Customers were still being encouraged to proceed with Dashdot’s property investment services just days before the buyer’s agency entered voluntary liquidation, according to emails and messages obtained by ABC News.
The communications do not prove any wrongdoing occurred. But they raise fresh questions about what was happening inside the company in the weeks before its collapse, and whether prospective customers were being encouraged to commit to significant up-front fees while the business was approaching insolvency.
One prospective customer, Daniel, who asked for his surname to be withheld for privacy reasons, had signed an agreement with Dashdot in early May but had not yet paid the company’s up-front fee of about $21,000.
After being…

