Three men have been charged by US prosecutors with helping run a US$722-million (R11.4-billion) cryptocurrency fraud that amounted to a “high-tech Ponzi scheme”.
From 2014 until this month, the men operated BitClub Network, which solicited money from investors in exchange for shares in purported cryptocurrency mining pools and rewarded them for recruiting new investors, according to prosecutors.
Matthew Brent Goettsche, 37, Jobadiah Sinclair Weeks, 38, and Joseph Frank Abel, 49, were arrested on Tuesday and charged with conspiracy, US attorney Craig Carpenito in New Jersey said in a statement. Two more defendants, whose names weren’t disclosed, remain at large.
Goettsche referred to potential BitClub Network investors as “dumb” and “sheep”, saying he was “building this whole model on the backs of idiots”, according to the statement. In September 2017, Goettsche sent an e-mail to a co-conspirator in which he suggested BitClub Network would allow them to “retire RAF!!! (rich as f***)”, prosecutors said.
Goettsche and Weeks are charged with conspiracy to commit wire fraud, while all three men are facing charges of conspiracy to sell unregistered securities.
Lawyers representing the three named defendants couldn’t immediately be located. They’re expected to appear in court on Tuesday, Carpenito said in the statement.
Fake profits
Bitcoin mining is a process through which “miners” can earn newly issued bitcoin by using special software to solve complex algorithms. BitClub Network claimed to pool investor money to buy mining hardware and computer capacity and then distribute the profits, according to the government. The group instead reported fake profits and defrauded its investors, prosecutors said.
Prosecutors have also brought fraud cases involving bitcoin rival OneCoin. A lawyer was convicted three weeks ago in New York of laundering $400-million from the fraudulent OneCoin cryptocurrency, which prosecutors claim operated as a Ponzi scheme, in which investors are promised unrealistic returns and early investors are paid with money from later investors.
Mark Scott, 51, was found guilty on 21 November of money-laundering conspiracy and bank-fraud conspiracy after jurors deliberated for three-and-a-half hours. Prosecutors claimed Scott set up a phony investment fund that he used to process money from Ruja Ignatova, the Bulgarian woman who co-founded OneCoin. Ignatova disappeared in 2017 as OneCoin came under suspicion from law enforcement. — Reported by Bob Van Voris, (c) 2019 Bloomberg LP