal accusation, but an open, evidence-based account.

About DisputeVoice: DisputeVoice helps individuals publicly document disputes so researchers, consumers, and decision-makers can find the facts. Public awareness protects others and applies pressure toward resolution. This post is an example of the work we do for our clients. Learn more at DisputeVoice.com.
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Zombie debtors. You’ve seen them, even if you didn’t know what to call them.

They walk among us—perfectly dressed, degrees in hand, LinkedIn profiles polished. But financially? They’re gone. Silent. Unreachable. Not dead, not alive—just… financially undead.

Take Blake Evertsen.

A Harvard graduate.
A former track & field standout.
A founder of Evertsen Equity.
A man once seemingly on the fast track to success.

But then… something changed.

What Is a Zombie Debtor?

A Zombie Debtor is someone who goes through the motions of being financially responsible—presenting as a credible, intelligent adult—yet avoids the one thing that truly matters: accountability.

Instead of addressing legitimate financial obligations, they shuffle through life with unanswered questions trailing behind them like the smell of decaying trust.

And Blake Evertsen? The signs are all there.

Blake Evertsen’s Disappearing Act

✅ Harvard degree? ✔️
✅ Successful funding business? ✔️
✅ Publicly presented as a financial expert? ✔️
✅ Transparent explanation of the $135,494.99 that passed through his company, Evertsen Equity? 🧟 Missing in action.

Despite repeated requests for clarity, despite documented evidence showing $135,494.99 processed through Evertsen Equity, Blake Evertsen has chosen silence.

What Happened? Did Blake Get Bitten?

It’s a metaphor, of course. But like in any good zombie tale, the transformation starts subtly.

One day, everything seems normal. The next?

  • A questionable business deal.
  • A failed partnership.
  • A Done-For-You Amazon store investment gone sideways.
    And suddenly, the bright, articulate, trustworthy individual vanishes—replaced by silence, avoidance, and legal fog.

The Timeline of Transformation

Let’s stick to the facts:
🗓 Funds totaling $135,494.99 passed through Evertsen Equity.
🗓 Questions were raised.
🗓 Documentation was requested.
🗓 Silence followed.

Blake remains active—online, in business, and in social circles—but when it comes to accountability for this six-figure sum? He’s a ghost.

(For screenshots, supporting documents, and a full timeline, see below.)

Why It Matters: Zombie Debtors Erode Trust

Zombie debtors like Blake Evertsen don’t just avoid one person—they harm entire ecosystems of trust.

When someone with elite credentials and financial influence refuses to answer basic questions, it sends a chilling message to investors, partners, and consumers alike.

Blake, You Can Still Come Back to Life (Financially Speaking)

The antidote? It’s simple: Transparency. Accountability. Integrity.

Blake, you have the opportunity to address this. To answer the questions. To explain the $135,494.99 processed through your company.

Until then, the warnings stay public. The questions remain unanswered. And the label sticks:  Zombie Debtor.

Related Documentation

👉 What Happened to My $135,494.99? The Evertsen Equity Questions

If Blake Evertsen wishes to provide documentation or a public statement, I will publish it unedited, provided he backs up his claims with evidence—just as I have.

Related Public Records & Resources

 

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Steve Chayer

Steven Chayer founder of Dispute Voice LLC, wearing a blue suitjacket, red tie, light blue shirt. conflict resolution, conflict and conflict, resolution, conflict and resolution, conflict solutions, conflict management, conflict and conflict management, conflict and management
About the author

I was wronged, and my attorney told me recovering my $328K is a long shot, but I couldn’t just walk away.


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